While there have been many legal battles in the United States, this court case from the Quebec Superior Court May be the first in Canada that has focused on some aspect of K-12 distance or online learning. Lawsuit to be filed
While there have been many legal battles in the United States, this court case from the Quebec Superior Court May be the first in Canada that has focused on some aspect of K-12 distance or online learning. Lawsuit to be filed
Earlier today we noticed this announcement on our recent special report. Torrey Trust Co-authors Report Examining Types of Remote Learning January 14, 2021Torrey Trust, associate professor of learning technology in the College of Education’s department of teacher education and curriculum
Today our lead researcher received this notice from his open scholarship networks. Congrats! Your technical report reached 20 reads Achieved on January 13, 2021 Technical report: A Fall Like No Other: Between Basics and Preparing for an Extended Transition During Turmoil A
Yesterday our lead researcher received this notice from his open scholarship networks. Congratulations! Your technical report reached 50 reads Achieved on December 29, 2020 Technical report: Understanding Pandemic Pedagogy: Differences Between Emergency Remote, Remote, and Online Teaching Note that this was
In the spring of 2020, the term ‘emergency remote teaching’ began to emerge to describe what was occurring in education at all levels, despite the more commonly used term “online learning” dominating media descriptions of the instruction offered to students
The Canadian eLearning Network (CANeLearn) released their latest research report – Stories from the Field: Voices of K-12 Stakeholders During Pandemic. The report, which is co-authored by two of the State of the Nation: K-12 e-Learning in Canada researchers, has the
Yesterday, the Canadian eLearning Network (CANeLearn) released a new report entitled A Fall Like No Other: Between Basics and Preparing for an Extended Transition During Turmoil. The report, which is co-authored by two of the State of the Nation: K-12
Yesterday, the Canadian eLearning Network (CANeLearn) released a new report entitled Documenting Triage: Detailing the Response of Provinces and Territories to Emergency Remote Teaching. The report, which is co-authored by two of the State of the Nation: K-12 e-Learning in Canada
Earlier this week we posted a brief commentary on one of the aspects of this report that we fear will become the norm as the organizations, the media, and researchers begin to examine the impact of remote learning on K-12
We haven’t had a lot to say about the emergency provision of distance education across K-12 schools in Canada over the past few months. In fact, the only thing that we have posted to this space since the pandemic began