Schooling and Covid-19: lessons from recent research on EdTech

Author:

Fairlie Robert,Loyalka Prashant

Abstract

AbstractThe wide-scale global movement of school education to remote instruction due to Covid-19 is unprecedented. The use of educational technology (EdTech) offers an alternative to in-person learning and reinforces social distancing, but there is limited evidence on whether and how EdTech affects academic outcomes. Recently, we conducted two large-scale randomized experiments, involving ~10,000 primary school students in China and Russia, to evaluate the effectiveness of EdTech as a substitute for traditional schooling. In China, we examined whether EdTech improves academic outcomes relative to paper-and-pencil workbook exercises of identical content. We found that EdTech was a perfect substitute for traditional learning. In Russia, we further explored how much EdTech can substitute for traditional learning. We found that EdTech substitutes only to a limited extent. The findings from these large-scale trials indicate that we need to be careful about using EdTech as a full-scale substitute for the traditional instruction received by schoolchildren.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Medicine,General Chemistry

Reference4 articles.

1. Bulman, G. & Fairlie, R. W. in Handbook of the Economics of Education (eds Hanushek, E., Machin, S. & Woessmann, L.) 239–280 (North-Holland, 2016).

2. Escueta, M., Quan, V., Nickow, A. J. & Oreopoulos, P. Education Technology: An Evidence-Based Review (National Bureau of Economics Research Working Paper No. 23744, 2017).

3. Bettinger, E. et al. Does EdTech Substitute for Traditional Learning? Experimental Estimates of the Educational Production Function (National Bureau of Economics Research Working Paper, 2020).

4. Ma, Y., Fairlie, R. W., Loyalka, P. & Rozelle, S. Isolating the “Tech” from EdTech: Experimental Evidence on Computer Assisted Learning in China (National Bureau of Economics Research Working Paper, 2020).

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