Get connected
Dr. Liam Printer - 'The Motivated Classroom' Educational Consultant, Author, Researcher
  • Home
    • About >
      • Coaching
  • Podcast
    • Episodes 1-40
    • Episodes 41+
    • Programme Notes 1-40
    • Programme Notes 41+
  • Blog
  • Videos
  • Workshops
    • Teaching with CI
    • Reading strategies
  • Consultancy
    • Presentations & Workshops
    • TPRS / CI
    • Testimonials
  • Publications
  • Contact

Returning to school after quarantine: Our first week back

17/5/2020

5 Comments

 
We’ve now had our first week of post-quarantine classes, back in our real classrooms, with real, live people around… yes, they exist and are not just avatars or thumbnails. Does it feel different? Yes, absolutely it feels different but it has to. The world is different. Life is different. Schools have to adjust. The Swiss federal government decided that the country was ready for students up to the age of about 15 to go back to schools from May 11th but with restrictions: only half the class could be present each day in order to allow for more spacing inside the buildings. So we have students coming in every second day. This is the part that feels the strangest as we are all essentially back at work but the school itself feels very empty as we only have half the students in on any given day. From May 25th we will be back to full classes again with the exception of the older students, who will remain with online learning until June 8th.

It has been challenging to try to provide meaningful learning experiences for children when you have half of them on a screen on your whiteboard and the other half in front of you. I certainly felt more tired and less happy with my teaching this week but I had to remind myself that this is so new for all of us. We never trained or dreamt of having to do something like this. Now is not the time for high expectations on our own shoulders. We are all adjusting; we are all fumbling through this. I had to remind myself that the focus now, more than ever, needs to be on happiness, inclusion and relationships. Many of the students themselves were also quite nervous and shy to get involved in class as they suddenly felt a lot more in the spotlight with only a smattering of their friends around for support. It is now that they need our support more than ever.

Luckily, I work at a school with fantastic leadership who had left no stone unturned in the preparations for us being back on campus: classrooms are spaced out, there are floor markings around the teachers desk, hand sanitisers in every classroom, one way traffic for the cafeteria, staggered end times for younger students, masks are available for those who want them, as well as some excellent and funny instructional videos for students before they came back… using teddy bears to show what social distancing looks like. The students have been great and understand the need to change their social behaviours but… and it is a big but, they are children. As soon as they are out of class, they are of course getting within a metre of each other. This is unavoidable. Official guidance from the Swiss government is that children do not need to socially distance the way adults do but that wherever possible we should use best practice and judgement to avoid them being in groups. So that is what we are doing.

My overwhelming feeling is appreciation and gratitude to be able to work at such a great school, that had us so well prepared for all this and to be back in my classroom, seeing my colleagues and my students faces again. My friends and fiancée are great of course, but I’ve really missed having people around who laugh at all my terrible jokes. Let’s be honest, none of us became teachers so that we could sit behind a computer all day on our own. Teaching is a people-centred vocation and I, for one, am delighted to see that all those wonderful people are the same as ever. There is no difference there.

The hardest part for me in all this is that so many of the fun things have been stripped out of our jobs: the spirit weeks, the year group events, the graduations, the theatre productions, the sports competitions, the field trips… That is the hard part. But if it’s like this for us, then imagine what it’s like for our students. We now have a duty to make our classes more engaging, more fun and more centred around our students’ own lives and personalities. They are coming to school and going to our classes… that is it. No socializing, no sports, no events. Now is the time to be brave, try out new approaches and do whatever we can to get our students smiling again. Ask them what they want to do, what they want to learn and how they feel their learning should be assessed. Start there. Can we reinvent our unit to satisfy the three basis needs of relatedness, autonomy and competence which are required for motivation to flourish?

Going back to school is different. And it will be different for some time. But the people are the same, great people who were there before all this. Put the ‘people’ at the centre of your planning. Lower the expectations on yourself, on your students and think about the people. If not now, when?
5 Comments
Judy Dubois link
17/5/2020 15:17:55

Great article, Liam. Could you remind new readers where to find your article on Competence + Autonomy + Network (CAN) = Motivation?

Reply
Liam Printer link
17/5/2020 15:58:13

Hi Judith! Sure. Here is a blog post on motivation:
https://www.liamprinter.com/blog/are-there-quick-fixes-to-increase-student-motivation

The full text of the article on TPRS and motivation published in the 'Language learning journal' is available on researchgate here for free:
https://bit.ly/364zg9l

Is that what you were looking for?

Reply
Rebecca Moulton
17/5/2020 16:21:31

Thank you for sharing what your school looks like-I’d like to know more about how you manage being filmed and teaching students live. What does the process of filming involve? Are you trouble shooting (the filming, video, Ss who are having trouble turning in at home) each hour? Are Ss who are watching from home supposed to be active in the class-the teacher calling on Ss on the camera, Ss asking questions, etc.)? What adjustments are you finding necessary with this format? Also, if students are moving from class to class, what “sanitation” is happening between classes? Thanks!

Reply
Liam Printer
17/5/2020 17:03:58

Hi Rebecca. Thanks for your comments and questions. I am not being 'filmed' but I have my webcam on my computer as if I was still teaching at home. At our school we did a 15 minute google meet check-in with students every second class when we were all teaching online. Now with this half and half, we have the google meet every class. I spend the first 15-20 minutes with my webcam on asking questions to students at home and in class. Students at home are projected on big screen. We do full group activities like discussion, games, reading together. Then I'll usually have 30-40 minutes where they are working independently as if they were all at home but some are in front of me in class.

For sanitation, they must use hand sanitiser after every class. We disinfect tables when each group leaves our room. It is quick drying and you just spray it on and open windows. They have to wash hands before recess and lunch. Hope that helps.

Reply
Monica Marino
17/5/2020 17:55:53

This is really informative, thanks for sharing! We don’t go back until late August, and it’s all such a mystery. It’s helpful to see what it might look like!

Reply



Leave a Reply.

    Author

    Dr. Liam Printer:
    Host of The Motivated Classroom podcast, keynote speaker, presenter, lecturer, language teacher, teacher trainer, educational consultant, published author and basketball coach. 14 years teaching experience in a variety of educational settings. Currently I am the Teaching & Learning Research Lead and Approaches to Learning Coordinator at the International School of Lausanne in Switzerland where I also teach language acquisition.

    View my profile on LinkedIn

    Archives

    May 2022
    August 2021
    December 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    January 2020
    October 2019
    April 2019
    January 2019
    September 2018
    August 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    January 2018
    November 2017
    October 2017
    April 2017
    November 2016
    May 2016
    January 2016
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014

    Categories

    All
    Agen
    Classroom Management
    Comprehensible Input
    Covid19
    Doctorate
    Feedback
    Ideas
    Inside My Classroom
    Motivation
    Professional Development
    Projects
    Reading Strategies
    Remote Teaching
    Research
    Teaching
    Technology
    TPRS

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly
Photo used under Creative Commons from karenstintz