It was around mid-January that Dr. Anushri Mukhopadhyay, a Goa-based ENT surgeon who had taken up a teaching assignment at a Chinese university only months earlier, returned home on a scheduled break.
By then, COVID-19 cases had begun to be reported from China but it was still not thought of as a pandemic. Soon, humankind was to find itself in the grip of an unprecedented health crisis and today, parts of the world, including India, are under a lockdown. But one thing continues as normal: Dr. Mukhopadhyay’s classes in China.
She is conducting her classes not in China, of course, but from the confines of her home in Goa — via a host of apps. “The college reopened on February 24 as scheduled and I was on the first lecture at 9 a.m. Beijing Time, which was 6.30 a.m. IST,” Dr. Mukhopadhyay, who teaches at the International Medical School at Chengdu city in the Sichuan province of China, told The Hindu.
“After a few days of unhindered lecture on the app Rain Classroom, I was forced to shift to another app called Zoom because traffic (on the former) seemed heavy and my signal in Goa was unstable too at times. But Rain Classroom has features like roll calls and setting MCQ questions which makes the experience worth the effort,” she said.
“All the apps are synced with WeChat. The lessons get published automatically on it for future retrieval. Students who cannot attend a class can also access them later — that’s the best part. I am also using an electronic board to write and draw diagrams, which fills the absence of a blackboard quite conveniently,” said Dr. Mukhopadhyay, who teaches regional anatomy, genetics, medical ethics, radio-imaging and biostatistics at the university.
She teaches two batches of students, one with 38 students and another with 68. They are drawn from various countries across the world, including India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Indonesia, Nigeria, Guyana and South Africa.
“Overall the situation is making me tech-savvy too. I recently purchased a Nikon Z50 to make video lectures. I miss cadaveric dissection though!” she said.
Norm of the future
And so, the show goes on — the teacher teaches and the students learn — even as panic grips many pockets in the world. It is quite likely that many universities are doing the same, and who knows going ahead, this may just become the norm, with technology wiping out geographical distances and time zones.