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Identity, Fatalism, and Recursive Time: A Structural and Philosophical Analysis of The Skull

Determinism, Fatalism, Identity, Narrative Structure, Philip K. Dick, Science Fiction, Self-Fulfilling Prophecy, Temporal Paradox, The Skull 0 comments

 

Determinism and self-fulfilling prophecy
AI-generated picture by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in April 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     It is always a rewarding experience to be surprised by thoughtful literary suggestions, particularly those that emerge unexpectedly through platforms such as the Kindle app by Amazon. As a reader drawn to dystopian narratives, especially those that provoke sustained reflection long after the final page, I find particular value in stories that linger intellectually and emotionally.

     The Skull by Philip K. Dick was one such discovery. Encountered after reading a story by Kurt Vonnegut, it immediately stood out for its conceptual depth and philosophical resonance. I must confess that, prior to this encounter, I had not read any work by Dick. However, this initial exposure has sparked a growing interest in exploring his ars literaria, particularly his treatment of identity, time, and reality.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


Identity, Fatalism, and Recursive Time: A Structural and Philosophical Analysis of The Skull

 

Abstract

This paper examines The Skull by Philip K. Dick through a comparative literary and philosophical lens, focusing on the interrelated themes of identity, fatalism, temporal paradox, and the self-fulfilling prophecy. By integrating structural analysis with theoretical perspectives from narrative theory, philosophy, and sociology, the study argues that the protagonist’s identity is not intrinsic but constructed through recursive temporal structures. The narrative’s broken sequence and cause–effect logic reinforce a deterministic framework in which agency is ultimately illusory. The temporal paradox at the heart of the story destabilizes linear causality, while the self-fulfilling prophecy underscores how belief systems generate their own historical validation. The analysis demonstrates that Dick’s narrative transforms a science fiction premise into a profound meditation on the limits of human autonomy and the recursive nature of time.

Keywords:

Identity, Fatalism, Temporal Paradox, Self-Fulfilling Prophecy, Narrative Structure, Determinism, Science Fiction, Philip K. Dick, The Skull

 

 

Resumen

Este trabajo analiza The Skull de Philip K. Dick a través de una perspectiva literaria y filosófica comparativa, centrándose en los temas interrelacionados de la identidad, el fatalismo, la paradoja temporal y la profecía autocumplida. Mediante la integración del análisis estructural con aportes de la teoría narrativa, la filosofía y la sociología, se sostiene que la identidad del protagonista no es intrínseca, sino construida a partir de estructuras temporales recursivas. La secuencia fragmentada de la narración y su lógica de causa y efecto refuerzan un marco determinista en el cual la agencia resulta ilusoria. La paradoja temporal que articula el relato desestabiliza la causalidad lineal, mientras que la profecía autocumplida evidencia cómo los sistemas de creencias generan su propia validación histórica. El análisis demuestra que la narrativa de Dick transforma una premisa de ciencia ficción en una profunda reflexión sobre los límites de la autonomía humana y la naturaleza recursiva del tiempo.

 

 

Resumo

Este trabalho analisa The Skull, de Philip K. Dick, a partir de uma perspectiva literária e filosófica comparativa, enfocando os temas inter-relacionados da identidade, do fatalismo, do paradoxo temporal e da profecia autorrealizável. Ao integrar a análise estrutural com contribuições da teoria narrativa, da filosofia e da sociologia, argumenta-se que a identidade do protagonista não é intrínseca, mas construída por meio de estruturas temporais recursivas. A sequência fragmentada da narrativa e sua lógica de causa e efeito reforçam um quadro determinista no qual a agência se revela ilusória. O paradoxo temporal no centro da história desestabiliza a causalidade linear, enquanto a profecia autorrealizável evidencia como sistemas de crença produzem sua própria validação histórica. A análise demonstra que a narrativa de Dick transforma uma premissa de ficção científica em uma reflexão profunda sobre os limites da autonomia humana e a natureza recursiva do tempo.

