It  is estimated  around half the world’s students’ schools remain shut down. All told, this has been a potentially damaging disruption to the education of a generation.

But one of the few positive outcomes from this experience is an opportunity to rethink how digital technologies can be used to support teaching and learning in schools.

Our collective experiences of remote schooling offer a fleeting opportunity for schools to think more imaginatively about what “digital education” might look like in the future.

This is not to echo the hype (currently being pushed by many education reformers and IT industry actors) that COVID will prove a  tipping-point  after which schools will be  pushed fully  into digital education.

On the contrary, the past six months of hastily implemented  emergency remote schooling  tell us little about how school systems might go fully virtual, or operate on a “blended” (part online, part face-to-face) basis. Any  expectations of profiting  from the complete digital reform of education is well wide of the mark.

Instead, the most compelling technology-related lessons to take from the pandemic involve the informal, improvised, scrappy digital practices that have helped teachers, students and parents get through school at home.

Technology during the pandemic

All over the world, school shutdowns have seen teachers, students and families get together to achieve great things with relatively simple technologies. This includes the surprising rise of  TikTok  as a  source  of  informal learning content. Previously the domain of young content creators, remote schooling saw teachers of all ages turn to the video platform to  share bite-size (up to one minute) chunks  of teaching, give inspirational feedback, set learning challenges or simply show students and parents how they were coping.

TikTok also been used as a place for educational organisations, public figures and celebrity scientists to  produce bespoke learning content, as well as allowing teachers to put together materials for a wider audience.

Even  principals  have used it to keep in contact with their school — making 60-second video addresses, motivational speeches and other alternatives to the traditional school assembly speech.

Classes in some countries have been  run through WhatsApp, primarily because this was one platform most students and families had access to, and were used to using in their everyday lives.

Elsewhere, teachers have set up virtual  BitMoji classrooms  featuring colourful backdrops and cartoon avatars of themselves. These spaces act as a friendly online version of their familiar classroom space for students to check in and find out what they should be learning, access resources and temporarily feel they were back at school.

Some teachers have worked out  creative ways of Zoom-based teaching. These stretch beyond the streamed lecture format and include live demonstrations, experiments, and live music and pottery workshops.

Social media, apps and games have proven convenient places for teachers to  share insights  into their classroom practice, while students can  quickly show  teachers and classmates what they have been working on.

These informal uses of digital media have played an important role in boosting students, teachers and parents with a bit of human contact, and additional motivation to connect and learn.

So, what now?

All this will come as  little surprise  to  long-term  advocates  of popular forms of digital media in education. There is a sound evidence base for the educational benefits of such technology.

For example, a  decade’s worth of studies  has developed a  robust framework  (and many examples) of how students and educators can make the most of personal digital media inside and outside the classroom. These include allowing students to participate in online fan-fiction writing communities, digital journalism, music production and podcasting.

The past ten years has also seen a  rise in e-sports  â€” where teams of young people compete in video games.

This stresses the interplay between digital media, learning driven by students’ interests and passions, and online communities of peers. Informal digital media can be a boon for otherwise  marginalised and disadvantaged youth  and allowing students to find supportive communities of like-minded peers regardless of their local circumstances.

Australia continues to be one of the few countries in the world where  classroom use of smartphones is banned  by some governments. Some of the most popular social media platforms, content creation apps, and open sites such as YouTube remain  filtered and blocked  in many schools too.

At the same time, official forms of school technology are  increasingly criticised  for being boring, overly-standardised, and largely serving institutional imperatives, rather than pitched toward the interests of students and teachers.

Concerns are growing over the  limited educational benefits  of personalised learning systems, as well as the  data and privacy implications  of school platforms and systems such as Google Classroom.

The past six months have seen many schools forced to make the best of whatever technologies were immediately to hand. Previously reticent teachers now have first-hand experience of making use of unfamiliar technologies. Many parents are now on board with the educational potential of social media and games. Most importantly, students have been given a taste of what they can achieve with “their” own technology.

With US schools now exploring the benefits of establishing official  TikTok creation clubs  to enhance their video-making skills, it might be time for Australian educators to follow suit. Let’s take the opportunity to re-establish schools as places where teachers, students and families can work together to creatively learn with the devices and apps most familiar to their everyday lives.

Written by Neil Selwyn,  Monash University. Republished with permission of The Conversation.