Introduction

In addition to the devastating number of human casualties, the rapid spread of the infectious coronavirus disease (COVID-19) has triggered a serious disruption of economic, social and cultural dynamics around the globe. The challenges and setbacks suffered by the education sector due to this ongoing pandemicFootnote 1 are undeniable. The temporary, yet indefinite, suspension of face-to-face activities of higher education institutions (HEIs) globally (UNESCO-IESALC 2020) has caused millions of students of both school and higher education to experience “displacement”, “disconnect” or “disengagement” from formal learning. As elsewhere in the world, HEIs in the Global South were forced to move their courses online in their effort to maintain and facilitate teaching and learning. However, in Nepal, open and distance learning (ODL)Footnote 2 programmes are concentrated largely in the country’s urban and suburbanFootnote 3 centres, even if some of the universities and their affiliated colleges in more remote, yet internet-accessible locations, have initiated attempts to include university teachers and students there too. Therefore in the absence of nationwide provision of electricity and internet connectivity, students from remote areas, low socio-economic and gendered spaces, as well as those with low proficiencies in EnglishFootnote 4 and technological skills, are experiencing social inequalities in and through ODL. This is a serious concern for higher education in Nepal, where government investment is insufficient. For example, figures published by the UNESCO Institute for Statistics shows that the education sector received only 14.1 per cent of the total budget in the fiscal year 2018 (UIS 2019). Moreover, the government expenditure on higher education was last recorded at USD 626.6 per student in the fiscal year 2015 (ibid.), which is almost not justifiable for maintaining quality education.

In this context, this article examines social inequalities reinforced by ODL, focusing on universities’ practices implemented before and increased during the emergent pandemic. Obviously, Nepal has undergone significant development in terms of access to and participation in higher education since the middle of the 20th century (Bista et al. 2019; Bhatta 2015).Footnote 5 However, considering the participation of students from disadvantaged, marginalised and gendered spaces in Nepalese society, it is worth investigating the extent to which the issue of equality in terms of access and quality education has been addressed (Kolbel 2013; Witenstein and Palmer 2013). Critical observations often point out that ambiguous educational policies and their nationwide implementation are resulting in social inequalities in higher education (Timsina 2016; Carney 2009). Such inequalities are manifested in and through ODL in higher education, which was not yet widely practised in pre-pandemic Nepal (Bajracharya 2014). Due to the risk of infection with COVID-19 in the conventional mode of face-to-face teaching, universities have been forced to maintain at least some of their courses through moving instruction online. Yet, in the absence of appropriate policies and pertinent infrastructure development, most of Nepal’s universities and their colleges are evidently confused and perplexed as they struggle to put this into practice, even if some of them have made attempts to engage their teachers and students through online tutorials during this pandemic.

Higher education development in Nepal: pathways and labyrinths

Even though Nepal’s history of higher education is comparatively young, it developed along complex trails and labyrinths. Its breakthrough is often attributed to the establishment of Tribhuvan University in 1959 (Bhatta 2015; Gaulee 2014), although Tri Chandra and Sanskrit Colleges were founded earlier under the affiliation of Indian universities.Footnote 6 This university remained the single unchallenged HEI in the nation for two and a half decades after its establishment.Footnote 7 However, along with the macropolitical changes and economic shifts Nepal has grappled with during the past few decades, Nepal became fairly open to welcoming and accommodating the establishment of several more universities, and their mushrooming constituent and affiliated public and private colleges (Bista et al. 2019). Currently, Nepal has a total of 11 universities,Footnote 8 along with four university-level medical academies and 1,407 university-affiliated campuses, all of which serve various tertiary education programmes throughout the nation (MoEST 2017). Besides being the oldest, Tribhuvan University is also Nepal’s largest university, educating a vast majority of the country’s tertiary students (Witenstein and Palmer 2013). Through its 62 constituent campuses and 1,060 affiliated colleges scattered across the country in both urban, suburban and rural locations, this university alone currently serves more than 80 per cent of the total population of higher education students enrolled across the nation (UGC 2018).

