Policy brief
Infographic

Improving the Quality of Distance and Blended Learning

Authors
H. Alix Gallagher
Policy Analysis for California Education, Stanford University
Benjamin W. Cottingham
Policy Analysis for California Education, Stanford University
Published

Summary

How can schools provide high-quality distance and blended learning during the pandemic? This brief includes a mix of rigorous evidence from extant studies, data from interviews with practitioners who described their learnings from informal experimentation during the spring of 2020, and expert researchers who thought about how to apply research to the current context.

Breaking Down the Issues

  • With the abrupt end of in-person schooling in the spring of 2020, learning opportunities available to students varied enormously with some students receiving almost no distance instruction and others engaging in meaningful learning.

  • Student engagement in available distance learning opportunities was uneven and inequitable in the spring,partially but not entirely due to students’ challenges in accessing online learning.

  • The move to distance learning reduces opportunities for many of the crucial social aspects of learning.

  • Early elementary children and vulnerable student populations are most at risk from the move to a distanced setting.

Strategies to Consider

  • Access to individual devices and broadband technology is an important but not sufficient step toward high-quality distance learning.

  • Successful implementation of distance learning depends on the extent to which schools and teachers shift to new pedagogies, such as the flipped classroom model, to ensure strong lesson design.

  • Synchronous class time is most effective when it is built around small- group peer interactions and direct teacher-to-student feedback.

  • Teachers will need additional daily planning time and training to redesign instruction and make the substantial instructional shifts necessary to provide high-quality learning experiences.

  • Students need reserved time to connect socially in ways that build community and engagement.

  • Priority for in-person schooling should be given to the students who are likely to struggle most with distance learning, including younger students and students with Individualized Education Programs (IEPs).

Strategies to Avoid

  • Distance learning will likely be unsuccessful if teachers ask students to watch expository instruction for multiple hours each day.

  • Punitive practices for students who are not meeting expectations for attendance or engagement can be inequitable and will likely discourage student engagement even further.


This PACE brief is one in a series within the EdResearch for Recovery Project, which is aimed at providing K-12 education decision makers and advocates with an evidence base to ground discussions about how to best serve students during and following the novel coronavirus pandemic. Click here to learn more about the EdResearch for Recovery Project and view the set of COVID-19 response-and-recovery topic areas and practitioner-generated questions.

 

Suggested citationGallagher, H. A., & Cottingham, B. W. (2020, August). Improving the quality of distance and blended learning [Policy brief, infographic]. Policy Analysis for California Education. https://edpolicyinca.org/publications/improving-quality-distance-and-blended-learning