Causing Learning | Why We Teach

Occupandi temporis dociles!

Teachable moments come and go.  We know them for what they are – that convergence of event, time, place, and people when a window for learning opens.  Some are BAM! in your face and demand your attention for teaching and learning.  Others flash so quickly that before we can capture the compelling concepts they are gone in the rapid fire of our national and personal attention spans.  COVID, tragically, has grabbed the world and is not letting go.  However, COVID presents a treasury of teachable moments.  So, BAM!  Seize the teachable moment or in Latin, occupandi temporis dociles!

If educators were not swamped in stay-at-home remote education and struggling with technology, the loss of personal contact with children, and how to teach in their pajamas, our educational journals would be overflowing with new curricula.  What is essential knowledge in a world crisis?  What are required skills when working remotely from others?  What dispositions and values are changing when personal contact and physical proximity are not possible?  What political, social, cultural, economic outcomes are more important than community and world health?  Every subject is a trove of compelling topics: art to zoology.  The moment is ripe and the content is rich.

Emergency generated emergent teachable moments.  No teachers were prepared for school closures and remote education.  No students were prepped for this version of home schooling.  No parents were trained to be surrogate teachers for their children.  Bam!  These were not present in our three-quarter school year, September into March, and overnight they became our world for March, April May and June.  Emergency caused educators to create an entirely unanticipated delivery of instruction.  To add to its complexity, instruction needed to be personalized from a distance, differentiated to each child’s needs, academically challenging, and in compliance with district standards. 

Out of this morass came a multitude of complaints that remote education doesn’t work and children across the nation will lose up to year of academic progress.  Yet, within this morass there were unbelievable gems of teaching and instructional delivery.  These are the teachable moments that we need to explore, understand and use to expand our pedagogy for future education.

I continuously talk with teachers who clearly demonstrate that they taught all the essential curricula of their grade level and subject area course in March, April, May and early June.  They

In our local school district, we are taking the time for teacher talk.  What did you learn from your remote teaching and learning experience?  We are not interested in the daily challenges, because they were common to most teachers.  Instead, we are focusing on what teachers learned about teaching practices, specific teaching methods that worked remotely, and a time and task analysis that will inform better teaching and learning in the future.

Occupandi temporis dociles!

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