Saturday, January 30, 2021

I Love My Job

 



The last 10 months have been crazy for everyone, no matter their industry. As my husband reminded me at the start of the school year, everyone is at their wit's end. Schools are in a very difficult position these days, possibly more so than most other industries because of competing concerns regarding online learning vs. returning to buildings. 

Many students are learning less of the curriculum designated by districts, states, and the country. Most parents are more responsible for helping their kids with learning those prescribed curricula. Teachers are dealing with students not showing up to Zooms and getting little to no response when they send messages or make phone calls trying to chase work or offer assistance. Everyone wants kids back in classrooms.

But teachers and school staff are understandably nervous. COVID numbers are much higher than when schools shut down in March.  Many people who are making decisions about re-opening schools are still working remotely and will continue to do so. The science has progressed and we know more now than we did when everything shut down, but there is still so much we don't know. We don't know how well kids carry the virus even if they don't show symptoms. But most of us work in old buildings with ventilation systems that are in various states of disrepair.

I'm back in the classroom, four days a week. I am excited to be back. Someone posted to one of the teacher groups on Facebook this weekend this question: "If you consider yourself a pretty 'happy' teacher, what's your secret?" This is a common theme in these groups, even pre-pandemic.. Teaching is a hard job, and often thankless. Parents send emails at all hours of the day and night, and a few of them act like they expect immediate responses. Questions that have been answered over and over again are asked again and again by students and families alike. Outside of planning, teaching, and communicating with parents, the number of job requirements seems to be climbing. In the best of circumstances, it's a lot. With the demands of providing a hybrid learning model and the increased stress of society as a whole, this year has taken the expectations to a while new level.

Still, I had no hesitation answering the question posed to those who consider themselves "pretty happy teachers." I love what I do. It helps that I have a supportive husband. Another factor that I believe has saved me from teacher burnout is the number of times I have moved to a new school and a new grade level. I have made the choice to leave schools twice and was pushed out twice. I have taught every grade level 4-8 and worked on teams that value my input and with those that seemed to ignore me. I have also worked without any real team, at a school that was small enough to have only one class per grade level. 

Moving between schools, teams, grade levels, and subject areas has been challenging and stressful. But it has kept me actively, continually choosing to do this this job. When I try to imagine myself outside of this profession, I can't. It's a part of my identity and a source of inner pride. I love my job.

Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Back to the Classroom



I have taught students inside a classroom this week for the first time since the middle of March 2020. My school is offering a remote option for families who are not ready to send their kids back to school, but only one student in my homeroom is using this option, and not because of a fear of the virus. Her older sibling's grade has not yet returned to in person learning, and her family is keeping all the kids home until they can all return to school. As far as I know I'm the only teacher in my building who has such a high percentage of in person learners..



These kids are so excited to be back in the classroom! It's visible in their sparkling eyes and the tone of their voices. It's only been two days, but they are working hard and following every rule to the best of their ability. It is very hard for them to stay in their own space, especially when walking to and from recess, but even in the classroom. They keep forgetting that they are supposed to stay at their desks and have me bring the trash can around for their lunch garbage or take their pencil to the sharpener and back for them. (I had 10,000 steps before 2:00pm both days.)

It's only been two days, but I am exhausted. It's a good kind of tired, but if I'd been out of the classroom for six more weeks, it would have been a full calendar year. The extra safety measures add to my daily tasks, and I haven't had a single moment where I've had the time and brain space together to grade anything since the middle of last week.. Did I mention how tired I am?

By and large the students are doing great with their masks. I have one student who has trouble keeping his face covered. I have to continually remind him to cover his nose or pull his mask up. But he's also the kid who bounces in his seat or gets up and stretches or does a little dance every so often. I sat him in the back of the room by the door where he would be able to move without getting into someone else's space on purpose. I was forewarned by his previous teachers and saw his wiggliness first hand via Zoom.


My husband asked me tonight how I feel about everyone's safety at school. Everyone (students and staff alike) certifies their symptom status on a jotform before coming onto campus and everyone's temperature is double checked. The kids have plastic shields that they sit behind when they take their masks off to eat. They are cleaning and I am disinfecting their desks before snack and lunch every day. They have a specific area of the playground to use and their own set of color coded playground equipment to use and keep separate from the equipment of other classes. (My class has purple playground equipment.) The hallway is marked in six foot increments and everyone's hands are squirted with sanitizer before they enter the building, every time.

I don't think there are any more COVID safety measures we can take, but if someone thinks up some more, I'm sure we'll implement them. But to answer my husband's question, do I feel everyone is safe? Well... as safe as we can possibly be. I try not to think about the threat of asymptomatic carriers or shedding the virus prior to showing symptoms. I know that's how this virus operates and the reason it's still wreaking havoc across the globe a year after it was discovered. I try not to dwell on the what ifs and what I can't control. This is a big uncontrollable mess.