 


Introduction

The Skull by Philip K. Dick presents a compact yet philosophically dense narrative in which time travel becomes the mechanism for interrogating identity, causality, and inevitability. The story follows Conger, a prisoner sent back in time to assassinate a foundational religious figure whose teachings have reshaped the future. However, the narrative culminates in a paradoxical revelation: Conger himself is the Founder. This realization situates the story at the intersection of identity fragmentation, fatalism, temporal paradox, and the self-fulfilling prophecy.

Drawing on structural insights from Acuña Solano’s framework on plot organization (n.d.), this paper argues that The Skull employs a broken and cause–effect sequence to mirror its philosophical concerns. The narrative’s recursive design destabilizes linear temporality and constructs identity as an emergent product of temporal loops. Through engagement with scholars such as Umberto Eco, Paul Ricoeur, David Wittenberg, and Robert K. Merton, the paper demonstrates how Dick’s story transforms narrative structure into a philosophical argument about the impossibility of escaping one’s own causality.

Plot Structure and the Arrangement of Events

Using Acuña Solano’s framework (n.d.), The Skull can be classified as a broken/rearranged sequence with a strong cause–effect pattern. While the story appears initially linear, Conger is recruited, briefed, and sent to the past, the revelation of the skull as his own retroactively reorganizes the entire narrative.

 

·       Sequence of Events:

Broken/rearranged + cause/effect

 

·       Plot Actions:

Selective omission and compression

 

·       Conflict:

Individual vs. self and society vs. individual

 

·       Climax:

Epiphanic and recursive

This structure aligns with Tzvetan Todorov’s (1977) notion that narrative equilibrium is disrupted and reconstituted, though in Dick’s case, equilibrium is never truly restored; it is looped. The story’s climax is not a resolution but a recursive closure, where the ending recreates the beginning.

Gérard Genette’s (1980) concept of anachrony is particularly useful here: the story’s temporal dislocations force the reader to reinterpret earlier events in light of later revelations. The skull, introduced as an object of investigation, becomes the pivot around which narrative time collapses.

Identity and the Dissolution of the Self

Identity in The Skull is neither stable nor intrinsic; it is constructed through temporal displacement. Conger begins as a defined individual, a criminal, an operative, but gradually loses ontological certainty as he moves through time. His ultimate recognition that he is the Founder reveals identity as retroactively constructed.

Paul Ricoeur’s theory of narrative identity is central to understanding this transformation. Ricoeur (1984) argues that identity emerges through emplotment, the organization of events into a coherent story. In The Skull, however, emplotment is paradoxical: Conger’s identity is only coherent when viewed from the outside, as a completed loop. From within, it is fragmented and unknowable.

Similarly, Jacques Lacan’s (1977) concept of the split subject illuminates Conger’s experience. The skull functions as a symbolic “mirror,” reflecting a self that Conger cannot initially recognize. His identity is externalized, objectified, and ultimately imposed upon him.

Scholars of Dick, such as Christopher Palmer (2003), have noted that Dick’s protagonists often experience “ontological insecurity,” where the boundary between self and other collapses. Conger embodies this instability: he is both assassin and victim, origin and consequence.

Fatalism and the Illusion of Agency

Fatalism permeates the narrative structure of The Skull. Conger believes he has been granted agency, the opportunity to alter history, but this belief is revealed as fully illusory. His actions do not change the future; they produce it. David Wittenberg (2013) argues that time travel narratives often reveal the “impossibility of altering the past without fulfilling it.” This is precisely the case in Dick’s story: Conger’s mission is a closed loop disguised as a choice, eliminate himself.

From a philosophical perspective, this “impossibility of altering the past” aligns with deterministic models of time, where all events are fixed within a temporal continuum. Henri Bergson’s (1946) distinction between lived time (durée) and mechanistic time is useful here. Conger experiences time as open and dynamic, yet the narrative structure reveals it to be rigid and predetermined. Moreover, Fredric Jameson (2005) interprets Dick’s work as reflecting late capitalist anxieties about control and agency. In this reading, Conger’s lack of freedom mirrors broader concerns about individuals trapped within systems, whether technological, political, or temporal.

