Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The private schools are not having kids online all day. I have one kid in DCPS and one in a Big3 private (Sidwell/GDS/St lAlbans). Thy both have about 2 hours per day of live instruction. It’s no more hours at the Big3 than our DCPS. The experiences (private vs public) are actually far MORE similar now than ever before.
You have two hours of live instruction per day in a DCPS school? What grade level is that and which school?
My kids go to one of the best DCPS Schools in NW DC and they don't have any live instruction. One kid has 10-15 minutes of morning meetings each day, with the teacher and the entire class. The other kid has this once a week.
Anonymous wrote:The private schools are not having kids online all day. I have one kid in DCPS and one in a Big3 private (Sidwell/GDS/St lAlbans). Thy both have about 2 hours per day of live instruction. It’s no more hours at the Big3 than our DCPS. The experiences (private vs public) are actually far MORE similar now than ever before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lunch once a week with different kids so they can socialize
New teacher responding. No.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hello,
I am a DCPS teacher, in the event we are doing DL or even a hybrid, what would you like to see?
And please, no comments about how you'd like fully in person or your child's teacher did jack sh*t, it's not very conducive to creating a meaningful conversation.
This is what I have been doing so far:
1. Short video lessons adding to 30 minutes total, broken into 3 parts, so 10 min. each. (everyday)
2. A pre-recorded virtual story-time, with an interactive PDF of questions/comprehension- based on your child's level (weekly, may change to 2-3x a week for fall)
3. A whole group lesson 30 minutes (everyday) - generally social studies, science, or social emotional.
4. A small group lesson 45 minutes (in the fall I plan to do 1 hr). Groups are based on skills level. 3-5 students per group. (everyday)
5. ELA/Math Lesson that students complete on Google Slides or Powerpoint. (takes 30 min- 1hr)
6. 1 on 1 time during office hours, if requested by parent(s). (15 minutes per student/per day max)
7. Asking parents to have their child do iReady math and reading for 40 minutes. (20 minutes per subject) -Students can do this independently and are required to in order to get accurate results.
What I want to add in the fall:
*Printed work binder for each student, based on their level
*Printed task cards
*Interactive and individualized PDFs to promote self- learning
I already have a few things students can do independently but a lot of the feedback is parents have work and they can't always be their to monitor. Of course I can't eliminate theor new role as facilitator altogether but I want to lesson the stress.
I've received feedback from most my parents but I'd like to present to a wider audience to get more ideas.![]()
*If it was hybrid some of this would be tweaked, since I'd get to teach in person sometimes.
What grade levels are you talking about in this case?? What works for my 6 year old is very different than what works for a 8, 10, 13+.
she said Kinder and 1st
In that case way too much sitting in front of a computer. You have like 3-4+ hours on watching videos or doing computer based work. And 30-60 minutes it too long to any one Learning Session sitting bin front of a computer watching a teacher talk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hello,
I am a DCPS teacher, in the event we are doing DL or even a hybrid, what would you like to see?
And please, no comments about how you'd like fully in person or your child's teacher did jack sh*t, it's not very conducive to creating a meaningful conversation.
This is what I have been doing so far:
1. Short video lessons adding to 30 minutes total, broken into 3 parts, so 10 min. each. (everyday)
2. A pre-recorded virtual story-time, with an interactive PDF of questions/comprehension- based on your child's level (weekly, may change to 2-3x a week for fall)
3. A whole group lesson 30 minutes (everyday) - generally social studies, science, or social emotional.
4. A small group lesson 45 minutes (in the fall I plan to do 1 hr). Groups are based on skills level. 3-5 students per group. (everyday)
5. ELA/Math Lesson that students complete on Google Slides or Powerpoint. (takes 30 min- 1hr)
6. 1 on 1 time during office hours, if requested by parent(s). (15 minutes per student/per day max)
7. Asking parents to have their child do iReady math and reading for 40 minutes. (20 minutes per subject) -Students can do this independently and are required to in order to get accurate results.
What I want to add in the fall:
*Printed work binder for each student, based on their level
*Printed task cards
*Interactive and individualized PDFs to promote self- learning
I already have a few things students can do independently but a lot of the feedback is parents have work and they can't always be their to monitor. Of course I can't eliminate theor new role as facilitator altogether but I want to lesson the stress.
