Causing Learning | Why We Teach

Summering After Remoting: Now to Next

Schooling for the 2019-20 school year is closing several months after the schoolhouses closed.  The shuttering of schoolhouses and the end of this instructional year are two events that will be marked on our calendars and not fade into history quickly.  Most important is our recognition that closing a schoolhouse and closing a school year are not synonymous.  Schoolhouses closed in late March and schooling continued until June.  If this were June of any prior year, children would exit school doors after a last day of their school year, teachers would box up classroom materials, and schoolhouses would be darkened for the summer.  Someone would be yelling “School’s out.  School’s out.  Teacher’s let the monkeys out.”  In those days, schoolhouses, schooling, and a school year had clear markers.  Not so much today.

A side note worth considering.  Schools and governors chose the safety of closing schools instead of staying in school and remote education instead of in-person, large group education.  These were health and safety decisions not based on educational or economy-based rationales.

According to NWEA, an educational assessment, professional development, and research vendor in Oregon, posting in the NY Times, “New research suggests that by September, most students will have fallen behind where they would have been if they had stayed in classrooms. . . . Racial and socioeconomic achievement gaps will most likely widen.” 

NWEA believes that the usual and traditional summer slide of student academic performance indicators, June compared with September, will be greater next fall than in prior years due to schoolhouse closures in the spring of 2020.  Other commentators agree with NWEA’s opinion that the loss will be greatest for students of color and poverty.  Most everyone agrees and understands that remote education this spring was not the equivalent of normal in-person teaching and learning.  The big question now is, “what do we do about it?”.

Some responses are knee jerks.  Others are contemplative.  And, a few are progressive.  Knee jerk reactionaries want to open schools in late July or August to add back weeks of learning time lost this past spring.  They want to open schools regardless of health and safety and complete the 2019-20 school year as if it were still the month of March.  For those who believe that schooling is time in school,  that nothing was learned during remote education, and schooling is a cut and paste enterprise, this works.  It is a traditionalist’s approach to making things whole.  Once whole again in school time, the future looks like the past.

The contemplatives look backward and rethink the decisions of governors and school boards to close schoolhouses in the ramp up period of the pandemic.  “If only …” thinking tells them “we cannot know how COID would have affected the health of children, their families and communities, because we closed schoolhouses.  But, we do know the educational and economic impacts of closure and they are not pretty.  Perhaps if we had not closed schools, educational loss and economic disasters would not have been as great”.  The unknown effects of COVID on the health of children due to closure is weighed against the known losses in educational performance and across-the-board economic losses.  This causes contemplatives to want to open schoolhouses to recoup our educational and economic losses.  “We gave a lot in to sustain healthy children.  Perhaps school closures were not necessary.  Now, it is time to balance things out.” 

Some facts.  Educational data will show disparate results in student learning resulting from remote education.  Some disparity arises from the differences in school and home resources.  Certainly, some schools and homes were better positioned to support remote education than others.  Certainly, some communities have better Internet connectivity than other communities.  And, certainly some teachers and students were better able to transfer rigorous teaching and learning from in-person and in-classroom to home-based strategies.  I know teachers whose daily, remote instruction caused children to sustain their academic growth and approximate student’s in-class academic growth.  I also know teachers whose daily instruction did not. There will be differences in outcomes.

What do do?

Next will arrive in its own time.  We need to understand exactly what will be our next.

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