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Guest Writer: Dr. Noor Ali, Principal, Al-Hamra Academy

Fall 2020 school reopening has been a tricky, tricky business. It has been a time of untold stress and unfathomable planning. It has required flexing of all our known boundaries and delving into the great uncertainty that only a pandemic could unleash.

From is this really a health crisis, to a rapid global escalation, COVID 19 forced school closures across the world. For many schools in the US, it meant going home one day in Spring and then not returning to close the year. It meant handling one detail at a time, and sometimes grappling the multiple that tumbled at you. It meant reinterpreting the requirement of testing, reevaluating the necessary standards, recreating assessment benchmarks.

It also meant understanding the systemic inequities that exist in society and realizing the role schools play in the health, nutrition, and economy of a nation. It brought with it a new appreciation of how much work goes into teaching, counseling, and managing schools. It made us ponder on what it means to be an essential worker. Parents witnessed what goes into managing a room full of students and the intrinsic role that motivation, engagement, behavior,  and socialization play in learning.

Teachers across the nation flexed their creative muscles to prep drive-thru rallies, drive-in graduations, surprise visits to their students. They returned to empty classrooms, left messages of love for their students in windowpanes, and navigated Zooming. For many, the technology integration was like a rapid crash course, a brutal boot camp, a forced initiation where they had to bring their vulnerability to the table. It meant leading a class without the confidence decades of teaching may have given. It meant being a newbie teacher again.

[bctt tweet=”Fall reopening meant reevaluating how everything needed to be done to plan a safe return for students to school, and no matter which way you cut it, it is not the norm.” username=””]

Fall reopening meant reevaluating how everything needed to be done to plan a safe return for students to school, and no matter which way you cut it, it is not the norm. As we hustle and strive for normalcy it is hard to remember that bit.

Everything is hard.

The Pains of Remote Learning

For those places that went remote only, the struggle of engagement is real. It means teachers sitting behind a screen and teaching blank screens. If your school required cameras to be on, you had to work around issues of privacy and now have to remind your students to turn their videos on. If you are teaching from home, the hardship is in not being in your known workspace, in navigating your own children’s learning schedule if they are at home with you.

If you are teaching in an empty classroom, it feels alienating, it still feels odd not having students, and you wonder if the administration trusts you. Side note: administration trusts you, they gain nothing from you being in school, they are providing you the necessary infrastructure to deliver the lessons, have resources, and the like.

If you are live remote teaching, the glare of the screen, the need to sit for so long is all difficult. If you are remote teaching asynchronously, it’s not easy either because it means creating lessons, crafting videos, assessing from a distance, having office hours that still just doesn’t replicate daily physically present learning. Schools, unfortunately, would have to go remote if they didn’t have the means to create equitable and safe face to face learning environments. Schools may still have to go remote if the surge commands us.

The Pains of In-Person Learning

If you are teaching in-person the biggest worry is the one for the risk of exposure to the virus. You wonder about the cleaning protocols, ventilation, disinfecting, keeping the masks or face shields on, giving adequate mask breaks, wiping the sneeze guards, desks, and chairs, and having students maintain a 6-foot distance Your hands feel dry and you need to sanitize and moisturize them constantly; your mouth feels dry. Your evening online shopping searches include best masks, face braces to place under masks, best lip balm, and you worry about keeping the lid of your water bottle clean.

If your students are on a hybrid schedule, you struggle with seeing them only so many days. Their work is prone to getting lost between home and school due to the gap in the face to face attendance.

If your hybrid class is asynchronous you struggle with making lessons for in-person students for half your grade and the other half being remote. You make videos and lessons that can stand alone, be done with minimal supervision, and still be meaningful. When you do see the students in person you have the task at hand of reviewing the non-in-person days’ work and playing catch-up. Transitions are a nightmarish reality in the hybrid situation. The pacing of your lesson has slowed down and you are often having to double teach in an asynchronous setting.

If your students are hybrid but synchronous via live stream you are having to navigating teaching two sets of students in two geographical settings. Questions abound about what mic works best, do I need speakers for the whole class to listen to those online, are wireless mics any good, and not overly expensive, how can I avoid tripping over the wires, how do I use a document projector and screen share, how do I share a video and make sure everybody can hear it, how do I place my laptop so I can remain engaged, do I need two screens and the list goes on.

Whichever way you cut it, there is no perfect solution given the circumstances and the financial, infrastructural, and logistical constraints that abound in both public and non-public schools.

Yes, this is not easy. But, please remind yourself that a year like this is not about replicating the norm, it is not about holding yourself to the same expectations you have of yourself in any other year. Your lessons may have become less creative, but you have shown up for the future- and that is what matters.

School

 

 

Dr. Noor Ali

Principal, Al-Hamra Academy

Assistant Professor, Worcester State University

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