“…The attuning process in my in-class teaching walkabouts work in hand in glove with the feedback I give on journals or assignments: always particular to the student, as I work to make myself cognizant of the journeys students are on—even as I also want to attune them to the journeys entailed by working with difficult, complicated knowledge. Writing about students’ experience of online education, Rose ( 2017 ), herself a specialist in educational technology, draws on the work of Levinas ( 1998 ) and Noddings ( 2003 , 2005 ), positing that the face—as in “face-to-face”, in the same physical space and time—“is the basis of caring, ethical relations, and that those relations represent an integral, essential element of education” (Rose 2017 , p. 28). In reviewing the research on “the implications of facelessness” (p. 23), she suggests that “[not only] is it difficult for those who come together in online learning environments to form caring relations, but that the prevalence of such faceless contacts may contribute to a further inability to engage empathetically with others—and, indeed, to a devaluation of human contact in general” (p. 24).…”