Temporal Paradox and Recursive Causality

At the heart of The Skull lies a bootstrap paradox, a causal loop in which an event is both cause and effect of itself. The skull exists without a clear origin; it is passed through time, detached from linear causality. David Lewis (1976) addresses such paradoxes by arguing that they are logically consistent within certain models of time travel, even if they defy intuitive causation. In Dick’s story, the paradox is not merely a logical puzzle but a narrative engine that drives the story’s plot.

Umberto Eco’s (1989) concept of the “open work” further clarifies the story’s structure. The narrative invites multiple interpretations, but all are constrained by the loop’s inevitability. The reader, like Conger, is caught in a hermeneutic cycle: understanding the ending requires reinterpreting the beginning. This recursive causality also destabilizes the notion of origin. The Founder’s teachings do not emerge from a singular moment of inspiration; they are the byproduct of a temporal loop. Thus, the story undermines traditional narratives of historical and religious genesis.

The Self-Fulfilling Prophecy and Myth Formation

The concept of the self-fulfilling prophecy, as articulated by Robert K. Merton (1948), is central to The Skull. Conger’s mission is based on a belief about the future, that eliminating the Founder will change history. However, this belief generates the very conditions that ensure its fulfillment. Conger’s death and subsequent mythologization transform him into the Founder. His actions, intended to prevent a religious movement, instead established it. This dynamic reflects how belief systems create their own validation.

From a literary perspective, this aligns with Northrop Frye’s (1957) theory of myth, where narratives gain authority through repetition and structural coherence. The Founder’s story becomes mythic precisely because it is embedded in a temporal loop that cannot be disrupted. Additionally, Mircea Eliade’s (1959) concept of sacred time is relevant. Conger’s repeated death and reappearance echo ritualistic cycles, transforming historical events into mythic archetypes. The temporal paradox thus acquires a धार्मिक (pronounced dhārmik, meaning “religious, pious, righteous) dimension, where time is not linear but cyclical and sacred.

Conflict and Epiphany

According to Acuña Solano’s framework (n.d.), the primary conflict in The Skull is individual vs. self, with secondary elements of society vs. individual. Conger’s struggle is not merely external (to complete his mission) but internal (to understand his identity). The story culminates in an epiphany, a sudden realization that reconfigures all prior events. However, unlike traditional epiphanies that lead to resolution, this moment produces ontological collapse. Conger’s understanding does not liberate him; it binds him more tightly to his fate.

As James Joyce (1916) conceptualized, an epiphany is a moment of sudden spiritual or intellectual revelation; however, in Dick’s narrative, revelation is inseparable from entrapment. Knowledge does not grant agency but instead confirms inevitability.

Interrelatedness of Plot and Theme

Acuña’s (n.d.) framework emphasizes the importance of coherence between plot and theme (). In The Skull, this interrelatedness is absolute:

 

·       The broken structure reflects fragmented identity.

 

·       The cause–effect loop embodies fatalism.

 

·       The recursive climax enacts the temporal paradox.

 

·       The epiphany reveals the self-fulfilling prophecy.

All narrative elements converge to reinforce the central philosophical argument: that identity and history are products of recursive temporal structures beyond individual control.

Conclusion

The Skull stands as an early yet profound exploration of themes that would define Philip K. Dick’s oeuvre. Through its innovative narrative structure and philosophical depth, the story interrogates the nature of identity, the limits of agency, and the paradoxes of time.

By integrating structural analysis with philosophical and sociological theory, this paper has shown that Conger’s journey is not merely a science fiction premise but a meditation on the human condition. Identity emerges as unstable, agency as illusory, and time as recursively self-determining. The self-fulfilling prophecy at the heart of the narrative reveals a world in which individuals are both creators and prisoners of their own histories.