Develo** and expanding the provision of higher education has often been understood as a key mechanism for fostering the modernisation and development of Nepal. Elsewhere (Devkota 2019), I have critically described how five ideological forces shaped the development phases of modern education in Nepal in general. These forces were (1) Rana elitist; (2) developmentalist [bikasi]; (3) monarch-led panchayat; (4) neoliberal; and (5) neoliberal-globalist. Rana refers to an aristocratic dynasty who seized state power and ruled the Kingdom of Nepal from 1846 until 1951. Rana elitist ideology restricted education to the Rana rulers and their courtiers, denying access to the general public because they thought that formal education would raise public consciousness which might then challenge their sovereignty of the nation. The Nepali word bikas refers to development. Bikasi (developmentalist) ideology considers those educated through modern schooling as “developed”, “advanced” and “civilised”, and the rest as “underdeveloped” (Shrestha 1997). The Hindi word panchayat refers to a village council. Monarch-led panchayat ideology promoted education as a key to modernisation and development, yet a large section of Nepali citizens still remained out of school due to deep-seated caste, class and gender discrimination. Neoliberal ideology promoted marketisation, deregulation and reduction in government spending. Finally, neoliberal-globalist ideology for the last few decades has promoted globalisation and marketisation effects in education. These ideological forces have informed higher education policies and pedagogies in different, yet historically situated, chronological phases of national development.

In their editorial to a special issue on “Education reform in Nepal: From modernity to conflict”, Stephen Carney and Jeremy Rappleye (2011) highlight the effects of three overriding tenets of neoliberalism – marketisation, privatisation and decentralisation. On the theoretical base of these tenets, Kapil Dev Regmi points out how “the hegemonic assumptions of neoliberalism perpetuated deeply into education policies and plans” (Regmi 2016, p. 12) in Nepal. In another article, Regmi (2019) applies critical policy sociologyFootnote 9 as a methodological tool to examine the involvement of the World Bank (WB) in higher education in Nepal, arguing that WB had exerted a strong influence on Nepal’s higher education policies and practices through the policy agenda of reforms, performance and competition constituted under the guise of neoliberal instrumentalism.Footnote 10 However, these WB-driven policy endeavours have hardly been conducive to solving Nepal’s problems such as poverty, social inequity and inequality, integration and brain drain. The result has led the graduates educated at (public) universities to experience difficulties in identifying potential future pathways despite their parents and society attaching more values and expectations to university education (Kolbel 2013).Footnote 11 Behind all these criticisms, Nepal’s higher education is constantly occupied with social selection and elite and middle-class favouritism under the patronage of social, cultural, economic and politico-ideological structures.

These structural constraints remain decisive in sha** the access of women, Dalits,Footnote 12 and diverse Indigenous peoples, including Madhesis,Footnote 13 to and their participation in education in general, and in higher education in particular. The socio-historically informed “patriarchal construction of gender roles” has persistently prevented women from accessing quality modern education (Devkota 2019). Equally, socio-culturally informed caste hierarchy has pushed a heterogeneous group of Dalits into an ongoing experience of discrimination in social, cultural, religious, economic as well as educational domains (Cameron 2007). Madhesis and linguistic minoritiesFootnote 14 also continue to experience different kinds of social inequalities due to their ethnic and regional backgrounds, even long after the introduction of mass schooling in the early 1950s.Footnote 15 These pre-existing social inequalities based on caste, class, gender, ethnicity, regionality and linguistic background are now being reinforced through online and distance modes of teaching and learning, since members of these social groups are still experiencing disconnect and disengagement from higher education due to their lack of required physical infrastructure such as internet access, computers and mobile phones, as well as the absence of a strong student support system at the respective colleges located in rural settings.