I've received feedback from most my parents but I'd like to present to a wider audience to get more ideas.![]()
*If it was hybrid some of this would be tweaked, since I'd get to teach in person sometimes.
What grade levels are you talking about in this case?? What works for my 6 year old is very different than what works for a 8, 10, 13+.
she said Kinder and 1st
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hello,
I am a DCPS teacher, in the event we are doing DL or even a hybrid, what would you like to see?
And please, no comments about how you'd like fully in person or your child's teacher did jack sh*t, it's not very conducive to creating a meaningful conversation.
This is what I have been doing so far:
1. Short video lessons adding to 30 minutes total, broken into 3 parts, so 10 min. each. (everyday)
2. A pre-recorded virtual story-time, with an interactive PDF of questions/comprehension- based on your child's level (weekly, may change to 2-3x a week for fall)
3. A whole group lesson 30 minutes (everyday) - generally social studies, science, or social emotional.
4. A small group lesson 45 minutes (in the fall I plan to do 1 hr). Groups are based on skills level. 3-5 students per group. (everyday)
5. ELA/Math Lesson that students complete on Google Slides or Powerpoint. (takes 30 min- 1hr)
6. 1 on 1 time during office hours, if requested by parent(s). (15 minutes per student/per day max)
7. Asking parents to have their child do iReady math and reading for 40 minutes. (20 minutes per subject) -Students can do this independently and are required to in order to get accurate results.
What I want to add in the fall:
*Printed work binder for each student, based on their level
*Printed task cards
*Interactive and individualized PDFs to promote self- learning
I already have a few things students can do independently but a lot of the feedback is parents have work and they can't always be their to monitor. Of course I can't eliminate theor new role as facilitator altogether but I want to lesson the stress.
I've received feedback from most my parents but I'd like to present to a wider audience to get more ideas.![]()
*If it was hybrid some of this would be tweaked, since I'd get to teach in person sometimes.
What grade levels are you talking about in this case?? What works for my 6 year old is very different than what works for a 8, 10, 13+.
Anonymous wrote:Hello,
I am a DCPS teacher, in the event we are doing DL or even a hybrid, what would you like to see?
And please, no comments about how you'd like fully in person or your child's teacher did jack sh*t, it's not very conducive to creating a meaningful conversation.
This is what I have been doing so far:
1. Short video lessons adding to 30 minutes total, broken into 3 parts, so 10 min. each. (everyday)
2. A pre-recorded virtual story-time, with an interactive PDF of questions/comprehension- based on your child's level (weekly, may change to 2-3x a week for fall)
3. A whole group lesson 30 minutes (everyday) - generally social studies, science, or social emotional.
4. A small group lesson 45 minutes (in the fall I plan to do 1 hr). Groups are based on skills level. 3-5 students per group. (everyday)
5. ELA/Math Lesson that students complete on Google Slides or Powerpoint. (takes 30 min- 1hr)
6. 1 on 1 time during office hours, if requested by parent(s). (15 minutes per student/per day max)
7. Asking parents to have their child do iReady math and reading for 40 minutes. (20 minutes per subject) -Students can do this independently and are required to in order to get accurate results.
What I want to add in the fall:
*Printed work binder for each student, based on their level
*Printed task cards
*Interactive and individualized PDFs to promote self- learning
I already have a few things students can do independently but a lot of the feedback is parents have work and they can't always be their to monitor. Of course I can't eliminate theor new role as facilitator altogether but I want to lesson the stress.
I've received feedback from most my parents but I'd like to present to a wider audience to get more ideas.![]()
*If it was hybrid some of this would be tweaked, since I'd get to teach in person sometimes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lunch once a week with different kids so they can socialize
New teacher responding. No.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think distance learning is garbage.
But if you're going to do it, do it all day, like the private schools do. None of this "well we met for an hour or two in the morning -- let's call it a day."
If you're going to do distance learning, do it for at least six hours per day. Make it come as close to a real day of school as humanly possible.
The private schools are doing distance learning basically all day long.
How are they managing gaming K-2 on zoom or whatever 6-7 hours a day?
That should say having. I can barely get my k kid to do 1 or 2 thirty minute sessions a week. But because I have to work because it’s too long for him to sit on the computer.
I find it hard to believe that some students are online for 6-7 hours. That is ridiculous. It is not age appropriate.