Causing Learning | Why We Teach

A Need for Principal Leadership and Supervision of Instruction in the Time of COVID

“COVID 19 and student learning in the United States: The hurt that could last a lifetime” is the title of an article by McKinsey.org.  The authors make a compelling case that changes in COVID 19 educational practices need to happen today in order to lessen the loss of learning by children, the loss of educational productivity by K-12 graduates, and the loss of school-community interactions.  The issue, they write, is not to prevent the loss but to lessen the loss that is inevitable.y.org community interaction.  The issue, they write, is not to prevent the loss but to lessen the loss.

https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/public-and-social-sector/our-insights/covid-19-and-student-learning-in-the-united-states-the-hurt-could-last-a-lifetime#

Take Away

We are all in the COVID 19 pandemic for the long haul.  Mitigation, improved treatment, development of promising vaccines, and herd immunity together add up to several years of future life in pandemic-mode.  Schooling will be affected by COVID.  Traditional classroom teaching and learning will be exception and not the norm.  Any prior educational disadvantage will be a greater disadvantage to an equal and equitable education for all children.

That is such a downer paragraph.  Although it is true, it is not a reason for pessimism or defeatism.  Educators know how to teach to children is pandemic mode.  Schools know how to organize flexibly so that, given health data, children can be in-class as often as possible.  And, when children are not in-class they can receive the best remote education, including on-line and hand-delivered instruction and learning materials.  We can do this.

What do we know?

There is an element of best educational practice that is absent in most school pandemic designs that must be present if we are to lessen the degree of our children’s educational loss. 

A supervision of instruction and learning is a constant and proactive force in assuring that school curricula is being taught with fidelity, that teaching is directly connected with student learning, and that all children with exceptional needs prosper from their adapted educational programs.  In short, focused administrative supervision of teaching and learning holds schools accountable to the educational outcomes children need to achieve.

Principals and instructional leaders are playing huge and essential roles in organizing schools for teaching and learning in the fall.  They are sitting in and contributing to hundreds of meetings with school boards, school committees, community committees, and local health care leaders.  They are writing new pandemic rules and regulations and publishing these in online and in distributable handbooks.  They are locating and purchasing mitigation supplies, taping classroom floors and hallways for social distancing, erecting see-through barriers in classrooms and offices where distancing is not possible, mapping the bus delivery for school-to-home lunch programs, and determining screening and quarantining procedures for exposed teachers and children who are in school.  As a group, they are fully engaged in the logistics of education.  These needs will not go away in September – they will be a constant.  However, they are not the supervision of curriculum and instruction that teachers and children will need after school starts.  The supervision of teaching and learning is more important now than ever before.

Why is this thus?

Instruction in the Time of COVID can be an inadvertent return to black box teaching and learning.  When teachers are in their classrooms, each classroom is a one-room school operation.  Social isolation protocols say that only essential people – the teacher and students – may be in the classroom.  Visits are prohibited.  When teachers are on-line, they are in a tunnel of communication with students that is closed from other viewers.  When teachers are providing hands-on learning materials to children, the interaction is in a personalized backpack.  In each of these scenarios, teaching occurs in a literal black box, difficult to observe and more difficult to supervise.

Unsupervised teaching with all good intentions tends toward the expedient.    Work is planned and executed in the immediacy.  A rule of statistics is that over time all data trends toward the mean.  In the Time of COVID, average is not good enough.

To do

Principals are the engines of school site leadership.  They set not only the expectations for educational outcomes to be achieved but uphold the standards of teaching by which those outcomes are achieved.  In the Time of COVID, these standards must be accentuated.  The longs list of must do jobs must include:

The big duh

In the Time of COVID, a school principal is the “go to person” for almost every issue regarding her school.  However, all COVID-tasks are not of equal importance nor of the same priority.  When teaching and learning begins this fall, the job of instructional leader and supervisor must be at the top of each principal’s daily to do list. 

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