Online and distance education: emerging practices in higher education

Over the past 2–3 decades, online teaching and learning practices have been increasingly embraced in HEIs and colleges of the Global North (Dumford and Miller 2018; Hennrie et al. 2015; Kim and Bonk 2006). ODL provides educational opportunities to individuals who often wish to continue their postsecondary education, yet experience geographical, temporal, social, cultural and other constraints to attending face-to-face classes (Crawford-Ferre and Wiest 2012). However, universities and colleges in develo** countries in the Global South are still lagging behind. Than Nwe Aung and Soe Soe Khaing point out a number of challenges related to ICT infrastructure, the nature of the course, contextual factors, instructors’ competencies, e-readiness,Footnote 16 etc. that universities and colleges encounter while implementing online teaching and learning (Aung and Khaing 2016, pp. 407-409). Shailendra Palvia et al. (2018) broadly examine how country factors (ICT capacity, internet diffusion, etc.), institutional culture (public versus private, profit versus non-profit, etc.) and curricular factors (graduate or undergraduate, fully online versus blended learning, etc.), as well as micro-level factors (teacher, teaching mode, etc.) affect the implementation of ODL (ibid., p. 235). These factors often play a decisive role in sha** the status, challenges and opportunities of online and distance teaching and learning in tertiary education in develo** nations like Nepal.

The first initiation of ODL in Nepalese tertiary education can be traced back to the College of Education, which began offering adult education through radio broadcasts in 1958. Later, the Ministry of Education (MoE) initiated a Radio Education Teacher Training Project (RETTP) in the late 1970s and 1980s with the technical and financial support of the United States Agency for International Development. (USAID) and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) (Holmes 1990). However, it was not until the Nepalese government pledged its commitment by signing a cooperation proposal set up by the South Asian Association for Regional Co-operation (SAARC) Consortium to Open and Distance Learning (SACODiL) in 1999 that discussing and conceptualising its own open university in Nepal became possible. And even after that, the process took more than one and a half decades. Despite a number of proposals,Footnote 17 initiatives and dialogues (Dhakal et al. 2010), the concept was not in fact formalised until the government of Nepal passed an Act (GoN 2016) establishing Nepal Open University (NOU) in 2016. By this time, Tribhuvan University (TU) and Kathmandu University (KU), had already established their own ODL programmes and offered a few programmes for Bachelor and Master’s degrees in Education and Social Sciences (Pangeni 2016).

These ODL-based higher education programmes, whether through TU (by establishing its Open and Distance Education Centre),Footnote 18 KU or NOU itself, have provided (in principle) access to higher education for those people who cannot attend conventional classes in face-to-face mode due to geographical, temporal, work-related, cultural and/or other constraints. Yet, with the exception of a few NOU programmes,Footnote 19 most of the ODL programmes offered by the aforementioned universities were in fact only delivering their service to a limited number of students. Challenges remained in terms of the educultural regime still requiring attendance in face-to-face classrooms for higher education degrees, the understanding of ODL as a secondary learning space, and the definition and understanding ODL policymaking, curriculum design and classroom delivery in and through the same monolithic framework of higher education.

However, with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, online teaching and learning – accelerated suddenly – has become an emerging practice in Nepalese higher education. Conventional face-to-face tutorials in HEIs have shifted to online teaching and learning in major urban cities. University colleges have enjoined their teachers and students to get connected through various internet-mediated online platforms. Of course, the students who have benefitted are those who live in urban spaces and have better access to digital equipment and internet have benefitted than their rural peers. However, the attempts of universities and colleges to run teaching and learning online does raise concerns in terms of equality, quality, uniformity and validity. While acknowledging the growing relevance of ODL in higher education in the face of society’s increased interaction with sophisticated means of communication and technology, there are serious drawbacks, violating the educational rights of disadvantaged students. The overarching question guiding this article is how the sudden and in many cases unplanned move of universities and colleges to ODL is reinforcing social inequalities in Nepal which already existed before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Research questions

Based on this overarching question, the research questions guiding this study were:

  • What policy gaps are Nepalese universities encountering in their move from face-to-face to online and distance teaching and learning?

  • How do infrastructural limitations challenge the effective implementation of online and distance teaching and learning in Nepalese universities?

  • How does a lack of strong pedagogic support reinforce social inequalities among students who come from socio-economically marginalised and peripheral backgrounds, and seek “a better life” in and through higher education?

Methods and analytical framework

As a lecturer at Tribhuvan University’s Research Centre for Educational Innovation and Development (CERID), my research interest lies in investigating progress in making higher education accessible to all Nepalese students, irrespective of their gender, their caste, their faith, their socio-economic background or their location. My purpose is to find out where and what their needs are, so that these can then be addressed effectively in terms of policies and strategies.

