Anonymous wrote:Parents here are full of crap. You do not know what goes I do teaching based on what you can see. And if you’re so free of anything else to do you can sit and watch your kids classes to this level of detail day in and day out you don’t have a concept of what work actually is since you don’t do it.
Anonymous wrote:NP. I’m a teacher and I hate virtual instruction. I hate that I do t truly o ow my students the way I would if we were together. I hate that I have a few struggling students who I could be so much more effective with if I could sit with them and show them how to edit their writing or work out that math problem. We could do our fun dances and routines and I could referee their football games on the playground during recess. I miss that, along with the close friendships and work relationships I have made with my colleagues after working together for the last few years.
But I also do not feel safe being back in the classroom with students and colleagues whose families have different risk awareness than I do. Some of my colleagues are young/single and still hanging out amongst each other and their college friends who are in DC, renting air bnbs for thanksgiving in the mph rains with 10+ other millennials, kids in my class are traveling to see cousins in NY and NC. I am doing none of that, my spouse has a high risk factor, and being back in the building with unmasked lunch and trying to keep distancing... I am not doing it. My child won’t be doing it.
I have a K-2 student. I'm her childcare and tech support. Of course I know what's going on after 2.5 months of supervising DL, even while working. I've also been working nights and weekends to make up for the time spent helping her during the school day. It's endless. I'm exhausted.Anonymous wrote:Parents here are full of crap. You do not know what goes I do teaching based on what you can see. And if you’re so free of anything else to do you can sit and watch your kids classes to this level of detail day in and day out you don’t have a concept of what work actually is since you don’t do it.
Anonymous wrote:There is absolutely no way my kid's 2nd grade APS teachers are putting in 50 hours a week. Zero.
So far this year there has been no differentiation. When asked the teachers say they can't do it virtually.
There has also been zero graded work or feedback. Everything is submitted to Seesaw and never reviewed.
Report cards were summaries of the material covered so far. Zero comments about my student, with the sole exception of her PALS score.
Small groups are rare. Maybe they're happening for ESL or IEP students, but my kid rarely has a small group meeting. Maybe once per week across all of her classes. When they do happen, small groups are just check ins where the teacher asks the kids if they've done their assignment and if they have any questions--no prepared materials or differentiation.
Our school has "departmentalized" which means a different teacher covers each subject. This means that a teacher only has to prep morning meeting, one class, and the closing meeting, plus two 30 minute elective blocks per week. Most classes are about 20 minutes of instruction, followed by time for kids to work independently to read, write, do Lexia or do Dreambox. Given that morning meeting and closing meeting rarely have content, this leaves the teacher prepping about 20 minutes of prepared content most days, plus an elective twice a week.
During the independent work time the teachers stay on video and prod kids who dont look like they're working. "Ben, do you have Dream Box open?" "Kenny, do you have your book?" "Doris, can you turn your camera on please?"
There is absolutely no way my kid's 2nd grade APS teachers are putting in 50 hours a week. Zero.
So far this year there has been no differentiation. When asked the teachers say they can't do it virtually.
There has also been zero graded work or feedback. Everything is submitted to Seesaw and never reviewed.
Report cards were summaries of the material covered so far. Zero comments about my student, with the sole exception of her PALS score.
Small groups are rare. Maybe they're happening for ESL or IEP students, but my kid rarely has a small group meeting. Maybe once per week across all of her classes. When they do happen, small groups are just check ins where the teacher asks the kids if they've done their assignment and if they have any questions--no prepared materials or differentiation.
Our school has "departmentalized" which means a different teacher covers each subject. This means that a teacher only has to prep morning meeting, one class, and the closing meeting, plus two 30 minute elective blocks per week. Most classes are about 20 minutes of instruction, followed by time for kids to work independently to read, write, do Lexia or do Dreambox. Given that morning meeting and closing meeting rarely have content, this leaves the teacher prepping about 20 minutes of prepared content most days, plus an elective twice a week.
During the independent work time the teachers stay on video and prod kids who dont look like they're working. "Ben, do you have Dream Box open?" "Kenny, do you have your book?" "Doris, can you turn your camera on please?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:5th PP. after hours twice a week I have meetings. Then I use a daily slideshow to go through the day and that takes me about 1 hour (sometimes more) to create and update each day, plus create, upload, and test that it works on iPad for each assignment. Grade and provide feedback for submitted assignments. Answer parent emails. Look ahead to future assignments and projects and compline resources. Start compiling future things for the next packet pickup. Make lists of who hasn’t turned in something so I can follow up with student the next day to finish. See who didn’t do their required lexia or dreambox targets. There’s always more to do.
I'm not trying to be a jerk, but I was under the impression this is what asynchronous Mondays are for?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:5th PP. after hours twice a week I have meetings. Then I use a daily slideshow to go through the day and that takes me about 1 hour (sometimes more) to create and update each day, plus create, upload, and test that it works on iPad for each assignment. Grade and provide feedback for submitted assignments. Answer parent emails. Look ahead to future assignments and projects and compline resources. Start compiling future things for the next packet pickup. Make lists of who hasn’t turned in something so I can follow up with student the next day to finish. See who didn’t do their required lexia or dreambox targets. There’s always more to do.
I'm not trying to be a jerk, but I was under the impression this is what asynchronous Mondays are for?
They fill half of Monday with mandatory meetings. The other half isn’t enough time to get it all done from scratch every week.
Honest question - do you find those meetings useful? If not, I think we’ve found something that can actually be targeted for change to make everyone’s life better
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:5th PP. after hours twice a week I have meetings. Then I use a daily slideshow to go through the day and that takes me about 1 hour (sometimes more) to create and update each day, plus create, upload, and test that it works on iPad for each assignment. Grade and provide feedback for submitted assignments. Answer parent emails. Look ahead to future assignments and projects and compline resources. Start compiling future things for the next packet pickup. Make lists of who hasn’t turned in something so I can follow up with student the next day to finish. See who didn’t do their required lexia or dreambox targets. There’s always more to do.
I'm not trying to be a jerk, but I was under the impression this is what asynchronous Mondays are for?
They fill half of Monday with mandatory meetings. The other half isn’t enough time to get it all done from scratch every week.
Honest question - do you find those meetings useful? If not, I think we’ve found something that can actually be targeted for change to make everyone’s life better
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:5th PP. after hours twice a week I have meetings. Then I use a daily slideshow to go through the day and that takes me about 1 hour (sometimes more) to create and update each day, plus create, upload, and test that it works on iPad for each assignment. Grade and provide feedback for submitted assignments. Answer parent emails. Look ahead to future assignments and projects and compline resources. Start compiling future things for the next packet pickup. Make lists of who hasn’t turned in something so I can follow up with student the next day to finish. See who didn’t do their required lexia or dreambox targets. There’s always more to do.
I'm not trying to be a jerk, but I was under the impression this is what asynchronous Mondays are for?
They fill half of Monday with mandatory meetings. The other half isn’t enough time to get it all done from scratch every week.