Virtual Teaching… from where?

As we ready ourselves to start a new school year unlike any other in our history, many districts in our state are once again embroiled in debates about teachers-as-workers and the rights and protections we deserve.

A sticking point in many places strikes me as fundamentally confusing: Whether instructional staff should conduct distance learning or virtual teaching from their physical classrooms or whether they should be permitted the flexibility to do so from off site.

I gotta be honest: This feels like a no-brainer. If students are learning remotely, why should teachers not have the flexibility to do their work from the environment they feel is best for their and their family’s health and safety? Personally, I have decided that I will probably be heading into my classroom unless I’m told I cannot. My preference, though, isn’t shared by others. And those others have valid reasons for not wanting to leave the relative safety of their homes…and even if we as a society seem to have forgotten that we are in the midst of a global pandemic, my colleagues’ valid concerns are literally matters of life-or-death.

My biggest problems with the debate have to do with the reasons being given as to why teachers should report to their classrooms for virtual teaching. None of these reasons, to me, outweigh the personal health and safety of a teacher or a teacher’s family: If our work can be done effectively from a safe environment, why not? (Sadly, local news sources like to stir the pot on this issue, with at least three local outlets in the Portland/Vancouver area doing the old “hey viewer, what do YOU think?” about where and how I and my colleagues ought to do our jobs.) From district leaders, policymakers, parents and the public, I’ve noticed four common arguments for requiring teachers to teach virtually from an empty classroom:

Common Reason #1 for Requiring Teachers to Report to School for Virtual Teaching: The employer has the right to verify that the work they are paying teachers to do is actually getting done. Okay, on the surface, I don’t disagree. How did this happen in face-to-face learning? Admin drop-ins and observations? Stacks of student work or student art on the walls? Student and parent feedback? These, or something analogous, can and will happen in a virtual setting. In fact, a virtual setting inherently creates mountains more potential artifacts that a teacher is “putting in the work.” From last spring, I have hours and hours of videos, mountains of virtual folders of work still in my Google Drive, and electronic data trails far more enduring than much of what was produced by my face-to-face teaching (where there would be whole class periods that might go by filled with interactions, discussions, probing questions, and coaching conversations: none of which necessarily produce any immediately tangible evidence that these ever even happened).

Common Reason #2 is closely related: Last spring there were many teachers working triple duty to do their job well, while others for whatever reason (lack of skill or lack of will) skated by doing much less. In theory, getting every teacher in the building will help with that, since supposedly the administration will have nothing else to do but diligently oversee everyone’s work (sarcasm). This is a classic case of creating policy for all in order to attempt to force the fringes toward different behavior. This is also, however, exceptionally poor leadership. Are there teachers not doing as much as they should? Such a population exists in every profession and also existed in teaching before the world flipped upside down. Rather than create policy that constricts the many, it makes more sense to exert instructional and managerial leadership to remediate the few. Just as it is a disservice to my ready learners for me to engage in sweeping classroom micromanagement to forcibly compel compliance from reluctant learners, it makes no sense to adopt blanket personnel policy for all when what really needs to happen are tough, uncomfortable supervisory conversations with the few who may be shirking their responsibilities.

Common Reason #3: It will make the transition to eventual hybrid or face to face learning easier. Okay: How? I’ve yet to hear a convincing follow-up answer to this. I am concerned about how I can facilitate my students’ eventual transition, but I can handle relocating my own work if needed. The small number of teachers who can’t handle that? Again, like above, that’s a small group and is a management/supervisory issue.

Common Reason #4, the least persuasive: It is bad optics to have teachers working from home. I get that we are public schools. I also understand that the public will have strong opinions about anything and everything teachers do. But again: How many people are we really talking about? No matter what teachers do, ever, there will always be a faction of the public outraged and ready to take it to the supe’s office. Now would be a great time for our leaders to smile and nod at those complainers, and then consider policy that serves the physical and mental health of the employees…those same employees being charged with scaffolding up the physical and mental health of our students. (It is perpetually disheartening to see, nationwide, school systems that refuse to treat employees with the same essential care and humanity they expect those employees to provide for students.)

