B U S I N E S S
12
● Asthecoronavirusshutters
campuses,schoolsscramble
toprovidedistanceeducation
ReadyorNot,CollegesGoOnline
Edited by
James E. Ellis
BloombergBusinessweek March 23, 2020
Analisa Packham, an economist who studies health
and education, would seem ideally suited for
teaching in the age of Covid-19. Yet last weekend
the 30-year-old assistant professor at Vanderbilt
University in Nashville realized she had a lot to
learn—about technology.
Packham taught herself two popular software
programs for videoconferencing, Zoom and Kaltura.
She plans to hold office hours via Skype and pro-
duce TikTok videos to explain the importance of
food stamps in the current economic crisis. She’s
already recorded a video lecture for her 41 students,
but is far from satisfied with it. “If I was a student, I
would not want to watch this,” she says.
America has 1.5 million faculty members, and,
like Packham, 70% have never taught a virtual
course before, according to education technol-
ogy researcher Bay View Analytics. To promote
social distancing during the pandemic, universi-
ties are sending students home en masse to learn