San José, Costa Rica

Sunday, April 12, 2026

 


📚 References

Acuña, J. (n.d.). The arrangement of events in a story [Unpublished instructional framework].

Bergson, H. (1946). Creative evolution. Modern Library. http://www.randomhousebooks.com

Dick, P. K. (1952). The Skull. If: Worlds of Science Fiction. http://www.gutenberg.org

Eco, U. (1989). The open work. Harvard University Press. http://www.hup.harvard.edu

Eliade, M. (1959). The sacred and the profane. Harcourt. http://www.hup.harvard.edu

Frye, N. (1957). Anatomy of criticism. Princeton University Press. http://press.princeton.edu

Genette, G. (1980). Narrative discourse. Cornell University Press. http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu

Jameson, F. (2005). Archaeologies of the future. Verso. http://www.versobooks.com

Joyce, J. (1916/2006). A portrait of the artist as a young man. Penguin Books. http://www.penguinrandomhouse.com

Lacan, J. (1977). Écrits. Norton. http://www.wwnorton.com

Lewis, D. (1976). The paradoxes of time travel. American Philosophical Quarterly, 13(2), 145–152. http://www.jstor.org

Merton, R. K. (1948). The self-fulfilling prophecy. The Antioch Review, 8(2), 193–210. http://www.jstor.org

Palmer, C. (2003). Philip K. Dick: Exhilaration and terror of the postmodern. Liverpool University Press. http://www.liverpooluniversitypress.co.uk

Ricoeur, P. (1984). Time and narrative (Vol. 1). University of Chicago Press. http://press.uchicago.edu

Todorov, T. (1977). The poetics of prose. Cornell University Press. http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu

Wittenberg, D. (2013). Time travel: The popular philosophy of narrative. Fordham University Press. http://www.fordhampress.com


Identity, Fatalism, And the Temporal Paradox in Philip K. Dick’s the Skull by Jonathan Acuña



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Sunday, April 12, 2026


Location: San José Province, Guadalupe, Costa Rica

From Boards to Screens: Reconfiguring Classroom Resources and Interaction in Online Adult ELT

Adult Learning, British Council, Digital Resources, ELT, Instructional Design, Instructional DesignBritish Council, Interaction Patterns, online teaching, Reflective Practice 0 comments

 

Elements of pedagogy and technology
AI-generated illustration by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano in April 2026

Introductory Note to the Reader

     As I often share with peers and colleagues, teaching face to face is not the same as teaching online, at least not in the sense of being a truly trained, certified virtual instructor. The global shift toward emergency remote teaching compelled many language educators to migrate abruptly to digital platforms; however, this transition alone does not suffice to transform a teacher into an online practitioner. The distinction is not merely technical but pedagogical, methodological, and, ultimately, epistemological.

     My own trajectory reflects this distinction. It took nearly two years of formal preparation and certification through Laureate Education before I was entrusted with teaching in fully online environments, first as an asynchronous instructor and later as a synchronous language teacher. This process was not incidental; rather, it was formative. It required a re-conceptualization of teaching presence, interaction, and resource management in ways that diverge significantly from traditional classroom practices.

     I deem it important to foreground this experience because it has shaped me into a reflective online teaching practitioner, one who is not only aware of the affordances and constraints of digital instruction but also committed to sharing the insights that have emerged from years of practice. Teaching online, particularly with young adults and working professionals, demands more than adaptation; it requires a deliberate reconfiguration of pedagogical assumptions so that learning can truly take shape and substance in virtual spaces.

     Now, as I engage with professional development courses offered by the British Council, I find that these experiences compel me to articulate, almost to set in black and white, the nuanced ways in which teaching unfolds differently in online contexts. While many of the principles presented in such courses are grounded in face-to-face or school-based settings, they nonetheless serve as a valuable springboard for reflection. In revisiting them through the lens of adult online education, I aim to bridge the gap between established pedagogical frameworks and the lived realities of virtual instruction.

