Category: Caring adult

From virtual counseling to wellness apps, school districts are increasingly turning to “telehealth” to meet students’ mental health needs during the pandemic.

“Regular touchpoints like online check-ins can also help ensure kids are tethered to the school community and aren’t slipping through the cracks, say educators and counselors “

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5 things to help keep students and staff safe when video conferencing

Here’s what you need to know to use videoconferencing platforms effectively.

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When students drop out of online learning amid the pandemic, teachers worry they may never come back

“Many teachers … are doing their best to maintain relationships from afar with students who depended on seeing them every morning. “

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5 Virtual learning resources for building student connection: “Temperature Checks”, Notes of Appreciation, Class Journal,Morning Announcements and Building Belonging

Some excellent resources to support student social emotional learniing.

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Measuring online student engagement or taking attendance? Is it worth it?

“Virtual schools that have quantified attendance as “one interaction per week” fall well short of ensuring students are engaged,.”

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Teachers, If You’re Not OK Right Now, You’re Not Alone: one teacher’s account of dealing with teaching from home during the pandemic

“As uncomfortable as it feels, I am slowly starting to accept that I have no choice but to sit in this moment with my students. There are no clear solutions or quick fixes. I can’t minimize the gravity of this unprecedented crisis for them or myself. For now, the best I can do for my students and myself is to accept that right now, it’s OK to not be OK.” Lory Walker Peroff

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Student engagement from home is tough: one secondary teacher’s fun suggestion that works virtually too

“enjoy the hilarity. Silly tools such as rubber ducks work because they channel positive associations from childhood—for bout our students and ourselves. If you let students embrace their silliness, they’ll be more free to express their creativity. This gives you an opportunity to learn more about their personalities. One of the best parts of teaching is the opportunity to connect with our students, and tools like rubber ducks can make these connections even more authentic.”Lindsay Mitchell

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Homeschool During Coronavirus: How Parents and Kids are Reacting across the US

Families across the USA interview each other about what it’s like to learn at home since schools closed due to coronavirus (COVID-19).

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A School Principal Ponders Pandemic Pedagogy and a Coronavirus Project Plan: A Corona Chronicle

“After about 2 weeks, my head started to clear up. I started zooming out. I started remembering all the other things that were going on. My writing. My business. My family, my-soon-to-be second daughter. And somewhere in the background (even though our puritan, martyrdom education system would rather place it in the foreground), somewhere in the background was school and “distance learning.” Joe Truss

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“Now is the time to imagine a post-corona future that is kinder, gentler, and more supportive of the weak, the sick, and the vulnerable. Let’s not resurrect bad habits. Instead, let’s seek transformation and renewal.”Andrew Fiala Fresno State

“stop hurting our health and our relationships by striving so relentlessly and breathlessly after success as the world defines it. “

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