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What Teachers Have Learned From Pandemic Education

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 a teacher tries to connect with students on a computer screen
Lauren Green
/
WKSU
Teaching became a lonely profession during the pandemic, as educators struggled to connect remotely with students. But online tools are likely to be an increasing part of education long after schools reopen.

It's a school day at in Akron, but it's eerily quiet, according to Dean of Students Theresa Essandoh.

鈥淭his is our playground, and it鈥檚 such a sad sight that there aren鈥檛 any kids running around,鈥 she said.

The kids are at home in front of computers.

Theresa Essandoh on playground
Jeff St.Clair
/
WKSU
Dean of Students Theresa Essandoh laments the empty playground and classrooms at Findley Elementary in Akron. She says the pandemic has provided a view into the homelives of students and the need to acknowledge their mental and emotional needs.

Classes haven鈥檛 been held inside this building since last March when the pandemic first hit. Essandoh says the experience has been surreal.

鈥淚t鈥檚 very Twilight Zone to have empty classrooms and quiet hallways, empty playgrounds and cafeterias,鈥 she said.

She says going remote radically altered how the classroom setting is used to connect with kids.

鈥淭he setting was ripped away from us, and teachers are redefining what it means to be a teacher and what it means to teach,鈥 Essandoh said.

Inside the basement classroom

"It's been a challenge," acknowledged Cynthia Rochford, a gifted learning teacher at in Akron.

She says that after 22 years in education, the switch to remote learning was the hardest thing she鈥檚 ever done.

鈥淚鈥檓 in my basement in a small section that I try to replicate my classroom,鈥 Rochford said.

Portage Path gifted learning teacher Cynthia Rochford working from her basement classroom. She says that after more than two decades in education, the switch to remote learning was the hardest thing she's ever done.
Cynthia Rochford
Portage Path gifted learning teacher Cynthia Rochford works from her basement classroom. She says that after more than two decades in education, the switch to remote learning was the hardest thing she's ever done.

Sandwiched between a couch and stairs with a dry erase board as a backdrop, she has tried to bring a sense of normalcy to youngsters trapped at home.

鈥淓veryday I get online with my kids, and they want to know when we鈥檙e coming back to school," Rochford said.

"They miss their classmates. They want to communicate with them. They miss their teachers. They miss the hugs. I miss the hugs!鈥 she said.

Schooling has come to mean something different for Rochford.

鈥淭heir emotional well-being is more important to me than any curriculum that I can teach them,鈥 she said.

Online tools for post-pandemic teaching

That sentiment is echoed by Garth Holman, who teaches social studies at .

He says the pandemic has emphasized the idea that he鈥檚 teaching a person not a subject.

鈥淚 have students who are concerned about family members," he said. "And they tell you so then you鈥檙e emailing them to keep that emotional connection with your students. At my level that鈥檚 probably as important as the content.鈥

Garth Holman
Jeff St.Clair
/
WKSU
Garth Holman teaches social studies at Beachwood Middle School and is an expert in online teaching tools. He hopes the new online tools used in remote learning will be adapted to serve individual student needs once schools reopen.

He says the pandemic has revealed the resiliency of both teachers and kids.

鈥淲e鈥檙e in a world where there鈥檚 no manual," Holman said.

"There鈥檚 no manual to tell us what to do or how to best reach kids, so each teacher鈥檚 making conscious decisions about how to build a relationship with kids, how to build trust, how to cover content.鈥

In addition to teaching middle school, Holman has taught graduate courses in online learning and presented at conferences around the country, showing educators how to integrate technology into the classroom.

He hopes that even after in-person learning returns, the lessons of the pandemic will remain and that teachers have learned to use the tools that suit each student best.

"Working remotely has been the hardest thing I've done."
Cynthia Rochford

鈥淚 think you鈥檙e going to see technology seeping into classrooms and being used to meet the needs of individual kids,鈥 Holman said.

His students are building their own online textbook and using Google Earth to create virtual reality lessons.

He says teachers have worked extraordinarily hard to adapt overnight to a whole new teaching system, which has a silver lining.

鈥淭hey鈥檝e built it, and now they have the resources that they can go back to," he said.

Findley school hallway
Jeff St. Clair
/
WKSU
As classroom have moved from brick-and-mortar buildings to virtual environments during the pandemic, teachers have been forced to adapt by learning new skills, teaching with different methods, and connecting with students in ways they hadn't before.

"Kids can put earphones in and be doing something productive for that kid, while somebody else is talking to the teacher and figuring out how to do something else,鈥 Holman said.

Toward a more human school

Back at Findley Elementary in Akron, Essandoh says remote learning, and the window it provides into the homelife of students, has brought home the need for schools to be more "human" and place more value on the emotional lives of kids.

She says the pandemic deepened her sense that school is not only for teaching kids reading and mathematics, "but to teach them self love, and self esteem, and independence and innovation, and to teach the student and love the student."

"I think there鈥檚 been a lot of love,鈥 Essandoh said.

She鈥檚 hoping that when kids once again fill the hallways and playgrounds of her school that a renewed love of learning is the lesson from pandemic education.

Learning Curve is a statewide media collaborative focusing on the challenges and opportunities facing K-12 public education in Ohio.

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Jeff St. Clair is the midday host for 91制片厂.