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Just have the in-person kids log in to see the online version from within the classroom.
Edit: Finished reading. Looks like you’ve figured it out. 😉 (Yes, it’s a horrible solution.)
Great post, Giulietta! You explain the problems very well for those of us who aren’t educators. Hope things improve.
Wow, just shaking my head. And they had all summer – actually more than that – to work on how to handle this.
Ray Bradbury, call your office.
Thanks, Matt. That really is close to the root of it, isn’t it.
To cut to the conclusion, we’re witness today to a breakdown of the civilizational fringe. Competence has receded from the capillaries.
Here’s a different analogy for people in logistics: we’ve lost the last mile.
Ain’t technology grand?
Why not have one class for in-person instruction and another class for remote rather than trying to mix them?
Then you would need two teachers for each class, or one teacher doing twice as much work.
Private schools are in a tough position here, but what you are being asked to do is going to deliver substandard education by default.
I think the question assumed there are multiple rooms per grade. Most Catholic schools don’t have that many students. If there are two rooms per grade, they might be on different tracts.
Well we are a small school and with our schedules, it’s not quite feasible to do “double” periods.
Admin did change our schedules so teachers have to be at work at 7:45am and class starts at 9am. That period is a check-in time for remote students who have questions. I would suggest utilizing that time as you suggested- focus on remote students then and during reg class time, focus on in-person students. It just seems practical. However some kids might report to their parents that they feel ignored in the virtual classroom if teachers decide to do that. Ufff.
True. My biggest class is 7 total. 3 of them are remote so only 4 are in-class. It is small, but that was the main class I described in the post so it was a lot more running around than you can imagine.
They really think they hit the nail on the head. My principal is so proud of what they have done.
Okay. Didn’t understand that limitation. Schools I always went to were big with big classes.
Well yeah!
He bought stuff!
The school is very small- just 130 HS students- and admission numbers have been very low. The public schools nearby are terrific and high-achieving (even during remote) which compounded this need to make these promises.
These might help….
4 Pcs Reusable Clear Mouth Mask With Window Visible Expression
Take the picture already, I can’t hold my breath forever!
It’s a tougher logistical issue than I would expect someone with no experience to get done in less than a couple of months.
Thanks but I do imagine that fogging up immediately!
As stated above, this is a very hard time for private schools. The California principal for whom I work long-distance has been an effective leader through the shutdowns, keeping teachers, staff, and families rallied. But it takes an enormous amount of time and energy. I hope the concerns about enrollment and all the virus hoops to jump through (lots of paperwork to finally be allowed to open on campus) don’t end up being overwhelming to the point that it’s impossible to do anymore. It feels pretty stinkin’ unfair sometimes, that due to events beyond our control, our thriving, non-elite school faces a possibility of having to shut down (but we all hope not).
We aren’t doing the hybrid model . . . yet. I guess the arrangement we’ve made is that we will go to that for students who need to be at home for one reason or another. I do not know what the plans are to make this work (and not sure what our population of international students will/ are doing). I need to find out. I don’t think we’re using any special programs–perhaps a Google app. Maybe I’ll reply to this post once I find out, especially if it seems to work well.
I think that the first few days will be the hardest, and as you go on, you’ll work out the bugs and it will all become less frustrating. But wow, it would be tremendously frustrating to have, as you did, that important first day feel like it has been ruined.
Do you follow Dave Stuart? He has been encouraging for teachers in this mess. Another helpful one, whose posts are all on target, is Smart Classroom Management. SCM will inspire confidence for keeping high expectations for students, even during a pandemic. Teach Like a Champion comes in third, with posts that try to capture what is really most effective for teaching online. Here is Stuart’s “How to Train Your Will to Want to Teach Again.” I also like his promotions of “Catchphrases.” Here is his blog with the list of most popular 2020 articles. And Stuart’s “Two Rules of Resilience” is something we shared with our teachers a few weeks, it seems like, before we knew anything about the shutdown. Our teachers were sharing the concept with our students. And then it all happened, and the timeliness of that article played a role in the faculty’s perseverance.
