U of T leaders discuss pandemicâs impact on learning, âpower of placeâ at World Academic Summit
Does the growing shift to online education as a result of COVID-19 reduce the importance of the cities and regions in which universities are located? Will digitized learning improve or impair access to post-secondary education? How will the changes brought on by the pandemic affect the evolution of classroom instruction?
These are some of the questions discussed this week at the World Academic Summit, a virtual conference involving university presidents, researchers, business leaders and policy-makers.
Among the kickoff events at the virtual summit, organized by Times Higher Education, was an interview with U of T President Meric Gertler, who shared his thoughts on the relationships between post-secondary institutions and the cities and regions in which they reside. In particular, he discussed how U of T has long benefited from its location in the Toronto region, with its reputation for diversity and a high quality of life, when it comes to attracting faculty and students.
âYes, the quality of the university was the way we got their attention in the first place and the quality of the department theyâd be working in,â he said, referring to his personal experience hiring faculty members when he was the dean of U of Tâs Faculty of Arts & Science.
âBut often, weâd be competing with other great institutions around the world for that same person â and, more often than not, it was the quality of the city that helped tip the balance in our favour.â
While U of T was originally scheduled to host this yearâs summit, the event was moved online because of the global pandemic. U of T is now scheduled to host the event in 2021, when the summitâs theme will be âthe power of place.â
The summit also coincided with the release of Times Higher Educationâs World University Rankings, which ranked U of T as the top university in Canada and 18th globally for the second year in a row. Among public universities, U of T was ranked eighth in the world.
President Gertler said that, while the pandemic has caused disruption and forced a rethink in how education is delivered, he doesnât expect the importance of universitiesâ locales to be diminished going forward. Even before the pandemic, he noted, âknowledge-intensive activity was becoming more geographically concentrated in a smaller number of citiesâ despite the growth of digital technologies.
He also said he didnât expect a recent, COVID-19-fuelled interest in suburban living to continue indefinitely.
âI do think that when the dust has settled, when things begin to return to normal â particularly when we have a vaccine or decent therapeutics available and things are looking encouraging â weâre going to see a reversal of those tendencies,â he said.
Susan McCahan, U of Tâs vice-provost, academic programs and vice-provost, innovations in undergraduate education, was also one of the summitâs participants. She was joined by counterparts from New York University, the University of Sydney and Tsinghua University for a panel discussion on the opportunities presented by the pandemicâs disruption of the global education sector.
McCahan said U of Tâs experience suggests COVID-19 caused an already ongoing shift in education to accelerate. âIn 2018-2019, we had about 150 online courses at the șüÀêÊÓÆ”. This coming year, we will have several thousand,â she said.
She characterized the coming era of higher education as âthe blending of the virtual with the real and in-person.â That, in turn, will make classroom instruction more of a team sport with greater involvement from educational technologists and librarians in addition to professors, instructors and teaching assistants, she added.
The shift will also prompt universities to think more carefully about the role of in-class time, predicted McCahan.
âThere is space for really extraordinary lectures in person with a large group of people, but daily lecturing may be something that we can move off and bring more active learning into the classroom.â
McCahan said in-person instruction will continue to remain a central and critical component at institutions such as U of T, particularly when it comes to the undergraduate experience.
âWe believe that immersive, in-person experience does offer that centre of gravity around identity development thatâs so important for undergraduate students, and is something that theyâre seeking,â she said.
As education becomes increasingly digitized, there are concerns about deepening existing inequalities.
President Gertler grappled with the issue during a panel discussion titled âDoes a digitised higher education world replicate analogue inequalities?â His co-panelists included representatives of New York University, the London School of Economics and Ashesi University in Ghana.
He said online learning has the potential to put students at a disadvantage if they donât have access to quality digital technologies or private study spaces at home. He said thatâs why U of T prioritized re-opening its libraries â ânot because of all the books that are there, but the access they offer to high-quality digital technology.â
President Gertler added that the growth of online learning presented opportunities to explore new innovations.
âWeâve been really excited by this idea of a global classroom model â itâs something we started working on before the pandemic came on, but it certainly has revved up â where we pair up professors [and students] at the șüÀêÊÓÆ” and another institution around the world.â
He said the model not only broadens studentsâ horizons but exposes them to international collaboration opportunities at a time when travel is constrained.
Going forward, President Gertler said, universities have a responsibility to continue to tackle systemic racism through their faculty- and student-recruitment strategies.
âThis is a huge problem,â he said, noting efforts at U of T to reach out to greater numbers of racialized students through collaborations with public schools in disadvantaged areas, programs to tackle unconscious bias in faculty search committees and ongoing efforts to hire more Black and Indigenous faculty.