I began my fieldwork for this research into inequalities of access to and participation in ODL in December 2019 and continued until May 2020, i.e. after COVID-19 had triggered a complete closure of HEIs in Nepal.Footnote 20 Considering the use of “online archives and internet communications as [my] main field sit[e]” (Kozinets 2015, p. 3), I chose a netnographicFootnote 21 approach (Kozinets 2010; Bowler 2010; Kulavuz-Onal 2015) to data collection and analysis for this study. Among the multiple methods I used were: (1) online interviewing (O’Connor and Madge 2017) with policymakers, university executives, teachers and students to explore their perspectives and experience of online teaching; (2) online focus group discussions (Abrams and Gaiser 2017) with teachers and students of urban spaces using online platforms such as Zoom, Microsoft Teams, etc.; and (3) phone interviews (Block and Erskine 2012) with campus authorities, teachers and students of rural settings. Telephone interviews were necessary to reach the higher education population in rural areas where internet connectivity was poor. I complemented these three methods with (4) observation of online classes, policy dialogues and workshops, and a review of online materials such as texts, audio and video recordings, etc..

Interviews and focus group discussions

A total of 98 participants (37 female, 61 male),Footnote 22 who fall into four groups, were involved in the interview and focus group discussions I conducted for this study. The first group included 10 officials (vice-chancellors of two universities, rectors of two other universities, a member of Nepal’s University Grants Commission (UGC), and five university educators who were involved in higher education policymaking bodies including the High Level National Education Commission – 2019). I interviewed each of these officials online in order to explore higher education policies and practice, including any short-term policies developed to address higher education issues during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Another group of participants were 14 campus chiefs representing different constituent, public and private campuses affiliated to different Nepalese universities, including TU, and located in different ecological belts of the nation.Footnote 23 I interviewed these campus chiefs online in order to explore how these campuses were experiencing, and taking action locally to deal with, the challenge of maintaining courses during the pandemic.

A third group of participants were five groups of teachers (n=20), and six groups of students (n=23) representing, constituent, public and private campuses located at different geographical regions. With these participants, I conducted online focus group discussions (online FGDs) in order to explore how they were navigating the online learning space which was more prevalent in urban and internet-connected cities and towns during the emergence of COVID-19.

Finally, my fourth group of participants were 24 students and 7 teachers who lived in the remote areas of Nepal’s eastern hills, western hills and mountainous region. Since they had hardly any internet access, I conducted telephone interviews with this last group.

Online interviews and online group discussions lasted between half an hour and one hour, whereas telephone interviews lasted 10 to 15 minutes each. These semi-structured interviews and focus group discussions were held in Nepali. With participants’ permission, I recorded them and later transcribed and translated them into English.

Observation and review

Besides these interviewing methods, I used observation in diverse online spaces including online classrooms, policy dialogues and online workshops that used Zoom, GoogleMeet, Microsoft Teams, etc.Footnote 24 Using these online platforms enabled me to engage as a netnographer in observing multi-site online communities of policymakers, authorities, educators, teachers and students (Kulavuz-Onal and Vasquez 2013) and exploring multifarious perceptions, senses, experiences, communicative acts and interactions (Kozinets 2010) occurring in these virtual spaces. For example, I observed and participated myself in three online policy dialogues and meetings where university executives, including representatives of the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (MoEST), focused their discussion on how they could best handle issues of discontinued instruction during the COVID-19 pandemic. Equally, I observed three online workshops organised by two central departments of TU for both students and teaching staff, and two further online workshops for teachers of TU and Mid-Western University (MWU).

Obtaining consent from the concerned university departments, campuses and teachers, I also observed eleven online Master’s-level classes in Education, Management, Science, and Humanities and Social Sciences mostly taught at TU central departments and affiliated campuses located in different geographical regions, and also a few classes of MWU and Pokhara University (PU). I collected information regarding perception, experience, participation and action of university teachers and students.

Alongside, I collected a large number of online texts, audios, videos and communicative events concerning higher education issues during the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as relevant information disseminated through different media including newspapers, e-papers, online portals, TV channels, YouTube, Facebook, etc. (Kozinets 2015, p. 3). I investigated such internet-mediated data for an extended period of time, extracting key narratives and texts spoken or written by higher education stakeholders including executives, university teachers and students.

