Has Teaching Changed since the Pandemic?

Ask a Tech Teacher contributor, Christian Miraglia, wrote an interesting article on changes in teaching since the pandemic. I think you’ll find a lot to relate to:

Has Teaching Changed Since the Pandemic?

March 13, 2019, for many educators in California and nationwide, was a day that will forever be etched in their memories. It was the day that many school districts closed temporarily, or so they thought, due to the spread and uncertainty of COVID-19. What nobody could have seen was that these closures would become more permanent and reshape the educational landscape for years to come. Changes to daily instruction have become the norm as students were absent due to illness, teachers were absent due to COVID-19 exposure or their children having been infected or exposed, in-face instruction shifting to online and then back to face-to-face. 

Recently I listened to K-12 educators at a session hosted by a local university designed to have teachers meet and share their experiences from the past two years. The output of emotions from these brave educators who detailed what it is like to teach during this challenging time was gut-wrenching. 

The resiliency of these educators is to be commended as they navigated the daily challenges of policy changes, students coming and leaving, the caring for themselves and their children.  In listening to them, a common theme resonated from the group, the value of networking.

In previous posts, I wrote about using social media in the classroom for instruction and to share ideas. Although not a social media platform, Zoom became a valuable tool in connecting grade-level groups of teachers at the district level. Some teachers utilized Instagram as educator groups formed to build community and collaborate on lessons. Other teachers began using Tik-Tok to find things they enjoyed doing and receive inspiration for lesson ideas. As the session closed, the educators voiced their desire to continue meeting with other educators in a supportive manner and to share what is working personally and professionally. 

I recently spoke to a former colleague of mine about what has changed in her teaching during remote and post-remote instruction.  Her struggles were similar to the teachers previously mentioned. At times there were only 15-20 students in her class due to exposure and quarantine requirements, and this required her to be flexible with assignment dates and daily instruction. Keeping a classroom routine became imperative for her students as it provided structure in an otherwise chaotic environment. Academically, she pointed out that students struggled with literacy skills, which has also been reflected in some recently published studies. At the site level, she observed many changes to the accessibility of content, with more teachers harnessing Canvas to organize their lessons and instruction, realizing that accessibility for students must be 24/7. Below are some of the changes that took place at her site.

  • Teachers delineate directions and provide resources using video tools such as Flipgrid
  • Choices for how work is submitted, paper or digital
  • All teachers have online options (Canvas or Google Classroom)
  • Teacher self-care sessions weekly
  • Work and personal life balance – some teachers no longer take work home

Despite the hardships incurred by students, staff, and the communities at large, changes occurred to the instructional approach and the general well-being of educators. There is an awareness that many long-standing teaching practices are no longer sustainable as education moves to the post-pandemic era. The highly-publicized exodus of teachers from the profession exacerbates educating students. Despite the spotlight on the news, change is happening. Technology is providing access and engaging students. Teacher groups are forming to support both academic and professional endeavors. More institutions are implementing the Design Thinking approach. Grading policies are being reviewed and modified to reflect student learning accurately. Who is to say where education will be in two years, but with these changes, much of which has been a grassroots movement, education will move to embrace 21st-century learning. 

Bio:

Christian Miraglia is a recently retired 36-year educator and now Educational Technology Consultant at t4edtech where he also blogs at Edtech and Things Related. He can be found on Twitter @T4edtech, Linkedin, and on his YouTube Channel Transformative Edtech.

More on changes in education:

Author: Jacqui
Welcome to my virtual classroom. I've been a tech teacher for 15 years, but modern technology offers more to get my ideas across to students than at any time in my career. Drop in to my class wikis, classroom blog, our internet start pages. I'll answer your questions about how to teach tech, what to teach when, where the best virtual sites are. Need more--let's chat about issues of importance in tech ed. Want to see what I'm doing today? Click the gravatar and select the grade.

3 thoughts on “Has Teaching Changed since the Pandemic?

  1. I don’t think your article accurately reflects the real changes going on in teaching right now. In my county in Northern Virginia, teachers are in a worse situation than last year. There has been such an emphasis on the collection of data about students and a push to adopt digital learning that administrators do not understand what the real effect of the pandemic had on the learning of students. Children have had too many choices in their lives that they are not respecting the classroom or structure of learning in school. Teachers are spending so much time dealing with behavioral issues with children – they don’t know how to resolve conflicts, don’t respect adults or school property, and definitely feel that they can do what they want on digital devices. They go onto the internet and search anything they want without adult supervision. One school in our county decided to take away all digital devices because they students don’t understand that these digital devices are tools – they feel entitled to use them how they wish. (Students in my elementary school are writing “69” in bathrooms, on the building walls, and in chalk on the playground!) Our county has done nothing except given us more meetings where we meet to discuss data instead of giving us time to deal with all of these new demands. We have been told to “self-care” each Monday – but the meetings are planned during the day while we are in class with students. We are taking more work home since we can’t do it during our 45 minute planning time. We are busy tracking down resources to use to teach to the students; our county doesn’t provide resources for us-no textbooks, no worksheets, no assessments. We have to create most of it – or use personal funds to buy it from TPT, Scholastic Teachables, etc. There is so much lip service to how society “values” teachers, but we aren’t seeing it. We are being asked to do more during this pandemic than we ever have and yet we still don’t have a voice except to leave. We can’t complain to our principal – they will make us switch grades the next year-causing us to have to start over finding resources, learning new standards, and switching rooms (which we will have to do during the summer). You state that networking is important for teachers – the new model is to take one teacher on a team, make that person the lead, and then funnel news from admin through that teacher for no extra pay. Staff meetings are presentations only- teachers are not allowed to comment or express their opinion during those meetings, so we have no way to share our feelings or ideas with other staff members at the school. How is all of this positive change in education?

    1. What a great summary. I hear this in the grad school classes I teach, as well as the positive sides of change in education. It does take a lot of support to recreate education. Thank you for your comments. They shed light on the dark side of what’s going on.

  2. Thanks CRT for your comments. I can see that your situation is quite difficult. The information I gathered for the articles was based on a limited number of teachers. However, having spoken to teachers from around the nation who do not receive the necessary support, I hope more resources are channeled to improve the situation.

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