In a previous podcast episode with Heather Estrada and Lisa Perris, Dr. Andrea Honigsfeld cautioned us from trying to return to normal. I could tell that this passing comment was full of gems to be mined, so I had Andrea return to share what she meant.  In our most recent podcast conversation, we identified four areas where we can create a new normal using what we have learned from school closures.  These areas include:

  • Authentic learning experiences 
  • Teacher collaboration 
  • School leadership 
  • Professional learning 

A month into the school year in North America, there’s still much to be learned here and put to good use as we try to make out the road ahead for children, schools and learning.

Staying with the new normal English language learners multilingual

Authentic Learning Experiences

Andrea shared two examples of authentic learning experiences – both from music classes – that her sons were assigned during the COVID-19 pandemic. The elementary school music lesson required students to create their own drums with things they had in the house. Her high school son had to interview a family member about their first musical experience and analyze what relationship they had with music. 

These lessons had elements of authentic learning because they:

Sudden school closures have forced us to think outside the box and restructure learning experiences without the resources we have readily available at school.  Yet, students still have a treasure trove of resources if we think about their families and cultures.  Upon returning to school, try to incorporate these elements as you design your lessons. 

Andrea shared a tweet from Will Richardson, who talked about having the focus on learning, not schooling. In this time of uncertainty, let’s avoid returning to our classroom with a narrow focus on schooling. Instead, let’s focus on learning. 

Teacher Collaboration

Even before COVID-19, Andrea emphasized the role of teacher collaboration as an avenue for raising student achievement, promoting job-embedded professional learning, and increasing skill capacity building (Honigsfeld & Dove, 2019).  However, not every school had systems, routines, protocols, and schedules that could support year-long teacher partnerships.  

As the virus halted traditional brick-and-mortar school structures, most people had to learn new skills to adapt to the circumstances. Some educators were not used to teaching with technology. Some had a few skills, while others were proficient enough to guide their colleagues.  Consequently, teacher collaboration became a lifeline rather than a luxury

During this pandemic, teachers have been seeking each other out to:

  • learn new skills 
  • share and co-design resources
  • create systems that support learning 
  • provide emotional support to deal with uncertainties 
  • scaffold and differentiate instruction for language learners 
  • construct the meaning of the constantly changing circumstances 

Some teachers have never had the opportunity for teacher collaboration, but with the upheaval of the virus, they formed new teaching relationships that are full of potential. As you return to your schools in the future, advocate for the time in your schedules for on-going collaboration with your colleagues.  Few of us want to remain in isolation after so much time there these past months, so why should we return to teaching in isolated silos?

School Leadership 

Principals and district leadership have a significant role in sustaining and expanding some of the unexpected teaching outcomes from this experience. They can:

  • create and protect time for teachers to collaborate
  • highlight examples of authentic learning 
  • encourage the integration of families as teaching partners

In addition, Andrea suggests that school and district leadership conduct an equity audit to assess the disparities between communities that have access and those that do not.   Then, they should categorize these inequities into two groups: 

  • Short term: Inequities that might be addressed by providing physical resources
  • Long term: Inequities that might be addressed at a systematic and programmatic level  

Lastly, principals and district leadership can capitalize on some of the positive school-parent relationships that were formed during this experience. Andrea asks leaders to consider how we can bring cultural practices and values into schools so that they too can be tools for learning and positively reflect students’ cultures.

Professional Learning 

There were so many organizations and consultants who offered virtual professional learning opportunities to support teachers through this experience and to sustain their capacity building despite school closures. As a speaker at various webinars over the past several months, Andrea was no different.  

Notably, she recently facilitated a day-long professional learning session that featured a blended teaching model.  Instead of a whole day of sitting and hearing Andrea talk, she recorded a series of videos that lasted between 20-25 minutes.  Teachers would watch these pre-recorded videos on their own then engage in a series of asynchronous and synchronous learning opportunities on such platforms as Padlet, Answer Garden, Google Slides, and Google Docs. After that, everyone would gather together on a video conference to ask Andrea questions for the last 25 minutes.  The videos, learning opportunities, and video conference would together complete one module.  Teachers were then given a short break before the second module started, which also followed the same structure.  

The takeaway here is for schools, districts, and consultants to rethink the types of professional learning they are offering.  Is an in-person “sit-and-get” the only platform that teachers can have for capacity building?  Andrea hopes that districts can leave this pandemic experience with alternative ways to offer asynchronous and synchronous learning opportunities. 

Closing 

There is a lot of grief, pain, and isolation from the COVID-19 pandemic on many levels. Yet, there are equally as many learning opportunities that we can carry with us as we return to our classrooms, school buildings, and districts. We all want to get back to normal. Hopefully, it’s a normal that’s even better.

In the comments section, what is one thing that you will do to “stay with the new normal”?

Honigsfeld, A., Dove, M. G., & Honigsfeld, A. (2019). Collaborating for English learners: a foundational guide to integrated practices. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin.