Sunday, July 19, 2020

Be the Teacher Students Need Today


Be the teacher your students need today. 


As I repeat that mantra in my mind, it seems so simple and empowering, and yet, as I turn on the news or read social media feeds, it feels like the idea of what our students need today is planted on shifting sand. Our country and the world are full of so much uncertainty and political unrest that it is easy to lose sight of what our schools need to stay safe and begin again. I am scared - many of us are. Unfortunately, I am most afraid of adults who have stopped taking thorough precautions and adhering to CDC guidelines, but I digress. 


Coping with and attempting to quell these fears, I take a page from Disney's Frozen 2 and focus on doing the next right thing. This summer, I have spent a significant amount of time reflecting on how to support teachers. They will inevitably be thrown into an impossible situation of teaching in a hybrid setting with a looming threat of becoming sick or exposing others to COVID-19. Ultimately, teachers need to be ready to be everything and anything for their students at a moment's notice. The schedules, general classroom practices, and expectations will shift drastically from week to week. So I return to the question that weighs on teachers' hearts right now: How do we prepare to be the teacher our students need? 


We have to prepare for the worst but be ready for the best. 


As I help teachers in my district and those in neighboring districts this summer, my advice has been to plan mentally for a semester of full remote learning. While I think we will oscillate in between hybrid and remote learning for much of the fall, preparing for remote learning will make every face-to-face encounter a bonus. Adjusting lesson plans from remote to face-to-face is much easier than the other way around. Also, even if we are in the classroom, typical practices such as sharing Chromebooks, grouping and rotating seats, helping students over their shoulders, and circulating the room have to change. 


Now more than ever, it is more important and appropriate to stop a lesson or change a plan to address social-emotional learning. Our students have learned more about life in the last few months than any of us realize. While they need to get caught up on skills and content, they have grown and changed. They need guidance and support, and they need opportunities to process the collective experience that we have encountered. Providing them with that outlet will allow them to make room in their minds for the course content that we hope to share with them this year. We can and need to help them become ready to learn. The best way we can be the teachers our students need today is to remind ourselves that we don't have stress about content. We can permit ourselves to change course! 


Every synchronous moment counts. 


When planning for this upcoming semester, consider what absolutely needs to be synchronous and what can be adapted and taught remotely or asynchronously. Prioritize direct instruction lessons and more challenging content. Again, it is okay to alter previous lesson plans from the years we had the opportunity to teach face-to-face every day. This year is different; we are in a new normal. Front-loading an entire unit with direct instruction may ensure that students receive critical skills that they will need to be successful for several weeks. When we teach that meaningful content, though, don't forget to stop for social-emotional learning again. What we think is essential is often more expendable than we realize. 


Again, do not shy away from social-emotional learning and community building. 


While we are all in the same boat in navigating a global pandemic, we are fighting drastically different battles. Some people live in fear of preexisting conditions; some have struggled with unemployment or loss of income. Others face depression, anxiety, or other social-emotional related difficulties. Personally, our household has been under extreme lockdown because we have a child with Cystic Fibrosis, a lung disease that also impacts all vital organs and his digestion. My son has remained relatively healthy to this point in his life, but his disease classifies him as terminally ill. While I have all the faith in the world that he will live a full and meaningful life, my family has to be incredibly cautious because when he contracts even a mild cold, he will most likely become very ill. A common cold or stomach bug results in a round of antibiotics and even hospitalization. We've been there; I don't want to be back anytime soon. My solution to keep him safe is to move out of my house, and I am fortunate enough to have several options of places to go and that my son can remain at home with my husband. This situation is my battle, and I fully acknowledge that we all have different struggles related to this impossible situation. We need to remember to recognize our students' feelings and empathize with each other. Regardless of the subjects we teach, we should make room for teaching empathy and giving our students space to cope with the storms they face. Even older students look to us to guide them through difficult situations. How we handle our struggles and our fears can help them process their own feelings and cope. 


Try something new every week. 


As we mentor, coach, guide, and teach students in person, online, and everything in between, we may find that traditional instructional practices are not as effective as they have been in the past. This coming school year, we mustn't be afraid to try something new. We may need to extend out of our comfort zones and incorporate new tech tools or strategies. Now is the time to get creative, and if a lesson fails, it is okay! We can permit ourselves to learn with the students as we use new tools or assign new projects to our students. With all the stress and challenges that are sure to come this fall, we do not need to reinvent the wheel entirely, but we can try one new strategy a week. We may find new instructional practices that make our classrooms better in any situation. 


Give yourself grace. 


Even if you weren't the perfect hybrid, remote, pandemic teacher this past spring, remember that you still made a difference in someone's life. You were still there for your students, and your efforts mattered. The personal videos, supportive emails, and cards that you delivered to your students meant something to them, even if they were not able to verbalize their gratitude. Thank you for what you have done for your students and for what you will continue to do. No matter what happens as we return to so much uncertainty, we will continue to love our students, teach them essential content, and inspire them to be their best selves. Give yourself grace as we all muddle through each day. Remind yourself to be the teacher your students need today. While it might look different tomorrow, what you do makes a significant difference and will make our world a better place. 


Asynchronous PDs: If there's a topic that catches your eye, click through it! I'm sharing these optional PD experiences as an a la carte menu to help teachers feel ready for back-to-school. Anything to help!

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