As the s-word starts to bubble up for various reasons in school districts across the nation, when it comes to where we teach virtually from it feels like we (labor) are fighting a fight we should not have to. Has anyone out there heard valid, compelling reasons why teachers should not have the flexibility to teach from wherever they feel safest during distance learning? Despite what it might seem from this screed, I’m open to having my mind changed.

6 thoughts on “Virtual Teaching… from where?

  1. Ron Thibodeaux

    Hi Mark.

    As a principal at a public 6-8 middle school, I have observed instruction in the “Distance Learning” model for over four weeks now. Overall, what I have witnessed has been nothing less than astonishing. I have seen teachers rise to the occasion in the classroom environment. I have seen students adapt to new policies. Learning is evident.

    When we were considering reopening, our District initially wanted teachers to teach from school. The reason was far more instructionally based than those you’ve listed. Put simply, the bandwidth with which instruction would take place at the school site far exceeded what teachers would have at home and would empower teachers to seamlessly maximize the use of synchronous teaching tools (ZOOM, etc) and to more effectively embed multimedia (videos, music, and other supplements) without the drag associated with lower connectivity generally available to at-home Wi-Fi consumers. (From this point of view, I completely agree that the school site is the optimal place for teaching in Distance).

    After receiving feedback from teachers, our District decided to allow the teachers the option to “teach in distance” from home or from the school site. Some of the teachers teach from the site. Most teach from home.

    The responsibility for verifying the quality of instruction lies with me as the site administrator. In my role, I have visited classroom after classroom for hours at a time. I have seen teachers repeatedly provide excellent instruction to students. The take role. They provide excellent individual and group feedback. They keep students accountable. The concerns that some have shared…about teachers being lazy…or not wanting to perform their jobs…have not been realized in any way.

    As I monitor the changing landscape of education, I know that our District, and others, will soon be looking at hybrid models for the next logical step to returning to school. I know we will have to reevaluate teachers “teaching from home”. In the meantime, I am happy to have witnessed that teachers are, far and away, performing admirably.

    The choice to give teachers choice was the right choice.

    1. Mark Gardner Post author

      Thank you for sharing this Ron. There are far more good things happening than I think we (myself included) give ourselves credit for. There is no perfect answer to the situation we’re in… and like you I’m seeing so many people doing great work, kids included.

  2. Janet L. Kragen

    For health reasons, home is a necessary choice for me.

    But also, at home I have one computer station set up in my study with my personal computer and three monitors. I have extra lighting so I look decent in Zoom sessions. A good camera.

    I have another station set up on the dining room table with my district-provider laptop.

    Being able to move from one station to another helps with back and hip and neck strain, too.

    I would be hard-pressed to duplicate all this at school!

    1. Mark

      As rough as it was to be teaching from my garage last spring, I do think being in my classroom will be right for me. I’m lucky to teach in a school with about a dozen total staff who are in the whole building at any time even not during a pandemic, so social distancing will not be a problem. It will also be important (for me) to have that boundary between work and home… as I shared in my previous posts that boundary was beyond permeable last spring, and it was bad for all involved.

      Even though I’m choosing to teach virtually from my classroom, the fact is that not everyone feels the same level of comfort or has the same ability to socially distance while in their buildings. Choice is key. My only worry is my own children, who will be on their own at home (they are old enough) while I’m at work. We’re still not sure if my wife (a classified staff member in the Evergreen district) will be working, furloughed, laid off… that uncertainty is not pleasant.

    2. dhilsen@hotmail.com

      None of your reasons are due to “health concerns” or “a matter of life and death”. Rather, you want to work from home because you like it. Just own that and stop using the whole we-are-in-a-pandemic blanket excuse for everything.

      1. Mark Gardner Post author

        Hmm. I’m thinking maybe you didn’t read what I wrote and you reacted to what you thought I would probably have said? …Particularly since I wrote that I will be working from my classroom and not from home.

        Not sure how that is a “blanket excuse for everything,” but perhaps I am misunderstanding your comment?

Comments are closed.