An Ed-Tech Tragedy?
An Ed-Tech Tragedy?
The COVID-19 pandemic pushed education from schools to educational technologies at a pace and scale with no historical precedent. For hundreds of millions of students formal learning became fully dependent on technology – whether internet-connected digital devices, televisions or radios.
An Ed-Tech Tragedy? examines the numerous adverse and unintended consequences of the shift to ed-tech. It documents how technology-first solutions left a global majority of learners behind and details the many ways education was diminished even when technology was available and worked as intended.
In unpacking what went wrong, the book extracts lessons and recommendations to ensure that technology facilitates, rather than subverts, efforts to ensure the universal provision of inclusive, equitable and human-centred public education.
An Ed-Tech Tragedy? tells the story of how thousands of schools, pupils, teachers and parents worldwide were suddenly thrust into predominantly technology-based education due as a consequence of the COVID-19 virus that was sweeping the globe.


Critical acclaim
Challenges views that digital technologies are synonymous with educational equality and progress.
The most extensive examination of the global lockdown experience in education.
To date, the book represents the most detailed analysis of how the rhetoric of technological solutionism comes to shape both policy debates and specific action on the ground.
Brings strong evidence of the detrimental impact of the digitalization of education on the right to education. Its forceful voice amplifies the chorus of voices opposing the digitalization of education as a replacement to on-site schooling with teachers.
This book offers an important argument that educational technology was a force multiplier for inequality during the pandemic. … It will take many years to reckon with the consequences of the pandemic and this work will be essential in this endeavour.
Thoughtful, fair and frightening, this is a book that exposes the folly of outsourcing education provision on the shiny – and unsupported – promises of new technology rather than investing in the long-term health of buildings, teachers and families.
Like the best histories, 'An Ed-Tech Tragedy?' shows us how we have arrived at our present moment, and how we can learn lessons from our past to achieve more equitable and inclusive futures.
It is indeed a tragedy that during a global emergency, big tech chose profit over children’s best interests and that governments failed in their commitment to human rights. This timely book sets out a clear path to avoid such problems in the future.
This unflinching analysis should be read by policymakers, IT executives and developers, school leaders, teachers, parents and anyone else in a position to ensure that we do not find ourselves enduring the same mistakes again.
While technologies new and old certainly have important roles to play in supporting teaching and learning, 'An Ed-Tech Tragedy?' reminds us that education remains a fundamentally human endeavour.
Points us towards more equitable and desirable paths ahead for digital learning.
Groundbreaking and extraordinary. A world-spanning record of the impacts of screen-dependent learning.
Boldly resisting the temptation to forget the lessons of the COVID yers, this landmark work gives us a sober guide to where the new educational technologies can help us, and how they could lead us significantly astray.
Wonderful and important. A warning that we ignore at our peril.
Thorough, methodical and well-researched. The result is a nuanced assessment of the promises of ed-tech and where those promises fall short.
Groundbreaking and timely. Provides a crucial moral and intellectual compass to direct us away from the ed-tech solutionism that is causing unparalleled exclusion and is in process of unterthering the right to education from that of schooling.
An immense achievement, and a hugely important critical intervention into debates about the future role of digital technologies in education.
What we see in these pages are the ways in which the pandemic and the embrace of digital education exacerbated many of the problems and inequalities that schools were already suffering from - historical problems and historical inequalities.
The analysis and recommendations detailed in 'An Ed-Tech Tragedy?' provide policymakers an opportunity to consider how to use technology within education to strengthen and enable - rather than endanger - the wide spectrum of children's rights.
'An Ed-Tech Tragedy?' offers a sobering, incisive critical analysis of the global remote and digital learning response to the COVID-19 historical moment. It is courageous in its challege of dominant commercialised ed-tech saviour narratives.
With refreshing exactness, 'An Ed-Tech Tragedy?' shows us how to chart a new course for education in digital age, safegarding it as a human right and public good.
In 'An Ed-Tech Tragedy' UNESCO crafts a poignant narrative, unravelling the complexities of ed-tech's seemingly promising allure during the COVID-19 oandemic.
Setting the scene
Organization
An Ed-Tech Tragedy? borrows the structure of a theatrical play to document and analyse the impacts and repercussions of the pivot from school-based education to remote distance learning with technology.
- Act 1 details the hubris and ambition that often marked the initial transition from schools to ed-tech as the pandemic took hold.
- Act 2 explains the many ways the promises of ed-tech collapsed when technology was deployed globally as a primary solution to maintain education during widespread and prolonged school closures. It reveals the harm and unintended consequences that resulted from endeavours to transition from in-person and school-based education to technology-reliant distance learning.
- The Inter-Act questions dominant narratives to emerge from the technology-centric educational experiences of the pandemic period.
- Act 3 puts forward principles and recommendations to guide future efforts to leverage technology for education, while keeping in-person schools and humans interaction at the centre of teaching and learning.
Act I: The Hope of Ed-Tech Salvation

Visions of reformatting schools with technology

Cut the red tape and catapult to a better future with ed-tech

Act II: From Promises to Reality

Most learners were left behind

Inequalities were super-charged

Learners engaged less, achieved less and left education

Education was narrowed and impoverished

Immersion in technology was unhealthy

Environmental tolls multiplied with the ed-tech boom

The private sector tightened its grip on public education

Surveillance, control and machine processes marked the move to ed-tech

Inter-Act: Questions about and Alternatives to the Shift to Ed-Tech

Did technology-mediated remote learning contribute to the prolongation of school closures?

Was COVID-19 an ‘educational crisis’?

Is technology a pillar of educational resilience?

If not ed-tech, then what?

Alternative A: Keep schools open or reopen them quickly

Alternative B: Pause formal education until the resumption of in-person schooling

Alternative C: Support caregivers and prioritize non-technological resources

Act III: New Directions for Ed-Tech

Prioritize the best interests of students and teachers

Reaffirm the primacy of in-person learning

Strengthen digital connectivity, capacities and content

Protect the right to education from shrinking ground
