For online teachers (and students), school is a work in progress – The Boston Globe

Posted: March 31, 2020 at 6:36 am

The day of the week is Thursday," she said, before quickly correcting herself: "I mean its Friday. Oh my God!

This was what first grade looked like on March 27, 2020, in this case at Naticks Bennett-Hemenway Elementary School. The picture varied by classroom, by age group, by school, and by community, as educators across Massachusetts tried to resume teaching, or at least restore connections with their students, whose routines have been upended by coronavirus-related school closures.

Even before Governor Charlie Baker ordered a three-week closure of schools statewide beginning March 17, some schools began improvising, reaching out to students online and scheduling class meetings or office hours. Full districts like Natick sprang into action, launching remote learning by Wednesday of Week Two.

Others, like Lexington, treated the initial shutdown like an extended snow day, holding off on assigning homework and asking parents to be patient while they developed longer-term plans in anticipation of a lengthy closure. Baker subsequently extended the shutdown to seven weeks.

The delay in instruction frustrated some high-achieving parents who expected more organized structure for their children at home and a bigger bang for their tax buck, noted Lexington Superintendent Julie Hackett.

A few days felt like months, years even, to people, Hackett told the Globe, pointing to the scoldings she was getting on social media and reiterating her response. Oh my gosh, today is Day 3. Can we all please breathe?

Its nobodys fault, Hackett added. People are just really reeling from a time when everything is unknown and theres so much pressure. My heart really goes out to families trying to figure it all out.

From the get-go, the state advised administrators that they could not operate virtual schools while their buildings were closed largely because federal law requires a free and appropriate public education be provided to all students with special needs, and that couldnt be done equitably from home. State officials also acknowledged that many students didnt have ready access to technology at home to be able to access course work, classes, or tests. As a result, teachers were told to give students enhancement opportunities and review, but not to assign new material or issue grades.

Right now, the directive is: no new content, said Edward Barry, who teaches biology and chemistry at Lexington High School and who has relished the collaboration among teachers brainstorming by video conference. Do a deeper dive into things youve already covered, approach things from a different angle. Doing lab work is difficult. Not everyone has flour in the kitchen to do kitchen chemistry."

Inequities are everywhere, educators are rediscovering. Even in relatively wealthy suburban school districts, many families dont have laptops or reliable home Internet connections.

In Natick, a Metro West town of 5,800 students, at least 40 students lacked Internet access at home. School officials distributed Internet hot spots to their families, and also started giving out 400 laptops, said Superintendent Anna Nolin. Still, that wont be enough.

Were a very digitally forward system and we just dont have a device for every child, she said.

Even in homes with technology, a student often has to compete for computer time with a parent who is working remotely or siblings who also have school work or meetings. Some teachers dont even have Internet access at home, Nolin said.

That was an eye-opener for me, she said. They cant afford to have it in their homes. When youre right out of school with a lot of college debt and trying to meet rent, thats real."

Meanwhile, at a time of uncertainty amid a pandemic, educators dont want children to feel pressured by academics. Students should explore learning for about half the length of the usual school day, Education Commissioner Jeffrey C. Riley recommended.

Added Hackett: We dont want students at the computer in the morning until the evening doing nothing but technology at a time when they really need to take good care of their health and social and emotional needs.

As the school year drags on, though, some districts may press to teach new material, Riley acknowledged last week. Its unclear how they will provide support to all students, and whether their legal obligations to do so will be waived. Students with special education needs often make up about 15 percent of a student body; their issues range from slight learning or reading problems to severe autism or physical differences that cant readily be accommodated online.

For instance, I cant tell you we are serving our mute, autistic, or blind students right now through this process, Nolin said.

She was disheartened by the advice from US Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, who suggested schools could easily swap to remote learning. Well, thats great, Nolin said, but you tell me how I provide physical therapy to a student this way.

Hackett, of Lexington, noted that some of her towns students with severe disabilities attend programs outside the district that have now closed their doors. Weve been trying to even think about ways to advocate for respite for families who need it, she said. Its a major challenge.

So, too, was ramping up remote learning for thousands of students in individual homes. The day before the launch was so hectic in Natick that Nolin could compare it to only one prior school day: 9/11.

This was a second to that," said Nolin. "Families, kids, everybody was freaking out about what it means to do online interaction with each other.

She cited concerns not only about the logistics of using technology, but about privacy and etiquette, as parents, teachers, and students entered one anothers homes virtually.

Theres so many pieces to it. Youre chatting in to peoples homes. Youre watching teachers do their work," she said.

On her video chat with 20 first-graders, Lyons got a surprising amount accomplished. The students shared a song and traded examples of kind things they had done for others. (One girl said shed helped a sister with slippery hands open the bathroom door. Another helped her younger brother get more Goldfish crackers for breakfast.) At Lyonss prompting, they described the homework they had been doing. One girl displayed the math problems shed done at her fathers direction, then did a little victory dance. A boy described a review hed written of a movie.

They discussed the elements of fairy tales, which they were encouraged to write this week. They live happily ever after, one girl offered.

Then Lyons read her class a Peter H. Reynolds picture book called Ish, which conveyed a particularly poignant lesson for the moment: Work doesnt have to be perfect for you to be proud. Lyons called it pretty fitting because were in a classroom-ish. Were together-ish, right? But were making it work.

But as she read, Lyons spilled coffee near her computer. Friends, Im going to pause for a second, she said, telling the children to take their microphones off mute and talk among themselves while she got a towel.

In her absence, chaos reigned. Silly faces were made. A teddy bear was forced to dance. Someone growled.

She returned, called for muting, and silence was restored for the ending and the lesson: Whatever home learning they tried this weekend, they should share it, even if its not perfect, she said, because I bet theres a lot of great work in it.

Stephanie Ebbert can be reached at Stephanie.Ebbert@globe.com. Follow her on Twitter @StephanieEbbert

See the article here:

For online teachers (and students), school is a work in progress - The Boston Globe

Related Posts