An Ecosystem of Equity in the Era of COVID-19:Considerations for
Creating Inclusive Teaching and Learning Environments
Abstract
Distance learning has been a means to provide an education to those who
are unable to participate in on-campus, face-to face classes. Teams of
instructional design specialists that focus on online education put
significant effort into course development. This planned process is very
different from emergency remote education in response to a crisis. In
early 2020, it was discovered that an extremely contagious respiratory
illness termed COVID-19 had spread to every corner of the earth. As of
mid-March 2020, the need to transition from face-to-face classroom
instruction to exclusively online education landed on the doorstep of
America’s universities. COVID-19 has catalyzed a transition in the
ecology of American education for all students, but especially the
underserved and minoritized. Ecology, by definition, is concerned with
the interactions of an organism and its environment. The circumstances
of the pandemic have caused vast and rapid change in both the internal
and external environments of the organisms (e.g., students) and the
systems in which they reside (e.g., U. S. educational systems). The
purpose of this paper is to provide some considerations for instructors
who find themselves “thrown into teaching remotely,” and help them
think about how best to create sustainable systems, broaden
participation and build capacity in a more equitable and inclusive
manner.