Causing Learning | Why We Teach

Essential: The New Occam Razor in the Time of COVID

Every significant historical and cultural event provides us with words and language that immediately bring that event to mind.  Even though human memory ultimately is short-term and we quickly move on forgetting as we go, these words will connect our future with this present time.  Think of 9/11 and World Trade Center.  This pandemic provides us with these references.  The word “COVID 19” moved from an acronym used by epidemiologists to the word pair that names a worldwide pandemic.  “Social isolation” seemed to be an oxymoron, but it defines the most widely used strategy for mitigating COVID.  “Peak” and “flattening the curve” give graphic words to understand the transition of the epidemic over time.  Old words, like quarantine, found new usage. 

In the field of education, “remote education” combines practices of school-provided instruction, home schooling and alternative delivery systems.  In the design of distanced learning, educators and educational leaders are finding the word “essential” to be the optimal and simplest word for refining and redefining curriculum and instruction, student assignments, and post-learning assessments.  As we transist from school closures back toward our traditional concepts of schooling, the word “essential” will prove to be the new Occam Razor used to reassemble post-COVID education.

Let’s combine essential with other constructs for reassembling school to imagine an “essential” education that will be the beginning for evolving into a healthier time.

Essential and social re-integration.

Essential and curriculum and instruction.

When schools re-open, there will be a new assessment of the essential school.  After the March, April, May and June closure this spring and the months of summer vacation, school programs that are missed the most will be valued the most.  There will be an urgency about these.  School programs that are mandated by state statute will get attention, because school boards are accountable for these programs.  What was not missed may be slow for renewal or not renewed at all.

While we hustle to reinstitute what was missed, what is mandated, and what is urgent, safety will insist that mitigation and social distancing will be the essential word as we re-open schools to teaching and learning.

In the Time of Post-COVID, new, essential schools will emerge.

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