Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:get up, walk around, doodle, chair yoga
Nobody should be lectured to for 90 minutes a good teacher will have it broken up ... but here we are.
Tell that to colleges...
Anonymous wrote:It is something we get used to. But I agree it’s hard at the beginning. I know how exhausted I felt after a day of zoom meetings.. it’s hard on kids.
Not a Red Bull fan myself but coffee is similar. And getting up and moving mid way. A little tougher if they have to keep their video on...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:get up, walk around, doodle, chair yoga
Nobody should be lectured to for 90 minutes a good teacher will have it broken up ... but here we are.
Tell that to colleges...
The classes at Wilson aren't 90 minutes long. My 10th grader has had one teacher keep them the whole class time, most are using the first half for instruction and the 2nd half the students log off to complete work. The teacher that's kept them the entire class gave them two 5 minute breaks. That sucks OP, that's a lot. I don't even know how I could get though it.Anonymous wrote:If this is Wilson, I think the online portion of the classes will get shorter over time as the teachers assign more work. My 10th grader reported that its like the teachers feel like they need to fill up the whole time block this week, but its hard since they haven't assigned much work yet. The goal is for there to be an online synchronous lesson for the first portion followed by the student doing asynchronous work (which might be online, but will be much more active than listening/watching the teacher).
Anonymous wrote:get up, walk around, doodle, chair yoga
Nobody should be lectured to for 90 minutes a good teacher will have it broken up ... but here we are.
Anonymous wrote:My 9th grader had a bunch of 90 minute online classes this week. Last year with distance learning they had 30 minute of synchronous teaching. Any tips for how to build the stamina to stay engaged?