Jonathan Acuña Solano


From Boards to Screens: Reconfiguring Classroom Resources and Interaction in Online Adult ELT

 

Abstract

This essay examines the reconfiguration of classroom resources and interaction patterns in online English Language Teaching (ELT) contexts for young adult and adult learners. Drawing on reflections from professional development courses by the British Council and the author’s experience as a certified online instructor through Laureate Education, the paper argues that effective online teaching requires more than the adaptation of face-to-face methodologies. Instead, it involves constructing an assemblage of digital tools, pedagogical strategies, and interactional designs that respond to the specific needs of adult learners. Supported by theoretical perspectives from educational technology and andragogy, the discussion highlights the importance of intentional resource planning, teaching presence, and reflective practice in ensuring meaningful learning experiences in virtual environments.

Key Words:

British Council, Online Teaching, Adult Learning, ELT, Digital Resources, Interaction Patterns, Reflective Practice, Instructional Design

 

 

Resumen

Este ensayo examina la reconfiguración de los recursos didácticos y los patrones de interacción en contextos de enseñanza del inglés en línea dirigidos a jóvenes adultos y adultos. A partir de reflexiones derivadas de cursos de desarrollo profesional del British Council y de la experiencia del autor como instructor certificado en línea por Laureate Education, se argumenta que la enseñanza virtual efectiva requiere más que la simple adaptación de metodologías presenciales. En su lugar, implica la construcción de un conjunto articulado de herramientas digitales, estrategias pedagógicas y diseños de interacción que respondan a las necesidades específicas de los aprendientes adultos. Con el respaldo de perspectivas teóricas de la tecnología educativa y la andragogía, el ensayo resalta la importancia de la planificación intencional de recursos, la presencia docente y la práctica reflexiva para garantizar experiencias de aprendizaje significativas en entornos virtuales.

 

 

Resumo

Este ensaio examina a reconfiguração dos recursos de ensino e dos padrões de interação em contextos de ensino de inglês online voltados para jovens adultos e adultos. Com base em reflexões provenientes de cursos de desenvolvimento profissional do British Council e na experiência do autor como instrutor online certificado pela Laureate Education, argumenta-se que o ensino virtual eficaz exige mais do que a adaptação de metodologias presenciais. Em vez disso, envolve a construção de um conjunto integrado de ferramentas digitais, estratégias pedagógicas e desenhos interacionais que atendam às necessidades específicas dos aprendizes adultos. Apoiado por perspectivas teóricas da tecnologia educacional e da andragogia, o texto destaca a importância do planejamento intencional de recursos, da presença docente e da prática reflexiva para assegurar experiências de aprendizagem significativas em ambientes virtuais.

 



Introduction

The organization of classroom resources has long been considered a cornerstone of effective teaching practice no matter what the subject is being taught. Within frameworks such as the British Council’s TeachingEnglish program, language teachers are encouraged to reflect critically on how materials, space, and interaction patterns shape learning outcomes. However, many of these frameworks implicitly assume a physical classroom populated by young learners. This assumption risks producing what might be deemed a partial pedagogical vision, one that, for instructors of adult learners in online environments, threatens to tell only of shadows and forebodings rather than offering practical, adaptable guidance.

This essay argues that while traditional resource-management principles remain relevant, they must be reconceptualized as an assemblage of digital affordances, interactional strategies, and teacher positioning in virtual spaces. Drawing on course reflections by Prof. Jonathan Acuña Solano, as well as scholarship in language pedagogy and educational technology, this paper explores how resources in online adult English Language Teaching (ELT) contexts take shape and substance in ways that differ significantly from their physical counterparts.

