Accelerated Remote Delivery: Gathering Information and Applying Learnings

Scientia Education Academy Lecture

Accelerated Remote Delivery: Gathering Information and Applying Learnings
The COVID-19 pandemic has dramatically reshaped our society, our practice and our student’s lived education experience. The almost overnight pivot to remote delivery in March 2020, while accelerating change, has laid bare the need for evidence-based digital pedagogies and resources, and challenged our preconceptions of a democratised education. Every challenge however is an opportunity to innovate. The pandemic has indeed exposed an adaptable academic culture and a connected creative community. In this lecture, we will reflect on the pivot to remote delivery to elucidate what has worked, review what hasn’t worked and outline a, yet embryonic, skeleton for the road ahead. Considering education as system centred on relationships, rather than focusing on its individual components, can help inform both cost-value discussions and a sustainable framework for the challenges and opportunities ahead. 

Publications:

Led the publication of a peer-reviewed journal article that documented the pivot to remote teaching during the covid pandemic

Forced Disruption of Anatomy Education in Australia and New Zealand: An Acute Response to the Covid‐19 Pandemic: https://anatomypubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ase.1968

SEA Lecture Recording: Accelerated Remote Delivery
The COVID-19 pandemic has dramatically reshaped our society, our practice and our student’s lived education experience. The almost overnight pivot to remote delivery in March 2020, while accelerating change, has laid bare the need for evidence-based digital pedagogies and resources, and challenged our preconceptions of a democratised education. Every challenge however is an opportunity to innovate. The pandemic has indeed exposed an adaptable academic culture and a connected creative community. In this lecture, we will reflect on the pivot to remote delivery to elucidate what has worked, review what hasn’t worked and outline a, yet embryonic, skeleton for the road ahead. Considering education as system centred on relationships, rather than focusing on its individual components, can help inform both cost-value discussions and a sustainable framework for the challenges and opportunities ahead.