Abstract

This article is a collective response to the 2020 iteration of The Manifesto for Teaching Online. Originally published in 2011 as 20 simple but provocative statements, the aim was, and continues to be, to critically challenge the normalization of education as techno-corporate enterprise and the failure to properly account for digital methods in teaching in Higher Education. The 2020 Manifesto continues in the same critically provocative fashion, and, as the response collected here demonstrates, its publication could not be timelier. Though the Manifesto was written before the Covid-19 pandemic, many of the responses gathered here inevitably reflect on the experiences of moving to digital, distant, online teaching under unprecedented conditions. As these contributions reveal, the challenges were many and varied, ranging from the positive, breakthrough opportunities that digital learning offered to many students, including the disabled, to the problematic, such as poor digital networks and access, and simple digital poverty. Regardless of the nature of each response, taken together, what they show is that The Manifesto for Teaching Online offers welcome insights into and practical advice on how to teach online, and creatively confront the supremacy of face-to-face teaching.

Highlights

  • Manifesto for Teaching Online offers welcome insights into and practical advice on how to teach online, and creatively confront the supremacy of face-to-face teaching

  • This book is the third iteration of the series that began with the online ‘Manifesto for Teaching Online’ in 2011, with a follow-up in 20161

  • I was concerned about supporting students who became anxious, fearful, and insecure, many of whom lost their jobs, had caring responsibilities, who found themselves unable, suddenly to conduct research, or who had to compete for digital access

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Summary

ORIGINAL ARTICLES

Dissolving the Dichotomies Between Online and Campus‐Based Teaching: a Collective Response to The Manifesto for Teaching Online (Bayne et al 2020). Alison MacKenzie1 · Alexander Bacalja2 · Devisakti Annamali4 · Argyro Panaretou3 · Prajakta Girme5 · Maria Cutajar6 · Sandra Abegglen8 · Marshall Evens8 · Fabian Neuhaus8 · Kylie Wilson8 · Katerina Psarikidou9 · Marguerite Koole10 · Stefan Hrastinski7 · Sean Sturm11 · Chie Adachi12 · Karoline Schnaider13 · Aras Bozkurt14 · Chrysi Rapanta15 · Chryssa Themelis16 · Klaus Thestrup17 · Tom Gislev18 · Alex Örtegren19 · Eamon Costello5 · Gideon Dishon20 · Michael Hoechsmann21 · Jackeline Bucio22 · Guadalupe Vadillo22 · Melchor Sánchez‐Mendiola23 · Greta Goetz24 · Helder Lima Gusso25 · Janine Aldous Arantes26 · Pallavi Kishore27 · Mikkel Lodahl28 · Juha Suoranta29 · Lina Markauskaite30 · Sara Mörtsell31 · Tanya O’Reilly32 · Jack Reed33 · Ibrar Bhatt1 · Cheryl Brown34 · Kathryn MacCallum34 · Cecile Ackermann35 · Carolyn Alexander36 · Ameena Leah Payne37 · Rebecca Bennett38 · Cathy Stone39,40 · Amy Collier41 · Sarah Lohnes Watulak42 · Petar Jandrić43,44 · Michael Peters45 · Lesley Gourlay

Postdigital Science and Education
Paying Attention
Careful Attention
Multimodal Stancetaking
The Multimodal Spatial and Temporal Complexity of Online Teaching
Distance Learning Under the Lens of Bakthinian Chronotope and Deweyan
The Flexible Meeting Place
The Experimenting Communities
Dissolving Structures of Oppression and Marginalization
Findings
Authors and Affiliations
Full Text
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