Virtual Education was ineffective
Virtual Education was ineffective

6 in 10 Indians say Virtual Education was ineffective: Ipsos IndiaBus Virtual Education Survey

6 in 10 Indians say Virtual Education was ineffective: Ipsos IndiaBus Virtual Education Survey Ipsos pan India survey shows virtual education did not work, though it saved academic years

The verdict is out on the efficacy of Virtual Education! According to a pan India Survey by Ipsos to assess the effectiveness of Virtual Education during the pandemic in these last 2 years, the findings are somewhat alarming, with at least 6 in 10  of respondents  (58%) believing Virtual Education was ineffective! Further, respondents aged 45+ (probably with children in schools or colleges) were most disillusioned (63%) with virtual education and its effectiveness.  And notably  a greater number of women (60%) gave a thumbs down to Virtual Education. The survey also shows that SEC C respondents (65%) were most unhappy with the success of virtual education.

 

Parijat Chakraborty, Group Service Line Leader, Ipsos Public Affairs & Corporate Reputation said, “I’m not surprised with the findings. While the students did not lose their crucial years of studies, the learning per se was nowhere close to physically attending of classes. Attention span was low in virtual classes and tech glitches, problem solving, it was a lot to deal with. For women it magnified their workload, whether homemakers or working women and mothers, with daily chores, office work, no domestic help and online classes and assignments to deal with. This phenomenon is also laudatory that education continued despite the strained macro forces.”

 

The survey shows more disparities by regions. East India (67%) and South India (65%) had higher level of  disenchantment with the effectiveness of virtual education. Fully employed (62%) were unhappy and those from tier 2 towns (65%)  found the online model of education ineffective.  

 

 Positive impact areas

While the virtual education model did not keep pace with the brick and mortar, conventional school format, the survey shows that the virtual education model did lead to some positive impacts! At least 1 in 2 (50%) of respondents polled said the ability to manage technology improved, virtual connecting skills improved (42%), interaction with co-students/ friends improved (41%), interaction with teacher improved (40%) and  social skills improved (38%).

 

Negative impact   

At least 36% of the respondents polled felt, the biggest downside was that the ability to concentrate on studies deteriorated during online classes.

 

Impact of online education and exams on overall quality of education 

The survey showed polarized views on the quality output of the online education model. So, while 34% felt it worked, 32% gave it a thumbs down.  

 

ABOUT IPSOS INDIABUS

 

Ipsos IndiaBus is a monthly pan India omnibus quantitative survey, that uses a structured questionnaire and is conducted by Ipsos India on diverse topics among 2800+ respondents from SEC A, B and C households, covering all adults of both genders in a representative way. The survey is conducted in metros, tier1, tier 2 and tier 3 towns, providing a more robust and realistic view of Indians. The respondents were polled face to face and online. The  margin of error is +/-3% with 97% accuracy levels.         

 

The author(s)

  • Madhurima Bhatia
    Media Relations and Content lead

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