Analytical framework

Over time and as a whole, the body of data I had collected comprised interview transcripts, reflexive field notes generated through multi-site observation, internet-mediated textual, graphical, photographic, audio-visual, and screen-captured social media material particularly related to higher education and online teaching and learning in Nepal. As mentioned earlier, I opted for netnographic analysis (Kozinets et al. 2014) because it is best suited for evaluating the kind of qualitative data I had collected. Using ATLAS.ti,Footnote 25 data analysis, I proceeded through open coding, categorising and develo** themes (Corbin and Strauss 2015) in the light of netnographic sensibility (Reid and Duffy 2018).Footnote 26 My research questions guided me in categorising the codes into three categories: (1) policy; (2) infrastructural preparedness; and (3) experience in online teaching and learning.

The first category, policy, comprised existing higher education policies on online and distance teaching and learning; policy gaps; university perspectives on online instruction; and short-term policies to address instructional issues during COVID-19. The second category, infrastructural preparedness, comprised current infrastructure; curricular constraints; students’ and teachers’ ICT knowledge and access; students’ and teachers’ internet access, etc. Finally, the third category, experience in online teaching and learning, comprised university teachers’ and students’ attitude towards online instruction; challenges for attending online classes; socio-economic constraints; info-techno literacies; gender, class and caste characteristics and (dis)engagement in online classrooms; the presence/absence of a student support system, etc.

From the analysis as such, three intersecting themes emerged: (1) policy trajectories of online teaching and learning in higher education, (2) limitation of infrastructure required for the effective implementation of ODL, and (3) experience of teachers and students across macro- and micro- structures, in combination with a lack of strong student support. Amidst a complex intersectionality of these themes, my findings seem to confirm that social inequality is being reinforced through online and distance education in higher education in Nepal, especially in the context of short-term policies introduced in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Policy trajectories of online and distance teaching and learning

In the 15th Five-Year Development Plan (2019–2024) of the National Planning Commission (NPC), the Government of Nepal has formulated its strategy to improve and expand the Open and Distance Education System in order to provide access to higher education to people in remote settings, and those who are in need of alternative pathways to higher education (NPC 2020, p. 176). Similarly, the University Grant Commission (UCG) has formulated its strategies (8.1) to promote access to open and distance education retaining trustworthiness and competitiveness; and (8.2) to provide access to higher education to those from rural settings, women, Indigenous groups, Dalits, Madhesis, citizens with disabilities, and people from economically disadvantaged communities (UGC 2015, p. 7). In principle, these national policies and strategies are supposed to provide a framework for designing and implementing any kind of academic programme in universities and colleges. However, most of the educators I interviewed for my study remarked that the “same policy guideline” which was designed to frame conventional face-to-face teaching has been found to be an “inflexible guideline” for designing and implementing ODL at different universities. Such “a monolithic ritual” for framing higher education policies is seen as a key obstruction, resulting in the failure of expected development of ODL in Nepal. A teacher educator of a public university commented:

The two modes [face-to-face and online and distance] of teaching and learning do have the same process of curriculum designing, content selection and even methods of assessment; they differ only in the mode of classroom delivery, i.e. face-to-face and internet-mediated, otherwise there is no fundamental difference between them, and it may not lead to the proper development of ODL as expected. (Online interview)

ODL programmes were principally initiated to provide access to higher education to those who could not attend face-to-face classrooms. TU, KU and NOU have initiated ODL programmes in order to meet this objective. However, their programmes remain out of reach for many students who live in remote places and aspire to individual progress through access to and participation in higher education. As many of the educators among my respondents remarked, the aim behind initiating ODL seriously contrasts with policy enactments. Since policy implementation remains centralised, it still defies the autonomy and decentralisation of the affiliated colleges and institutions in implementing their localised policies and programmes in a manner which is adjusted to the needs of the student communities they serve. This is the true cause behind universities’ inability to run ODL courses with a realistic potential to reach the targeted population during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Theoretically, the Second Higher Education Project (2007–2014) and the Nepal Higher Education Reform Project (2016–2020) were/are supposed to promote decentralisation and autonomy of university campuses/colleges across the nation. However, the centrally lavished policies based on WB-funded Higher Education projects, including the current Higher Education Reforms Project (HERP), are still prominently decisive in all ways of regulating the academic programmes, thus overriding national reform projects and strategic guidelines. Most of the teachers I interviewed sensed this as a crucial challenge for motivating and engaging local actors in policy formulation and implementation. A teacher educator of a public university remarked,

