Are you prepared for online learning if your school is closed for an extended period of time? In this special BONUS episode, you can prepare for coronavirus closures and get online learning tips for teachers and schools.
Teachers and administrators listen up!
In this candid interview, I chat with Jennifer Pearson, a tech coach who recently evacuated from China due to the coronavirus.
Jennifer’s school has been relying on home learning and online learning with their students in China for several weeks now. Jennifer shares tips, tools, and best practices for this special situation. And it’s not what you think!
Jennifer helps us focus on the right things during this difficult time.
It’s important to note the big differences between online learning “snow” days, and the seriousness of closing because of something like the Corona Virus. The time period could be much longer. And while we may use some of the same tools and strategies, the stress and emotions that students and teachers experience during a time like this will be very different. Let’s remember Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs.Listen to the full interview:
Below are tips and takeaways from Jennifer for facilitating home learning with students when your school campuses are closed due to the coronavirus (COVID-19), or other extenuating circumstances.
Jennifer says, “Get a plan!” We cannot sit back and just hope for the best. We need to have plans in place so we can react accordingly.
Coronavirus Closures? Online Learning Tips for Teachers and Schools
by Jennifer Pearson
1. Online Learning Doctrine
In this new frontier of online learning, everyone will need a little guidance as to how things should work when schools are closed for long periods of time. Our school created an online learning doctrine very quickly in reaction to the coronavirus closures.
A document outlining some basic guidelines for teachers from your school’s administration will clear up any gray areas. A document informing parents what they can expect from the school during online learning would also be comforting to parents.
Here’s an example Online Learning Doctrine. (click here to make a copy)
2. Get Comfortable
Take a pic of your workspace, post it, and ask students to show you theirs. Show students what makes a good workspace, and how to create their own.
3. Choose a Platform and Stick With It.
This platform should be one that students have used before, and one which they are comfortable. Google Classroom, Seesaw, OneNote, or Microsoft Teams are all useful.
4. This is NOT the Time for New Tech Tools!
Students need routine and structure during this time. Their way of learning has been changed; their environment has been changed, their routine has been changed, do NOT introduce new tech tools, and expect students to use them for learning during the first month of Online Learning. You can have new content or new tech, not both. Go for the content at this difficult time in students’ lives.
5. Use a Checklist
Post a checklist every day to help students make sure they do all of their work for the day. In a long feed of posts, it is easy for students to lose track and become unsure of what they’ve accomplished and have yet to accomplish. Checklists can look different depending on the platform. (See Nadine Gilkison’s template at the bottom of this post.)
Here’s an idea to use in Google Classroom:
Make a topic with the day of the week and everything that will be posted for the day. Specialists can access the Google Classroom and add to the topic. You can schedule the topic for the week and allow Specialists access to schedule all of their assignments for the week ahead of time.
6. Video, Video, Video!
Your presence as a teacher and trusted adult in students’ lives is important to the daily routine. Your students miss you! You know your students are accustomed to your way of instructing, it helps them construct meaning. Your voice and presence is important for your students. They need to see and hear you every day. This does not mean a video conference with them every day. It means you record yourself saying, “Good Morning,” every day and recording video instructions every day. Keep it short, light, and cheery. No one needs a fifteen minute lecture video. Screencastify, Flipgrid, and even your iPhone screen recorder will work for this.
7. Reduce the Workload by Half
I know this is not a popular idea. I don’t mean less Reading and less Math; I mean choose three subjects for the day. Monday may be Reading, Math, and P.E. Tuesday can be Science, Math, and Music. Wednesday is Social Studies, Art, and Reading. What you will soon come to find out about online learning is that it takes twice as long to do half as much. There are many reasons for this, but I challenge you as an adult to stay focused on the internet for three hours and see how many times you get distracted. Minds wander, comprehension breaks down, and it isn’t hard to get a digital hangover.
8. Consolidate Work
Consolidate work as much as possible for students. Fewer clicks, fewer distractions. Try not to send them to tons of websites, sort through different databases, no WebQuests. Put everything you can into a Slide deck or a Nearpod lesson. Every time students have to go search for something, there’s a chance they will get distracted.
