We teachers have been told for quite a long time that we should digitalise more of our teaching and transfer most or all of it online. It’s easy – just use this or that software, these digital platforms, a heaped measure of virtual learning environments, a pinch of apps, a dash of doctrines. Sprinkle with a helping of livestreams, top with video recordings from cloud servers, oh except wait a minute, you mustn’t forget subtitles or else remove the videos quickly. “I can’t open the file,” “The video doesn’t work,” “Why can’t I hear a thing,” “Unable to access the site.” Error, error. Tyger! Tyger! burning bright... A dash of doctrines? They have indeed been flooding through doors and windows with the onset of the COVID19 pandemic. Best practices, good models, check these five ways to improve your online teaching, read these ninety-five online theses hammered onto the door of the cathedral of virtualities, hey does your student plagiarise or cheat in online exams, here’s an algorithm for...
On learning and education. Critically. Texts both in English and Finnish, side by side.// Oppimisesta ja koulutuksesta. Kriittisesti. Suomeksi ja englanniksi, vieri vieressä.