Rethinking Classroom Resources in the Digital Age

According to the British Council (n.d.), “one other important aspect of your lesson is what resources you have.” Traditionally, such resources include chalkboards, flashcards, paper, and physical seating arrangements. Yet, in a fully online environment, these elements are either absent or radically transformed. As I have repeatedly noted, “I can type directly on my PowerPoint by using the annotate feature in Zoom or Microsoft Teams… I often use Word or Notepad” (Acuña Solano, 2026). This reflection highlights a fundamental shift: the “board” is no longer a static object but a dynamic interface. In this sense, the digital screen becomes a blazing torch, illuminating content in real time, adaptable, and interactive.

Scholars such as Gavin Dudeney and Nicky Hockly argue that digital tools are not mere substitutes for traditional resources but transformative agents that reshape pedagogy itself. They assert that technology “enables new forms of interaction and collaboration that are not possible in face-to-face classrooms” (Dudeney & Hockly, 2012). Thus, what might initially appear as a bleak island, a classroom devoid of physical materials, can, in fact, become a richly networked learning environment.

The Board Reimagined: From Surface to Interface

The British Council’s (n.d.) course emphasizes that “boards are very versatile… there’s no technology, so they always work.” While this claim holds true in physical settings, it does not translate so seamlessly into online teaching. Instead, the digital “board” introduces both “opportunities” to exploit and “constraints” to be overcome. As I have often reflected on this matter: “Whenever it is necessary, I can type on my screen for my students to see” (Acuña Solano, 2026). This practice underscores a crucial pedagogical shift: visibility is no longer guaranteed. Teachers must consciously manage screensharing, font size, and layout to ensure accessibility.

From a mere theoretical standpoint, Lev Vygotsky’s concept of mediation becomes particularly relevant in this online teaching context. The digital board acts as a mediational tool that structures student interaction and learner cognition. However, unlike a physical board, it requires deliberate orchestration to avoid cognitive overload. Poorly managed digital resources may lead to dire repercussions, including disengagement and fragmented attention. Moreover, the teacher’s physical positioning, once a key consideration (“Where did you stand when you wrote on the board?”), is now replaced by digital teacher and teaching presence. Eye contact, for instance, becomes a function of camera alignment rather than spatial orientation and positioning. In this way, teacher visibility must be reinterpreted as performative presence within the screen.

Interaction Patterns in Online Adult Learning

The British Council’s checklist shared among course content material emphasizes interaction patterns, grouping strategies, and classroom organization. While these elements remain essential, their implementation differs markedly in online contexts. Adult learners, particularly working professionals, bring distinct expectations and constraints. As Malcolm Knowles (1984) argues in his theory of andragogy, adult learners are self-directed and goal-oriented. Consequently, interaction patterns must be purposeful and efficient. Digital platforms such as Zoom or Microsoft Teams allow for breakout rooms, chat functions, and collaborative documents. These tools can be used to sway learner engagement positively, provided they are deployed strategically and purposefully.

However, without clear instructions, group activities may quickly devolve into confusion, a challenge acknowledged in the course checklist: “Did learners know what to do?” Based on my own reflections, studies on online teaching, and sharing of ideas with online colleagues, I have personally come to address this issue by emphasizing clarity and adaptability. The use of familiar tools like Word or Notepad ensures that learners are not overwhelmed by technological novelty. This aligns with Richard Mayer’s (2009) cognitive theory of multimedia learning, which cautions against extraneous cognitive load.

Resource Planning as Pedagogical Design

Effective resource management is not merely logistical; it is fundamentally pedagogical. The British Council’s (n.d.) checklist encourages teachers to consider interaction patterns, grouping, and resource selection. In online adult ELT, these considerations must be integrated into a coherent instructional design. Planning, therefore, becomes an act of constructing an assemblage of tools and strategies that support learning objectives. Each element, PowerPoint slides, shared documents, breakout rooms, must be aligned with pedagogical goals. Failure to do so may result in lessons that lack cohesion, leaving learners metaphorically stranded on a bleak island of disconnected activities.

