Friday, September 18, 2020

How long will we let the lie live. . .

I don't know how it is where you live, but where I live there is an unpleasant truth that has been hidden behind a lie.  The unpleasant truth is that online education is NOT the same as in class school and the lie is that by providing online classes, our children are getting a good education.  While I believe that this is true for all grades, even for high school and college, it is even more true for elementary age children.  Who in their right minds actually believes that children from preschool through grade 2 can be adequately taught online?  Do we honestly believe that online classes are an equivalent to in person classes?

The lie became possible with technology.  If COVID 19 has happened thirty years ago, we would not have had the option of online classes.  But because we have entered the age of the screen, the presumption underneath our technology is that the screens can replace in person activity.  The permanence of the temporary (which is the digital or virtual reality which the internet provides) has changed how we think of ourselves and how we deal with others.  From the ever present smartphones to the computers and screens that replace typewriters, file cabinets, and copiers, we have bought into the premise that technology not only replaces in person interaction but improves upon it.

People do not need to go to the office; they can work from home and be as productive and happy at home as they might have been in an office building.  We do not need personal contact; the screen suffices.  Thus we are freed from the daily commute, from the cost of central hubs or headquarters, and from the need to provide good work environments.  Instead we can simply add in a small monthly stipend to provide a more ergonomic chair or high speed internet or whatever else an employee needs to do his or her work at home.  At first people seemed to love it -- delighting in wearing a good shirt or blouse over their sleep pants or leggings so that they look good for the Zoom meeting or facetime interaction.  Then when working from home was complicated by having to take care of children or by a loneliness that no screen could answer and it has been made worse by the need to assist the children with their online lessons.  Suddenly the reality is not as great as the hype but we have locked ourselves into the lie.  How long will it take for us to realize and admit that online and in person are not the same?

What we believed about the workplace has become and even more sacred truth of education.  It was already beginning long before COVID.  Everyone from colleges to seminaries were wondering if it might be cheaper and easier to educate people at home on their screens.  We gave all sorts of justifications for at home and online classes but under them all was the presumption that watching the screen was the same or almost the same as in person schooling.  Then COVID shut down colleges and schools and seminaries and we were captive to the screen -- not by choice but without our choice.  We limped through the end of last year online and now have decided that in many places and for many schools we have no choice.  Now we are left to make the best of things and reliant upon technology.  It remains to be seen if colleges and universities can continue to charge a premium dollar for what is anything but a premium education.  It also remains to be seen if we are doing our children a favor or a grave disservice by replacing in person instruction with online replacement.  Time will tell but we are generally agreed that preschool and the first years of elementary education cannot be replaced by the screen.  It will certainly further the divisions between the apt and those who struggle in school as well as the great divide between the haves and the have nots.

Not to mention, the ever popular idea that worship need not be in person and that online church is an adequate replacement for sitting in the pew.  If you have read here before, you know my feelings on that subject.  Some pastors are pumped up by statistics of how many outside their own congregations are watching but underneath the statistics is another set that is not so exciting.  Many people do, indeed, take a glance at religious content but few of those watch the entire video and most of them stick around for a few moments before clicking on to find other interests.  

It is one thing to depend upon technology in time of crisis when you have no choice but it is quite another to presume and invite technology to replace face to face contact.  The lies we have told ourselves will come home to roost sooner or later.  It will be up to us to admit the lies we have told ourselves are, indeed, lies, and to confront those lies with truth.  At least I hope that is what will happen.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

I personally believe that education from high school on up can be hybridized — some courses on premise, some online. This can be said especially for elective courses in high school and college. The cost of campus living has gone up too high. Ted Badje

JC in TX said...

My thought... a virtual connection is no substitute for a face-to-face interaction, ever. That being said, we've been using substitutes for that at least since folks were writing stuff down.

Letters, phone calls, text messages [the form of communication that I abhor!], video calls...

Some work can be done outside of an office. Not all, of course. But what I do (computer programming) works really well with that setup. Even before the COVID shutdowns, I didn't work face-to-face with the majority of our clients, even though I did go into the office daily. I've never even met the folks I work with daily at the largest client I work for (and they take up at least 3/4 of my time any given week).

If my wife and son weren't here with me, though, the lack of face-to-face connection during the day would drive me nuts, though. In fact, during a period of my life when I lived alone and worked remotely, I used to go out to coffee shops in the evening just to have some other people around. And I'm an introvert!

And learning... while I think some learning can be done remotely at the higher level (in my view, by the time a student gets to high school, they should be fairly self-directed), I don't see a good way to do elementary education virtually. And even at the higher levels, actually attending lectures, talking with other students... there is no subsitute for that.

JC in TX said...

My thought... a virtual connection is no substitute for a face-to-face interaction, ever. That being said, we've been using substitutes for that at least since folks were writing stuff down.

Letters, phone calls, text messages [the form of communication that I abhor!], video calls...

Some work can be done outside of an office. Not all, of course. But what I do (computer programming) works really well with that setup. Even before the COVID shutdowns, I didn't work face-to-face with the majority of our clients, even though I did go into the office daily. I've never even met the folks I work with daily at the largest client I work for (and they take up at least 3/4 of my time any given week).

If my wife and son weren't here with me, though, the lack of face-to-face connection during the day would drive me nuts, though. In fact, during a period of my life when I lived alone and worked remotely, I used to go out to coffee shops in the evening just to have some other people around. And I'm an introvert!

And learning... while I think some learning can be done remotely at the higher level (in my view, by the time a student gets to high school, they should be fairly self-directed), I don't see a good way to do elementary education virtually. And even at the higher levels, actually attending lectures, talking with other students... there is no subsitute for that.

JC in TX said...

Oh, and I forgot to mention church... I am very, very thankful that we were able to view our pastor's sermons during the weeks where local restrictions made having an actual Divine Service for a large group of people on-site largely impractical. And, of course, there are fine tools (such as the Treasury of Daily Prayer, Brotherhood Prayer Book, or even services in LSB) that can be used by families.

But we were back in church as soon as the doors were open!