Here's to hoping the 2021-2022 school year is easier to navigate and much less anxiety provoking.

Friday, January 8, 2021

Reopening Plan

 My school has released an updated reopening plan. It is still subject to change, but if all goes according to plan, my fourth graders and I will return to the classroom by the end of the month. I am nervous about the possible negative outcomes, but the preschool students have been in my building since the first day of school, and the K-2 students were in for several weeks before the holidays. There haven't been issues, in part because our community of families is largely adhering to guidelines. While I do know of families of my own students who have traveled, I haven't heard of any COVID cases among them and I would hope that travel would diminish with a return to the classroom.

Instead of worrying about the idea that I might have to deal with having a student, co-worker, family member, or myself becoming part of a statistic, I want to focus on all the positives that will happen once I am teaching in the classroom again. 

First, I will be better able to elicit student participation. I have three students who always participate and the rest stay muted, waiting for one of the three to respond. A couple do put relevant comments in the chat, but a solid class discussion is very difficult over Zoom. I have one student who claims his camera is broken, even though his parents did get him a new computer early in the school year, and I have seen his camera on for a few minutes here and there. Technical difficulties are the biggest challenge: audio quality during student responses, unstable connections that have kids re-joining all throughout the class, videos buffering on my end as I try to show them, videos that are laggy or have poor audio quality on the student end even when they are smooth on my end... the list goes on and on. But I also have a student who hit a huge milestone when she participated in a class discussion with a direct message to only me during class this morning, and then wrote "bye" for EVERYONE to see after 90% of her classmates had dropped off the call at the end of class today. Her camera is never on. I can't wait to get these kids back into the building!

Going back into the classroom will give me my evenings back. I am done with teaching Zooms at 11:30 every morning. However, I have scheduled 1-1 meetings with students or staff meetings on my calendar until 3:00 or 4:00 every day. I also meet with one student and her family *every* evening at 5:00. In between scheduled meetings I am fielding Google Chat messages from students and trying to stay up to date on my email. There have been many days when I haven't had time to eat lunch. Grading and planning don't even begin to happen until after I eat dinner, and there have been evenings when grading and planning have been interrupted by a slew of email. During a normal year I don't respond to emails that come in after about 4:00pm until the next day, with very few exceptions. But this year, everything is different. In order to make the next day run more smoothly or alleviate family stress, I find myself responding to certain messages until 8:00 or 9:00pm.

It will be cold. We will be teaching with our windows open and air purifiers running. My classroom's vent is LOUD, and hearing timid fourth graders with their masks on or even ensuring I am heard in the back of the room with my mask on and students spaced six feet apart, feels daunting. But my school did purchase air purifiers for each classroom. I did get new bulletin boards installed and aides looking for additional hours are putting up butcher paper and borders for me. My principal got a grant for technology and new Smart Boards that don't use projectors are on order, and should be mounted in place of the old model before I return to the classroom. In working to make my seven year old school issued laptop work with the new Smart Board, my principal sat on three tech support calls with me today, and even though we did eventually get my computer connected to the sleek new board, promised to order me a new computer. 

I can't leave without saying that cutting the parents out of the loop on some assignments will make teaching things like pre-writing much easier. I have spent more time than I could have predicted this week explaining free writes to parents and reminding students of what they already know - free writing is about the flow of ideas and not about worrying about spelling, grammar, or structure of any kind. Over my 20 year career, I have learned to live with the reputation I earned in my first year of teaching, expressed by a student in my second year with the words, "Mrs. Conrow assigns a boatload of homework!" But the problem with remote learning is parents don't see the distinction between what would have been assigned as in class work vs. what would have been brought home to finish if their kids were coming into my classroom. Free writing would never be an at home assignment if we were in the classroom. I wouldn't have parents sending me emails about how much time they spent helping their child edit and revise the free writing assignment or asking for examples of free writing (which were provided in videos the students had access to watch again and again, but parents didn't "have time" to watch to see what I was looking for).

It's important for me to remind myself that the parents of my students are awesome. They are very involved and want their kids to succeed, even as we are redefining what it means to "go to school" during the pandemic. I'm grateful for their support and the fact that they care so much about the success of their kids. But writing instruction would still be easier for me if the students' writing notebooks resided only in the classroom.

I wish I was in line for the vaccine earlier. My state released guidelines this week that put me in a group that they hope to get to by April. It's disheartening but doesn't change my school's plan to bring me back by the end of January. I'm doing my best to remain positive even in the midst of an ongoing pandemic during the week that saw the second ever attack on the U.S. capitol. There is something supremely surreal about living in the midst of historic times that seem to be continuing to unfold.