COVID-19 and the ‘New Normal’ in Education: Exacerbating Existing Inequities in Education

Authors

  • Yusuf Sayed University of Sussex, Falmer, United Kingdom and Centre for International Teacher Education (CITE), Cape Peninsula University of Technology
  • Marcina Singh Research Fellow at the CITE, Cape Peninsula University of Technology
  • Thelma Mort Research Student at the Centre for International Teacher Education (CITE), Cape Peninsula University of Technology

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2957-3645/10330

Keywords:

Policymaking, Education policy, Equity, COVID-19, Pandemic, Teaching and learning, South Africa

Abstract

This paper considers education responses to the COVID-19 pandemic, with specific reference to South Africa, examining how inequality has been exacerbated as a result of the pandemic. It outlines how education policy choices are shaped and how the (mis)use of evidence highlights the lack of meaningful and robust involvement by key education stakeholders and social science specialists, particularly from the critical tradition. COVID-19 has intensified and sharpened social, political and economic fragilities and inequities globally, forcing governments to (re)think responses to social problems and disruptions. This paper underscores three dimensions of inequity in education as a result of the pandemic: equitable teaching and learning during the lockdown and school closures; inequities that may result from the (re)opening of schools in the ‘new normal’; and the lack of attention to psychosocial support and professional development. The paper argues that while this pandemic may be new, it has exacerbated existing inequities in education provision, intensified by the COVID-19 disaster management and education policy. The paper argues for a progressive approach to education transformation in response to this pandemic and future crises and disruptions.

Published

2021-11-17

How to Cite

Sayed, Y., Singh, M., & Mort, T. (2021). COVID-19 and the ‘New Normal’ in Education: Exacerbating Existing Inequities in Education. Social and Health Sciences, 19(1), 18–42. https://doi.org/10.25159/2957-3645/10330

Issue

Section

Articles