Contemporary education systems face a range of challenges, including delivering on their equity commitments and ensuring that all students regardless of location or socio-economic status have access to a high quality education. While governments have invested in a range of proactive initiatives to mitigate the effects of isolation for remote and underserved students, more can be done. The installation of collaboration technology into schools is becoming increasingly important to education systems that want to be able to make `live' video available to students.
How live video technology is used in education
Live video technology describes a set of tools, including web-based platforms and room-based systems, that enable real-time video communication between people at multiple locations. Live video technology is part of a broader suite of tools referred to as 'digital collaboration technology,' which includes a diverse range of applications such as screen casting, social networking, document collaboration and multimedia learning. The value of live video -and its capacity to positively impact student learning -becomes even more powerful when augmented with these other digital collaboration tools.
This infographic helps identify how live video technology is being used in education settings, with a particular focus on remote schools, understand barriers to effective use and opportunities to use the technology in the future.
Pre-requisites for sophisticated use of technology
Global literature and consultations identified four factors critical to effective uptake of technology and realisation of benefits:
Future use of technology
Schools are generally positive about the outlook for digital collaboration and video technology and there is significant potential to increase the amount and sophistication of use. Doing so will also position schools to more effectively meet government policy objectives. The majority of schools Cisco works with believe that the use of live video is likely to increase over the next two years, and in a recent survey a network of remote schools indicated overwhelmingly that live video technology will have a positive impact on the quality of student learning over the next 5 years.
Conclusion
The investments at the network layer have equipped schools for 'digital learning,' and the deployment of live video technology is gaining momentum. The challenge is to realise the full value of its investment within schools to realise anticipated benefits from use of the technology and achieve a true digital transformational impact in education.