Furthermore, digital environments demand contingency planning. Technical issues, such as platform instability, are not uncommon. As I have noted after working for several years in videoconferencing platforms, “Teams gives us headaches at times” (Acuña Solano, 2026). Such challenges necessitate flexibility and backup strategies, such as switching to simpler tools. In this context, the teacher’s role resembles that of a curator, carefully selecting and organizing resources to create meaningful learning experiences. This perspective is supported by Terry Anderson (2008), who emphasizes the importance of teaching presence in online learning environments.

From Material to Meaning: The Symbolic Dimension of Resources

Beyond their practical function, classroom resources carry symbolic significance. In traditional settings, objects like flashcards or boards serve as tangible anchors for learning. In online environments, these anchors must be reimagined. Digital tools, when used effectively, can take shape and substance as meaningful learning artefacts. For instance, a collaboratively edited document becomes not just a resource but a record of shared knowledge construction. This aligns with social constructivist principles, which emphasize the co-construction of meaning.

However, there is a risk that digital resources may become mere “fagots of firewood, assembled without purpose, ready to ignite confusion rather than clarity. To avoid this, teachers must ensure that each resource serves a clear instructional function within the lesson plan and classroom delivery.

Adult Learners and the Ethics of Resource Use

Teaching adults introduces ethical considerations that differ from those in primary or secondary education. Adult learners often invest significant amounts of time and financial resources in their own education. Consequently, inefficient or poorly planned lessons may have dire repercussions for learner motivation and retention. As Stephen Brookfield (2013) argues, effective adult teaching requires critical reflection and responsiveness to learner needs. Based on my own reflective practice, it exemplifies this approach, demonstrating a commitment to continuous improvement (Acuña Solano, 2026).

Moreover, adult learners are more likely to question pedagogical choices made by their instructor. Teachers must therefore be prepared to justify their use of resources and interaction patterns. This transparency fosters trust and enhances the learning experience for them.

Conclusion

The principles outlined in the British Council’s TeachingEnglish course provide a valuable foundation for understanding classroom resource management. However, when applied to online adult ELT contexts, these principles must be adapted and expanded.

This essay has argued that classroom resources in digital environments constitute an assemblage of technological tools, interactional strategies, and pedagogical intentions. Far from being a bleak island, the online classroom can become a dynamic and engaging space, provided that teachers approach resource management with intentionality and creativity.

I have also tried to use my personal online teaching reflections to illustrate how traditional concepts, such as the board, can be reimagined in digital terms. By integrating insights from educational theory and practice, teachers can transform their virtual classrooms into spaces where learning does not merely occur but flourishes.

Ultimately, effective resource management is not about the tools themselves but about how they are used to illuminate understanding, like a blazing torch guiding learners through the complexities of language acquisition, rather than leaving them to navigate a landscape of shadows and forebodings.

San José, Costa Rica

Saturday, April 11, 2026


 

📚 References

Acuña Solano, J. (2026). Personal reflections on TeachingEnglish: Organising the classroom course.

Anderson, T. (2008). The theory and practice of online learning. Athabasca University Press. http://www.aupress.ca

British Council. (n.d.). TeachingEnglish: Organising the classroom. https://open.teachingenglish.org.uk/Team/UserProgrammeDetails/699499?stepId=2

Brookfield, S. D. (2013). Powerful techniques for teaching adults. Jossey-Bass.

Dudeney, G., & Hockly, N. (2012). How to teach English with technology. Pearson.

Knowles, M. (1984). The adult learner: A neglected species. Gulf Publishing.

Mayer, R. E. (2009). Multimedia learning. Cambridge University Press.

Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind in society. Harvard University Press.


 

From Boards to Screens Reconfiguring Classroom Resources and Interaction in Online Adult ELT by Jonathan Acuña



Listen to the podcast version of this article!

If the Google Drive player doesn’t load, please refresh the page.
You can also listen in your favorite podcast app: simply copy the link below and paste it into your podcast app to enjoy a conversation about the ideas explored in this blog post.

https://podpod.me/rss/1worOGGkLrw1Z.rss




Saturday, April 11, 2026


Location: San José Province, Guadalupe, Costa Rica

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