The Alternative Narrative: When Digital Learning Worked During the Pandemic

Citation

Drost, B. R. & Levine, A. C. (2024). The Alternative Narrative: When Digital Learning Worked During the Pandemic. Journal of Education. https://doi.org/10.1177/00220574241249454

Abstract

From late spring of 2020 to the present, the U.S. educational conversation about learning in K-12 public schools during the pandemic has been about the fact that students did not learn as much, widening the achievement gap due to digital learning. Some K-12 public schools and school districts have reported no learning loss. This exploratory study examined elements shared by teachers, administrators, and parents that accounted for potential reasons why these individual K-12 public school districts did not experience the learning loss during digital learning that has been at the center stage of the narrative about educational experiences during the pandemic. Analysis of the results showed four elements that were central to these school districts’ experiences: having an instructional framework; determining a clear pedagogical function; connecting technology to the pedagogical function; capitalizing on formative assessments. Data also revealed that the participants tended to believe that a focus on pedagogy before technology integration was crucial.

Authors

  • Drost, Bryan R.
  • Levine, Anita C.

Reference Type

Journal

Keywords

  • Instructional design