The lack of a participatory approach in higher education policy formulation has resulted in a weak institutionalisation of the policy terms, which has in turn pushed universities and local colleges into not being fully prepared for handling the effects of the current COVID-19 pandemic through ODL programmes. (Online interview)

My analysis of interviews and online interactions of university executives, policymakers, campus chiefs, university teachers and students revealed that the need for ODL increased remarkably with the temporary closure of HEIs for an indefinite period of time. With the ongoing pandemic in mind, TU and KU, as well as some other universities, initiated transitional policies for continuing teaching and learning through online means. These universities urged their affiliated campuses/colleges to initiate online teaching and learning using diverse online platforms. However, this sudden shift to online tutoring was and continues to be limited to urban areas. Large numbers of university teachers and students, particularly those living in rural villages, were and continue to be disconnected from learning.

Infrastructural limitations

David Bloom and Henry Rosovsky argue that under the influence of current globalisation changes, most of the develo** nations have become buffer zones of powerful forces including democratisation, rapid demographic change, knowledge and information, and technological revolutions (Bloom and Rosovsky 2007, p. 444). Under the influence of these forces, higher education has become a “global commodity” within and across nations (Naidoo 2007). Access to higher education has become a public demand in nations like Nepal, which has accommodated a tremendous expansion of HEIs within the space of only a few decades, either through establishing new universities or through the affiliation of mushrooming public and private colleges with pre-existing universities (Bista et al. 2019; Bhatta 2015). However, most of these institutions seriously lack the infrastructure required to operate effectively. Underfinancing is crucially affecting not only the infrastructural development of Nepalese HEIs but also the quality of teaching, learning and research they are delivering (Bhatta 2015). My respondents, particularly the campus chiefs and teachers of constituent and affiliated campuses, explained how their institutions lacked basic facilities such as a proper and reliable supply of electricity, internet connectivity, access to an e-library, and ICT laboratories for teachers and students. Most of the participant campus chiefs and teachers of campuses/colleges in rural settings reported that the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic had disconnected them from the continuation of teaching and learning activities. A chief of a TU-affiliated campus located in Nepal’s eastern hills region explained the condition of infrastructural limitation in these terms:

It is really difficult for us to run online classes, we face unstable electricity and “almost no” internet connectivity; moreover, most of our students do not have laptops and smartphones since they are mostly from economically disadvantaged communities. Since the lockdown we and our students are completely disconnected from formal teaching and learning. (Phone interview)

Similarly, another campus chief working at an affiliated college of MWU explained:

Yes, it may be a fashion in the urban areas where there is a good internet access, no power-cuts at all, and for those who have digital devices, but not for us. Truly speaking, for us, it seems like “äkäshko phal änkha tari mar” [if the sky falls, we will catch the larks] because we don’t have internet access, electricity is hardly available and hardly any of our students have computers or smartphones. (Online FGD)

By contrast, university teachers and students from urban areas often explained how they experienced “the new learning and sharing platform in this digitalised world”. Many of them reported how they had benefitted from diverse online classes and e-conferences through Zoom and Microsoft Teams. However, many other students – particularly those aspiring to and navigating higher education from geographically remote locations or economically marginalised communities – reported how they were facing “a complicated time” since they did not have personal computers or required digital devices or access to the internet, to an e-library or a virtual learning space.

Experiencing online teaching and learning: the lack of strong student support

The success of ODL in higher education is measured through the relevance of instructional design and student learning, effective delivery of instructional information, adequate support provided to students, and high-quality participation and engagement of teachers and students in online classrooms (Bao 2020; Dumford and Miller 2018). However, in the presence of a strong policy gap, combined with a lack of required infrastructure at societal, institutional and individual levels, scoring well on these indicators is quite challenging in develo** nations such as Nepal.

