Glossary of Terms
Purpose
This document defines key terms and common ways technology can be used for remote learning. It also identifies important considerations to help guide you when establishing a remote learning and teaching program. This document should be used as a reference by project planners when considering new remote learning programming, or program adaptations involving remote learning.
Below, the Education Technical Unit has outlined key considerations as well as eight important terms that will be useful to understand when designing or implementing technology-enabled remote learning solutions. A full glossary of terms follows.
Key Considerations
- Prioritize Needs
Base your decisions on an up-to-date needs assessment. Aim to ensure that everyone who needs to - teachers, parents, students, boys and girls - can access the technology. No one solution will reach all children and families. An effective program will likely require more than one technology.
- Align with National Priorities, Strategies and Curricula
As always, content should align with national curricula and learning objectives (formal and non-formal), as well as to Cluster and National Response Strategies.
- Be Flexible
Many policies and practices that work in schools will not apply.
- Keep it Simple
Although there is a lot of available online content, this is not necessarily the right time to roll out new tools, unless there is no other option. Remember that parents and caregivers will have limited time and abilities to guide and support children at home.
- Collaborate and Coordinate With Other Sectors
Messaging, outreach, and content should reflect both health and protection related messaging in common delivery platforms.
- Engage Parents, Teachers and Stakeholders in Decision Making
Be collaborative; base any new delivery platforms and programming on needs reflected in needs assessments to improve uptake and sustainability of programming.
- Be mindful of cost
In addition to equity concerns, be mindful of costs being incurred on families for mobile phones and data usage, as well as limitations on coverage and bandwidth in many areas.
Eight Key Terms
How to Deliver
- Emergency Remote Teaching
Emergency Remote Teaching (ERT) is a temporary shift of instructional delivery to an alternate delivery mode in a crisis. It involves the use of fully remote teaching solutions for instruction or education that would otherwise be delivered face-to-face and that will return to that format once the crisis is over. Because it is temporary ERT differs from Remote Learning strategies, which are purposely designed to use technology for the entirety of the learning course.
- Emergency Remote Teaching Instructor
The person who will support the learner in a semi-autonomous learning environment. This person can be an older sibling, parent/caregiver, teacher or any person who has had basic training.
- Self-Learning Program
A Self Learning Program (SLP) is a program that has been specifically designed for self-led instruction in home settings. SLPs are normally geared towards reaching out-of-school children with a comprehensive self-study curriculum based on national curricula, with semi-structured support provided by community facilitators.
Access Consideration
- Learning Device
The physical equipment used by the learner. With E-Learning approaches, this can include radio, mobile, tablet, laptop, eBook reader, etc. For areas without digital access, home or self-learning materials (textbook kits, student kits) can be utilized by learners.
- Infrastructure
The foundational components for functional, safe and equitable access to education technology. These can include power, service providers, supply chain, privacy/security, connectivity, government policy/regulations etc.
- Connectivity
The ability to access information and communication technology services. This can include through radio broadcasting, mobile internet, internet, television broadcasting, etc.
- Functionality
The features available on a device. automatic redial, caller ID, text or data transfer, Bluetooth, SD card slot, share files such as pictures and video or access the Internet through the use of integrated Web browsers and other Internet applications optimized to function with a small screen, calculators, camera, video games, HDMI, etc.
- Format
The different types of digital content preferably using open standards published using the select delivery mode. This can include: PNG, JPG for images, MP3 for audio, MP4 for video, PDF for printable documents, ePub for contents to be presented on different devices and SMS for messenger apps.
Glossary of Ed-Tech Related Terms
Emergency remote teaching
or
Emergency distance learning
HTML for text in different languages on websites
PNG, JPG for images
MP3 for audio
MP4 for video
PDF for printable documents
ePub for contents to be presented on different devices
SMS for messenger apps
Automatic redial, caller ID, text or data transfer, Bluetooth, SD card slot
Shared files such as pictures and video,
Access the Internet through the use of integrated Web browsers and other Internet applications optimized to function with a small screen,
Calculators, camera, video games, HDMI
Important considerations for designing modular learning content include but not limited to:
Curricular content (reading, math, science, geography etc.)
Learning objective
Language of learning (French, Hausa, Arabic, etc.)
Instructional format (short story, game, activity, song, exercises, eBook, etc.)
Delivery format (SMS, short text, video, audio, image, etc.)
Length of modular lesson (3 minutes per micro-lesson)
Frequency (30 minutes a day)
Dosage (5 hours a week)
The combination of speed and bandwidth.
Speed is the measure of how fast information is transferred.
Bandwidth refers to the capacity of an individual Internet connection measured in bits per second (bps).
2G provides data at the speed of 9.6 kbit/s to 28.8 kbit/s
3G provides data at a speed up to 348 kbit/s
4G provides data at a speed up to 1gbit/s (also known as Long Term Evolution or LTE)