Online learning isn't exactly new—its origins go all the way back to the 1960s. Still, the Covid-19 pandemic accelerated its use as students all over the world were forced to transition to remote ...
When COVID-19 spread globally in spring 2020, hundreds of millions of students across the world had no choice but to attend school remotely. The consensus now is that the outcomes were overwhelmingly ...
Medical students who reported a disability to their school increased by more than 25% during the COVID-19 pandemic, a study shows. The proportion of students reporting attention deficit hyperactivity ...
A lawsuit accused the state of failing to provide an equal education to lower-income, Black and Hispanic students during the pandemic. By Sarah Mervosh In the fall of 2020, around the height of the ...
The question of whether students learn better online or in a classroom setting is a multifaceted debate, encompassing considerations of individual learning styles, access to resources, social ...
This month’s episode explores how remote and digital learning has evolved beyond emergency pandemic measures into strategic, purpose-driven educational approaches. DLAC’s John Watson distinguishes ...
As school ended last year, parents and teachers were ready for a reset. Summer not only promised a break from an exhausting spring of remote learning; it provided much-needed time to bend the COVID-19 ...
Remote learning was a disaster for many students when it was introduced in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic. Schools and teachers were not prepared, access to technology was inconsistent, and ...
New York City students can forget about snow days. The Department of Education will stick with its remote learning plan when wintry weather hits — despite a series of glitches that befell the system ...