Academics across the UK are ¡°at?breaking point¡± as a result of the pressure to shift their teaching online, according to one mental health expert, who urged caution over judging the success of remote learning based on the upcoming academic year.
Nicola Byrom, senior lecturer in psychology at King¡¯s College London and founder of the charity Student Minds, said the Covid-19 pandemic had created ¡°a?real opportunity to improve accessibility¡± to higher education and ¡°to?make the learning experience better for students¡± by embracing technology.
However, she said, there were ¡°limits¡± to capitalising on the crisis and universities needed to ¡°stay mindful of the scale of the challenge¡±.
¡°Academics across the country, I?think, are at breaking point with the pressure that they¡¯ve been under to redesign teaching over the summer. They had to cope with changes in assessments, uncertainty for the autumn and then redesign the way they teach. All of that change is substantive, and change is difficult to deal with,¡± she told the Times Higher Education Student Success Forum.
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Dr Byrom added that junior academics were ¡°under the most pressure¡± because their high teaching loads are compounded by the stress of career uncertainties and, in many cases, caring for young children.
In light of this, institutions ¡°need to be kind in recognising that this year ahead may?not be brilliant¡± and in understanding that the quality of online education might not be as strong as it could be, she said.
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¡°It¡¯s an emergency response to providing teaching online,¡± she continued. ¡°If what we deliver this year isn¡¯t brilliant, that doesn¡¯t mean that this shift online is?bad. That means that it¡¯s going to take time to adjust to change, to learn new skills and to build on?that.
¡°I want to urge caution in judging this year as demonstrating whether being online has benefits because I?think there may be more benefits than we would see just in this year in this emergency response.¡±
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