Focusing on the last of these indicators, participation and engagement of teachers and students in online and distance teaching and learning, in the context of COVID-19, the analysis of my interviews, online classroom observations, and online discourses of teachers and students of different universities throughout Nepal highlighted the particular importance of three factors. These factors are (1) access; (2) quality participation; and (3) validity, All three are deeply intermingled both with macro structures (such as gender, poverty, geographical background, accessibility of physical infrastructures, etc.), and micro structures (such as for low proficiencies in English and technological skills, availability of internet, personal computers and construction of learning space, etc.).

In terms of “access”, most of the students studying at urban HEIs responded that they had some kind of regular access to online classes. In terms of “quality participation”, the online classroom conversations they participated in or on Facebook walls provided some explicit and implicit evidence of their attitude to and engagement in online learning. In terms of “validity”, they were provided with a platform to engage themselves in online forums, e-conferences and e-seminars, and were also given opportunities to explore content areas of their university courses. Nonetheless, the students studying science and technical subjects did not unreservedly feel that they had quality participation online, since this mode of delivery did not integrate a major component of their course, namely the heavy lab work they were required to do which could only be conducted in the university and college labs.

A significant number of responding students enrolled at less urban HEIs reported having only irregular access to online classes, enabling them to be only partially engaged, until they tried using internet data packages.Footnote 27 Yet, even this attempt resulted in far from high quality participation, and therefore very poor validity. Many other students had practically no access to online classes. They were entirely detached and disconnected either because they had no internet connection at all, or because they could not buy data packs on a regular basis. Others did not have computers and/or smart phones of their own in order to get connected. A male student studying for a Master’s degree in English education at a public college narrated his efforts and frustrations in trying to attend online classes as follows:

Just for getting connected to three online classes per week, I am living in a rented room [in a small town in a hill district in Western Nepal], I buy data packs and connect myself to the online class of my college. However, the internet access is not good, there are many disruptions, the video and sound of my teachers often get blurred and interrupted, it is boring and I think it [online tutoring] does not work for students like me. (Phone interview)

In a similar tone, a female student studying for a Master’s degree in social sciences at a public college located in Nepal’s far-western hills region explained her experience as follows:

For me, it [online class] is not possible; those who are in villages cannot attend this class. I do not have internet access … frequent power-cuts are another problem, I tried using a data pack, but it does not work either, and we don’t have money to buy data packs all the time … As we are women and now at home, we have some household duties as well. Those who are in cities may be enjoying online classes, but in our case it is not easy, and not practical. (Phone interview)

Another female student from a Dalit background who had recently joined a Master’s degree programme in the subject of sociology in a university campus in Kathmandu explicitly expressed the complexity of her challenges:

I would attend the class in the morning shift, and would work as a contract teacher in a private boarding school [in the afternoon]. Due to Corona health regulations, the school stopped operating and we were told that the school would no longer be able to pay [staff salaries]. I returned to my home village, which was challenging as it was already locked down, and I am not sure whether I will be able to come back to Kathmandu because it is difficult to find a job due to school closures. I cannot continue my studies if I don’t get a job, my parents cannot pay for my studies at this age. I have to be dependent on myself … our online class is not so systematic either; I encounter so many interruptions as I try to connect using the student data pack … it is quite complicated, these days I don’t attend anymore. (Online interview)

Like the participants cited above, many students noted how physical facilities were crucial in sha** their high-quality participation and engagement in online classes. Equally, responses confirmed that geographical background, economic circumstances, sociocultural construction of gendered space and household liabilities deeply intersect with the opportunity to participate in online classes. On top of challenges and disadvantages on these fronts, many students also responded that they could not engage themselves well in ODL because of their limited proficiencies in English and technological skills. One such student noted:

I am not good at English, nor at technology either, I know I could participate well if I had good English communication skills and manageable knowledge in modern technologies. Very often I get lost in my class, I can just connect to Zoom now. (Online FGD)

Campus chiefs and teachers in rural settings explained that students struggling with social, cultural, economic and familial constrictions tend to enrol in rural campuses, while students from richer and better backgrounds go to cities. A teacher working in a rural campus explained:

Students such as married women, Dalits and the economically marginalised, or those who have jobs and cannot go to the colleges of urban cities enrol here. (Phone interview)

In their diverse online debates and discussions on the issue of higher education access, teacher educators, university teachers and students often pointed out the absence of “a strong pedagogic support system” to students at societal, university and individual campus levels. In the absence of such support, students from economically marginalised sections of society are likely to feel disconnected and disengaged from learning during and post-COVID-19.

