A colleague put an interesting question to me recently:
Why did schools struggle with online learning so much during COVID given that it’s been around longer than most teachers have been in the profession?
That’s a great question, and I’m not sure there’s an easy answer. Perhaps it’s because there are quite a few issues in play, some of which combine into a tangled mess of differing needs and interests, inertia, and complacency. Let’s untangle a few key points.
1. K-12 online learning remains mysterious to many people
As Amy Valentine, CEO of Future of School, likes to say: “Online learning isn’t new, but it’s still new to many people.” Consider that we could soon, if not already, have our second generation of K-12 online learners. The earliest online K-12 students could be putting their own children into online schools, even if those current parents were elementary-aged when online schools first appeared on the scene in the mid- to late-1990s. But many parents, policymakers, and reporters remain only vaguely aware of how K-12 online (and hybrid) learning really works. When the pandemic first hit, the producers of a major national radio show called me and asked “Do the…