Teachers learn that online classes for foreign students come with geopolitical snags
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — In the midst of the summer scramble to get courses online at Memorial University in St. John’s, Sonja Knutson realized there were political implications to remote learning she hadn’t considered.
A Memorial student living in Iran couldn’t buy an e-book for a course because Iranians don’t have access to major credit cards, Knutson, director of the university’s office for international students, said. The student dropped the course.
Knutson and her colleagues realized there could be a host of similar problems involving Memorial’s international students, many of whom are taking courses remotely because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The school’s efforts to ensure a smooth transition to remote learning had a political blind spot, she said in a recent interview. “The same curriculum that we could deliver privately in the classroom is now going to be subject to monitoring in countries around the world.”