Discussion and conclusion

Ideally speaking, “higher education should actively seek to address social inequality and promote equity and social justice” (Mbati 2019, p. 254). It is expected to enable individuals to develop potential and capabilities by synergising national, societal and individual goals of education (Morley et al. 2009). However, far from this ideal consideration, social inequalities affecting choice, participation and engagement continue to exist in higher education based on class, race, gender, socio-economic, ethno-linguistic, and regional backgrounds (Witenstein and Palmer 2013; Morley et al. 2009; Bhatta et al. 2008).

The social inequalities experienced by the students who participated in the study presented above are not just evident in Nepalese higher education where formal education itself has long been a site of conflict (Pherali 2011), a matter of social exclusion (Devkota 2018; Valentin 2011), and a fractured space where Nepalese youth navigate their self amid instability and radical uncertainty (Madsen and Carney 2011). However, as argued by Regmi (2016, 2019), higher education policies constituted in Nepal in and after 1990s are predominantly supported by WB, and are more targeted towards buttressing neoliberal ideas of market, performance and competition. This, in turn, has resulted in higher education becoming increasingly unresponsive to the needs and aspirations of Nepalese communities and society. Amidst these arguments, the critical issue this article addresses is how pre-existing social inequalities and injustices have been reinforced through online teaching and learning in higher education in the age of COVID-19.

The above analysis of the narratives of higher education authorities, university teachers, students and all concerned revealed that most of the students from rural settings in Nepal got “disconnected” from formal learning during the time of the pandemic. Other students got “displaced” from the formal learning space after leaving for their remote home villages due to closure of their HEI. Still other students got “disengaged” from formal learning due to the lack of necessary physical facilities. By contrast, students living in urban environments had access to the internet, already owned the required digital devices, and also had English and technological skills, all of which enabled them to get connected to ODL offerings provided by the universities and departments.

Students lacking all these assets were left behind, experiencing online teaching and learning as unreachable for them: “äkäshko phal, änkha tari mar” [If the sky falls, we will catch the larks]. This study found most students from economically disadvantaged as well as socially and culturally marginalised social groups, including women and Dalits, and also those having low proficiencies in English and technological skills, to be disconnected and disengaged from online tutoring. In the course of the analysis described above, three intersecting issues emerged, namely (1) policy trajectories of ODL in higher education; (2) infrastructural limitation; and (3) the lack of strong student support particularly to those of marginalised and disadvantaged communities. All three factors have reinforced social inequality through the construction of a “digital divide” (Hill and Lawton 2018) among Nepalese HEIs, university teachers and students. While HEIs should focus “their efforts on technological solutions” to maintain continuity in teaching and learning (UNESCO-IESALC 2020, p. 15), it is equally important that transitional policies and implementation address “the right to higher education for all within a framework of equal opportunities and non-discrimination” (ibid., p. 7).

In conclusion, ODL is an emerging teaching and learning mode in higher education in Nepal. The outbreak of COVID-19 and subsequent lockdown have amplified and accelerated the demand for online teaching and learning. Nepalese universities and colleges have been forced to adopt it as the solution for the continuation of teaching and learning. HEIs located in urban environments have made some attempts to continue their programmes through online tutoring. Most students located in urban settings are at least navigating online and digital spaces of learning. However, students with social, cultural, geographical and economic constraints, including those with low proficiencies in English and technological skills, are experiencing disconnect and disengagement. Therefore, the crucial challenge for higher education in Nepal is to reduce social inequality and prevent its reinforcement through the uneven and unequal delivery of online teaching and learning. To combat this challenge, policies and strategies need to be formulated through participatory and engaged policymaking processes in order to encourage individual colleges to explore what solutions would best fit their respective contexts to enable continuation of their teaching and learning activities. Infrastructural development and strong pedagogic support to economically, culturally and socially marginalised students, in collaboration with government, university and community efforts, need to be harnessed effectively to prevent further reinforcement of the “digital divide” in Nepalese higher education.