What really matters right now
Teaching and learning in a time of Coronavirus, an educator perspective
By Karen Zapata
The words distance learning and online teaching should not be used. This is not what we’re doing. We are providing assignments and worksheets to students.
Teaching and learning is a collaborative act, it’s a social act, and it’s one that only takes place when we have relationships and trust. We are running on the fumes of what we built in our classrooms over the first 3 quarters, but the conditions have changed.
Good teaching involves moves in-the-moment. It involves realizing you covered a topic too quickly, so you go back and review. Or your class was hella dry so you circle back and build a fiery conversation. It involves differentiation for your diverse learners. Do you know how incredibly difficult it is to create differentiated assignments that all kids can do independently? And ones that are just outside of each child’s zone of proximal development, so they are stretched just right. The perfect stretch.
Someone tell me what gradual release of responsibility looks like when we cannot be together? Someone, please describe how I humbly learn from my student’s bank of expertise, their funds of knowledge through google classroom?
And learning happens when we are laughing together, giving each other a bad time and apologizing if it goes too far. Learning happens in community, with people that share ideas that we hate or love and we can face them with our shouts of disagreement or calls of praise. We learn when we sit together and come up with a million metaphors, connecting new ideas to ones we already have.
What really matters right now? Here’s what I care most about from my students: CONTINUE READING: What really matters right now. - SF PUBLIC SCHOOL MOM