Note to educators:
This is not the ‘New Normal’, this is a pandemic that will come to an end. This is temporary.
We need to be positive. Communicating that this is ‘normal’ is not encouraging to students or parents. 1/3
* This is an opportunity to try new things.
* We are learning at a distance only until we can work together again.
* What a pleasure it is that we can still see each other online.
* Aren’t we lucky to be living at a time when we still get to share experiences digitally! 2/3
Let’s face it, the term ‘New Normal’ is going to be tossed around a lot outside of education, but that doesn’t mean that we can’t construct positive vocabulary and language around these unusual times, in our digital classrooms, and in our communication home. 3/3
That is a thread of 3 tweets that I shared yesterday, and I want to add a little perspective:
Imagine being a grade 12 graduating this year and it was your last high school play that got cancelled, or your final season of Track and Field, or your graduation dinner-dance.
Imagine that you come from a single parent home, your parent works 10 or 12 hour shifts, you have siblings that you don’t get along with, and your daily escape to school is gone.
Imagine that you are 6 years old, and you can’t have a play date, can’t use the playground, and can’t spend time with your grandparents, who usually visit you every weekend.
Imagine any one of thousands of scenarios where your routines, your friendships, your family structures, your family financial well being, and all of your extra-curricular activities are disrupted.
Now let’s just call this the ‘New Normal’… No.
COVID-19, schools closing, and ‘social distancing’ have taken so much away from our kids, let’s not take ‘normal’ away from them too.