a difference that becomes much more acute when learning goes online
This resonates so strongly with me - that sense of being made more acute, online, and even amplifying (both good and bad) when teaching interfaces with online. In our previous "jam" on chapter 1 Sean and I were discussing the binaries (or lack thereof) between "online" and "not-online" teaching and learning, and hybridity. Hybridity amplifies and makes more acute certain practices and policies, as well as modes of engagement and lifelong learning, that we have largely been complacent about in "traditional" teaching (whatever that means). This was perhaps the biggest shock to me as an instructor who started teaching in seminar rooms and now teach fully online courses.