Oh, I think the administration had a plan; just tell the teachers, “You work it out.”
Along with the regular loaded plate, our administration had their hands full all summer with Covid paperwork and online county health meetings, as well as nightly fielding of parent concerns via e-mail. Plus, even though parents were withdrawing their kids, there was a surge of interest at the same time, so that kept admin busy with campus tours, admissions testing, etc.
That said, I don’t think our administrator would have had the attitude of the principal in the OP. Our K-12 admin would have been all over a day of issues like that–especially proactively before it took place. Teachers are supported and heard. I apologize if that comes across obnoxious.
Yuck on trying to teach in person and remote simultaneously. Our local government school district required parents to choose either on-line or in-person. The on-line students (about 25%) were assigned to their own classes with teachers from throughout the district (not necessarily from the student’s home school). The district recognized that on-line and in-person requires different teaching methods.
The important thing in making decisions is to not ask for input from people who might ask difficult questions. It just slows down the decision-making process and makes it too inefficient.
If I could appoint myself Chief Queen Bee at your school:
Why not have the classroom videotaped, with no access of that presentation for the stay at home crowd until the next day? That way you can focus on the in person people with full attention. Then the next day, the at home crowd can watch the recorded video, and email whatever questions they happen to have. Those could be addressed at the beginning of the third day’s classroom presentations.
It’s not perfect, but it certainly would eliminate the problem of not being heard by the in home crowd due to the noise of the fans.
It is also possible that some of the at home crowd could email you short videos of themselves where they offer up a presentation or ask question on their videos to you. (A lot of young people are quite adept at making videos of themselves.)
That sounds like you have a remarkably competent group of people making decisions about the situation.
Congratualtions, as it certainly doesn’t seem to occur very often these days.
A big problem is that my admin hasn’t defined what hybrid means for us. Thus far I’m guessing admin thinks we teach everyone all together as a fully integrated class- it doesn’t matter “where” the student is.
You’re right though- the best thing to do would be to focus on the in-person students During class and then use the morning time for the remote students to ask questions one-on-one and go over things together. That I can manage. I just wonder whether this will be contradict the school’s perception of “hybrid” and lead to a torrent of angry parents and irritating conversations with my principal who will ask me in his usual fake-caring, utterly passive-aggressive way why I’m not doing my job.
You certainly did get all the competent people. But hell, I’m in Illinois. Competence here isn’t necessarily a prerequisite for running an organization of any size or scale.
All of the competent people left years ago.
Back when I lived in Illinois organizations were run by competent people. (I left in 1981.) Sad to hear it is following California into the massive Brain Dead Zombie Syndrome my state is so well known for.
California legislators are so massively brain dead that in the 1990’s, they allowed hospital admins to cut back on the number of licensed vocational nurses (LVN’s). “Nursing assistants can do their jobs just as well! Plus they will be cheaper.”
Of course it took the public about 6 years to realize that cutting a nursing staff back to bare bones and replacing 2/3rds of the nurses with people who had half the education was not a winning recipe for good health among hospital patients.
The public demanded the legislators do something to fix the situation. So for six months the state legislators agonized about what to do. They had ideas about exciting new titles for some type of interim nurse who would be something more than a nursing assistant but would not be a full fledged RN. No one could agree on which exciting new title should be used. Nor could they decide on what the college course work should be or how many units should be required.
Not once in all their many, many, m-a-n-y meetings did it ever occur to to them to say, “Well maybe we should just stipulate that LVN’s come back aboard to staff the hospital in the numbers we used to insist on.”
I never did figure out if all these squabbles went on as they all really were that stupid, or if they simply felt the public needed to see them all so hard at work over absolutely nothing, as a ploy for their re-election.
Around the same time, people started saying that term limits were a very good idea.
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