
Parents of elementary and secondary students will have to add two more words to their pandemic lexicon: synchronous and asynchronous.
While parents appear to prefer synchronous learning, it is not necessarily the best way to learn online, said Beyhan Farhadi, a high school teacher who has been teaching online courses since 2010 and is now a post-doctoral visitor in the Faculty of Education at 91亚色.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a fantasy of students lined up in quiet spaces, ready to learn. That鈥檚 just not the reality,鈥 said Farhadi, whose PhD research focused on the relationship between e-learning and educational inequality in the Toronto District School Board.
Asynchronous learning uses less bandwidth or data. It鈥檚 more flexible and can take into account each student鈥檚 schedule. The teacher can set up three different options for a discussion group, for example, and the student can choose according to their preference, Farhadi said.
鈥淪tudents who succeed online succeed in traditional environments. It takes a lot of discipline.鈥