9. Capture Kids’ Hearts
Capturing kids’ hearts is essential during a time like this! Respond to their assignments with voice or video whenever possible. Teach them where to look for your response. If you want students to redo something, teach them the procedure for this too.
10. No Hard Deadlines.
Everyone’s situation is unique and different during home learning. Johnny may not be able to do his assignment until mom gets home from work, while Susie has to do her assignment in the morning before her dad leaves for work. No two homes will be the same. Technology can also make it difficult for students to complete work on time. As the Technology Coordinator of a school, I’ve run into many tech problems in my own home during online learning that interrupted my work and my children’s schooling. The deadlines are not as important as the relationship you are saving by giving students grace.
11. Do Not Assign Partner Work.
Again, everyone’s situation is unique and different. Stress levels will be raised if students not only have to worry about their own situation but also their partner’s home situation.
12. Get Away From the Computer as Much as Possible.
All that screen time is bad for you and your students. Be creative with your assignments and incorporate their physical, living space. We have the opportunity to show the learner how to apply their knowledge to their everyday environment. For ideas, see my blogpost on Unplugging Home Learning.
13. Send Home a Weekly Email to Parents.
In most home situations, parents will be trying to support their children in their learning. Especially for younger students, parents want to know what their child will be doing each week. An overview of their assignments or a simple check-in will assist parents who are trying to make home learning work.
14. Give Students Choice
Choice boards and learning menus work great for this! Not only will offering choice engage students more, but it will also give options to parents who may not understand an assigned lesson.
15. Use a Video Conferencing Tool.
Use a video conferencing tool to keep in touch with your students. Publish a weekly meeting schedule that gives students a daily option to join a meeting and send the schedule to parents in their weekly email. Leave this meeting as an option that anyone in class can join and have fifteen minutes of face time with their teacher and peers. You can use this time to clear up some misconceptions about an assignment or allow students to chat so they don’t feel so alone. Some students will never join a meeting, and some will choose to meet every day.
Grace and patience is the name of the game. Treat the entire situation with an open mind and heaps of grace and patience.
Check out this online learning template from Nadine Gilkison:
Posting a link to my eLearning day template with suggestions in case anyone needs it.#BetterTogether #edtech #k2cantoo #iste20 #googleei #nyc19 @jmattmiller @KSzajner @tonyvincent @JakeMillerTech @lhighfill @educatoralex https://t.co/OVN2VX0FFv pic.twitter.com/3kUfC0IEbM
— Nadine Gilkison👩🏻💻♥️ (@nadinegilkison) March 4, 2020
Nadine was also kind enough to share her elearning day resource site here.
FREE Online Learning Tools and Resources for Schools Affected
Many companies, like Google, are making premium features and tools available to any schools that need them during this time. Keep in mind what Jennifer said above, now is NOT the time to introduce a bunch of new tools. However, if you don’t have certain capabilities, these may come in handy in a pinch!
- Google Hangouts Meet: Features that are typically available in the Enterprise edition of G Suite and in G Suite Enterprise for Education, and will be available at no additional cost to all customers until July 1, 2020. Google has also shared some online learning tips here.
- Screencastify
- Nearpod
- Kahoot! offers free access to all features to support distance learning in schools affected by the coronavirus outbreak.
- Pear Deck – get premium access for schools in quarantined communities, Tips from Peardeck, and a FREE Lesson about the coronavirus
- Edpuzzle
- EPforlearning: offering support for schools affected by COVID-19
- WeVideo – offering support to schools affected by COVID-19
- Kami: offering complete Kami Digital Classrooms to schools affected by the coronavirus.
- BrainPop: Free BrainPOP Access for Schools Closed Due to the Coronavirus.
- Hapara
- Tyker
More will be added to this list as available.
About Jennifer
Twitter: @1hightechteach
Website: 1hightechteacher.com
Location: Shenzhen, China/Houston, TX
Title: Technology Coordinator
School District/Campus (or Employer): International School of Nanshan Shenzhen
Bio: Jennifer has been an educator for 17 years. In the last five years, she has focused her expertise on helping teachers learn new technology through her position as an Instructional Technology coach.
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