Skip to main content

Love First


The thing about our closing schools and staying home is definitely a loss of social interaction face-to-face, a chance to sit beside our students to listen and provide feedback, but mostly to encourage. And classrooms which are communities of learners and learning are ones that focus on encouragement and support by teachers and students as well as continuous learning of content.

Classrooms and hallways are filled with conversation and even shenanigans, and each person from school misses that.

Yet, teachers have stepped up and provided lessons to meet the needs of students in different and new ways-- often with only a week's notice. We thank our teachers and staff for their steadfast dedication to their students and their learning.

Today, Kevin Hodgson was able to return to school to gather up the possessions of students left from those days in March. His reflection shows the effect of silent emptiness echoing the hallways and classrooms, a loss felt deep within each teacher's heart.

Take a look: Pandemic Poem from the Classroom: Broken Pencils

I wrote a response:

Those pencils.
So many.
All sizes.
Broken tips.
Just sharpened.
Blunt, ready to be.
Thoughts held in
a distant memory
Lost words
not erased,
just unwritten.

This post is so heartfelt; lost school hallway conversations — where are they now?

And so, I repeat from yesterday, this, about moving forward:

“Love first, design later.” — Maha Bali 



Update:

If you're a teacher looking for online resources, there are many out there now that do not require paying a company or person to show you how: find those who have already been teaching online for years. 

The important thing to remember is the heart of teaching starts with relationships. The learning comes with the pedagogy of teaching and learning, not the technology.

That said, the technology implemented from a pedagogical focus provides teachers and students with the how of learning remotely.

A few people who know a few things about remote learning:

Laura Gibbs: Online teacher using blogs as hub

Edublogs-- a platform for classrooms and blogging with excellent support

Michelle Pacansky-Brock
Hybrid Pedagogy -- a group of thoughtful educators
Sean Michael Morris
Larry Ferlazzo -- Classroom Teacher and Author -- Blogs on Edublogs platform
Scott McLeod-- former principal and teacher; leader in educational technology
Thomas C Murray
Jennifer Gonzalez: Former middle school and pre-service teacher 
The above resources discuss pedagogy and specific practices that encourage online learning and student agency and engagement. I've found blogging and Google Classroom to be most adaptable to pedagogy that promotes improved teaching and learning.  Here are resources on using the technology-- but remember, it's the pedagogy that makes the difference to learning.

Catlin Tucker -- classroom teacher and author
Leaders for Google Classroom:
Slidesmania by Paula from Uruguay




Go boldly and scatter seeds of kindness... Reflect curiosity and wonder... Live to make the world less difficult for each other. ~ George Eliot

Photo: by Sheri Edwards, from my school's hallway

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A Vision of Education

What is your vision for education? That is a question on everyone's minds these days, and the times require us to think differently. Many of us have been thinking and planning for these times for many years. Today, Eric Sheninger shared a post that linked to a 2013 quote of his on just these ideas -- what could education look like -- to be true learning experiences for all learners? What educational leadership is needed to guide these changes? The Vital Role of Digital Leadership in Transforming Education https://t.co/H98P9QVM0I #aussieEd #ukedchat #intled #globaled #globaledchat #edchatMENA #africaEd #edchatNZ pic.twitter.com/NbINiI5JbY — Eric Sheninger (@E_Sheninger) May 13, 2020 Among many ideas, he says this: Innovative learning spaces and environments : How will the environment and conditions under which kids learn change to more adequately reflect the reality of the world they live in? Remote learning has brought to the forefront the need to develop pe...

Curation, Art, Action

Shine a Light for Hope I've started a series of art illustrations to emphasize a hope I have that our country will join together as one again, as a United States of Americans-- where we are all treated equally. I recently read an article in The Guardian about art's impact on our world during difficult times. Hope is the precursor to change. Without it, no better world is possible.    ~  Feeling overwhelmed? How art can help in an emergency by Olivia Laing   The above illustration is about hope-- and shining light on the goodness of the world, to keep our vision for moving forward in these difficult times. My art is a small piece of hope for a better world. Last week, I shared a post on how I "curate" tweets and articles by emailing to a blog: Project: A Tweet Away Today, I found exactly what I needed for my new illustration on "building bridges." In the news again this week were more devastating problems with racism. I know we need to conn...

A Project: A Tweet Away

Summer 2020 Blog Fest Laura , our mentor in our journey about networked blogging and the benefits of blogging, suggests we start a project, for which she shares two of hers: Twitter Highlights : blog posts with interesting, annotated Twitter highlights, tagged with "Twitter Highlights" -- check the bottom of a post to see the tag Dabbles: Stories in 100 Words [or less] : a collection of such stories My Project: Tweet Curation for Research I have a project already set up. It's called: So. Consider. I cannot believe I started it in 2012. But blogs have many purposes, and I think blogs are perfect places to gather and curate. I wanted a place to share bits of interesting blog posts or tweets-- and it became [along with Diigo ], a place to post tweets for things that: are interesting could be part of a current research project seem important for the times may be words of wisdom are usually about education, but now could be covid or democracy or socia...