Science, asked by vaishalikaranje777, 10 months ago

essay on important of technology in education in lock down ​

Answers

Answered by Rishika200854
6

Answer:

With the country under lockdown, Children spend a significant part of the day in front of the screen, taking online lessons on Zoom or Google Classrooms or whatever online platform the school has opted for.

One day you return from school, having taken a board exam or a class test or spent just a regular day, and the next day you hear the school is going to be shut due to a nationwide lockdown to restrict the spread of COVID-19 pandemic.

Before you can even process the news, you realise life as you knew it–early mornings, rushing out to board the school bus, the clamour of meeting friends, sharing tiffin, the playground, cracking jokes in the middle of class–is all set to change. For over three weeks now, you have been cooped up at home, with your immediate family and barely any contact with the outside world. This is something neither your parents, nor your grandparents have ever experienced in the past, so even their coping skills are rather raw. Such unprecedented moments have neither been expected, nor adequately prepared for.

Within days, your school, concerned about completing syllabi and not breaking the continuum of learning, launches online classes and in no time, private tuition teachers follow suit and literally zoom into your lives. So, gone is the morning rush, the run in the park, birthday parties and hangouts with friends. Now it’s a new regimen with no real time to adapt. Soon, summer holidays as you have known them for years, will also not be the same.

This has been the story of students in many parts of India, especially in cities, which are better served by technology than rural areas. Children, especially in middle and senior school, spend a significant part of the day in front of the screen, taking online lessons on Zoom or Google Classrooms or whatever online platform the school has opted for. In places where access to technology is limited, schools and teachers are trying to reach out through their phones, recording lessons and sending them to students on WhatsApp.

Yet, what does it look like from the eyes of a child? Fitting into a new system always takes some time, before a sense of routine and ease sets in. For adults and parents, to imagine what a child is going through, recalling their first day in school or college or a new workplace would help.

Here, your home that was most likely your comfort zone, has changed character. School has now come home, so it doubles up as a classroom. While parents are posting happy pictures of children as young as five or six sitting in front of a laptop, transfixed by online classes, mental health professionals sound a word of caution.

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Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:With the country under lockdown, Children spend a significant part of the day in front of the screen, taking online lessons on Zoom or Google Classrooms or whatever online platform the school has opted for.

One day you return from school, having taken a board exam or a class test or spent just a regular day, and the next day you hear the school is going to be shut due to a nationwide lockdown to restrict the spread of COVID-19 pandemic.

Before you can even process the news, you realise life as you knew it–early mornings, rushing out to board the school bus, the clamour of meeting friends, sharing tiffin, the playground, cracking jokes in the middle of class–is all set to change. For over three weeks now, you have been cooped up at home, with your immediate family and barely any contact with the outside world. This is something neither your parents, nor your grandparents have ever experienced in the past, so even their coping skills are rather raw. Such unprecedented moments have neither been expected, nor adequately prepared for.

Within days, your school, concerned about completing syllabi and not breaking the continuum of learning, launches online classes and in no time, private tuition teachers follow suit and literally zoom into your lives. So, gone is the morning rush, the run in the park, birthday parties and hangouts with friends. Now it’s a new regimen with no real time to adapt. Soon, summer holidays as you have known them for years, will also not be the same.

This has been the story of students in many parts of India, especially in cities, which are better served by technology than rural areas. Children, especially in middle and senior school, spend a significant part of the day in front of the screen, taking online lessons on Zoom or Google Classrooms or whatever online platform the school has opted for. In places where access to technology is limited, schools and teachers are trying to reach out through their phones, recording lessons and sending them to students on WhatsApp.

Here, your home that was most likely your comfort zone, has changed character. School has now come home, so it doubles up as a classroom. While parents are posting happy pictures of children as young as five or six sitting in front of a laptop, transfixed by online classes, mental health professionals sound cautious.

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