2020
DOI: 10.1002/tesj.546
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The disparate impact of COVID‐19 remote learning on English learners in the United States

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Cited by 43 publications
(48 citation statements)
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“…As a result, the quality of the teaching learning process was much lower in online classes than that in on-campus classes. Sayer and Braun (2020) pointed out that inequality in accessing the internet and other technologies and inadequate support for learning English posed particular challenges for students from socioeconomically marginalized communities during COVID-19. Such inequality is evident in the educational context of Bangladesh, where a considerable proportion of students and teachers reportedly do not have access to technology resources in the truest sense of the term (The Daily Star, 17 July 2020).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, the quality of the teaching learning process was much lower in online classes than that in on-campus classes. Sayer and Braun (2020) pointed out that inequality in accessing the internet and other technologies and inadequate support for learning English posed particular challenges for students from socioeconomically marginalized communities during COVID-19. Such inequality is evident in the educational context of Bangladesh, where a considerable proportion of students and teachers reportedly do not have access to technology resources in the truest sense of the term (The Daily Star, 17 July 2020).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because of the isolation and separation of distance learning, much of the most effective transformations of methods and strategies during the pandemic related to communication and community building (Bertacco, 2020;Godsey, 2020;Kaden, 2020;Lynch, 2020;Rhim & Han, 2020;Sayer & Braun, 2020;Whittle et al, 2020). This is especially the case for students with the greatest need, such as those students who have disabilities, are living in poverty, or are from marginalized groups (Bertacco, 2020;Godsey, 2020;Kaden, 2020;Lynch, 2020).…”
Section: Connection and Community Buildingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The work to close the digital gap revealed deeper sociological issues (Kaden, 2020;Sayer & Braun;Tang & Bao, 2020). A byproduct of attending to the technological gap was bringing attention to student needs that went beyond providing laptops and internet access.…”
Section: Connection and Community Buildingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…It can be assumed that potential impacts of the transition from teaching in physical environments to ERT are particularly massive in foreign or second language teaching because language is not only the medium through which academic content is taught and learned but it is also the academic subject itself (Long, 1983). Classroom language is eminently important for the creation of learning opportunities (Walsh, 2006), and anecdotal evidence suggests that classroom discourse in virtual classrooms differs strikingly from that in physical classrooms: Given the significance of interaction in language learning and teaching, ERT reduces the opportunities to make input more comprehensible because verbal and non-verbal cues or objects (realia) are not or to less extent implementable in instructional practices compared to physical classrooms (Sayer & Braun, 2020). Apart from these aspects, there are a variety of factors to be considered for an evaluation of ERT including teachers', learners', parents' and school managers' familiarity with technical tools, equipment and internet access available or attitudes towards online teaching.…”
Section: Emergency Remote Teachingmentioning
confidence: 99%