The world鈥檚 mass shift to online learning is shining a more intense light on the Chinese government鈥檚 tight internet controls and is spurring new efforts by academics to provide students with unimpeded access to course materials.
Many popular online platforms 鈥 including Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and some Google functions 鈥 are largely inaccessible to teachers and students on the Chinese mainland. Meanwhile, domestic Chinese platforms have built-in filters to block politically sensitive materials and are often monitored.
Some foreign universities now find themselves unable to engage fully with students who have returned to mainland China during the coronavirus pandemic. Educators are scrambling to upload materials to whatever platforms they find handy and usable, and many lack experience dealing with Chinese internet restrictions, widely described as the great firewall of China.
The most common workaround is to have students in mainland China use virtual private networks, or VPNs, which redirect data away from users鈥 physical geographical locations. But even VPNs are not always reliable.
糖心Vlog
A staff member at a British university who coordinates between teachers in the UK and overseas students told 糖心Vlog that the VPN provided by the institution for use in online classes was 鈥渘ot very effective in China鈥. Speaking anonymously, she said that many mainland Chinese students could not access materials via the VPN, although other international students could.
鈥淭eaching online is quite difficult now,鈥 she said. 鈥淢any [mainland Chinese] students need to search for paid and more advanced VPN services.鈥
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While some companies and institutions have approved VPN usage rights in China, members of the public are generally barred from using the networks.
Katrin Kinzelbach, co-director of the master鈥檚 in human rights programme at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg (FAU) in Germany, told THE that she welcomed the greater emphasis on digital education but warned that it came with risks.
鈥淔or example, it becomes very easy to record class discussions,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his might incentivise China experts to self-censor, and it could further expose Chinese students who study abroad.鈥
Professor Kinzelbach will teach a political science class on China next term, and she will deliver it digitally. 鈥淚聽am already thinking about how to deal with the possibility of being recorded, and how to manage student discussions online,鈥 she said.
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Masato Kajimoto, an expert in misinformation ecosystems at the University of Hong Kong鈥檚 Journalism and Media Studies Centre, told THE that he used the open-source learning platform Moodle to ensure that all students in mainland China could access聽all course materials (Hong Kong is outside the great firewall).
鈥淚 upload everything that is blocked (or I聽suspect might be blocked) for the students currently in the mainland,鈥 he said.
鈥淔or example, links to YouTube videos work perfectly fine for most students in Hong Kong, but not in mainland China. So I download all YouTube videos and re-upload them to our course page 鈥 to the extent legally allowed for educational purposes, of聽course.鈥
According to Dr Kajimoto, 鈥淢oodle is a closed platform, and the content won鈥檛 be accessible to outsiders.鈥
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Asked if the great firewall could hamper the delivery of educational materials from outside China, he said, 鈥淢y experience is actually the opposite.鈥 In some cases, the shift online has given mainland Chinese students more access to materials from the rest of the world, it appears.
鈥淚 have seen some online courses featuring materials that may be normally blocked if they are published openly on the internet in the mainland, but [which are] actually accessible to the learners there,鈥 Dr聽Kajimoto said.
糖心Vlog
Jing Liu contributed reporting.
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