In mid-March 2020, like many other educators across
the United States and around the world, I shifted
to emergency remote teaching due to the global
pandemic. During the first few weeks I was trying
to figure out how to manage my own three children
and how to be as effective as possible teaching
remotely while dealing with the underlying stress
of the pandemic. I began to have moments of time
and the mental space to reflect on my teaching and
the feedback I was getting from students and their
families. While I would love nothing more than to be
in my physical classroom with my eighth graders, this
situation pushed me to adapt and taught me lessons
that will continue to impact my instruction long after I
return to my physical classroom.
Connect First
Emergency remote teaching magnified the need to
connect and address the social-emotional needs of
students. Suddenly the emotional and physical wellbeing
of my students were on the forefront of my
mind, and I no longer had many of the opportunities
to connect with students that are naturally built into
a school day. I realized that I mostly relied on the unplanned moments of connection in the hallway
both before and after class and while working with
students individually or in small groups.
Without these opportunities to interact and
connect with my students during remote learning,
I began to intentionally build them into daily
assignments and live class meeting times. Remote
teaching helped me realize that I needed to spend
more time intentionally developing connections with
each student, each day.
Once I return to my physical classroom, I will
continue to develop new ways to build in these
moments, but there are a few strategies I can easily
carry over from teaching remotely. During remote
learning, I have begun all live class meetings with
time to check in with kids and share how we are
all doing. When I return to my classroom, I will
implement “first minutes” during the first 2-4 minutes
of each class period to check in, practice speaking and
listening skills, collaborate, and build community. It
will be like a morning meeting, eighth grade-style,
that fits into the time constraint of a 45-minute class
period. I look forward to taking this time to connect
in a space that is available to all students and that is intentionally planned to meet their needs. Taking time
to focus on connection will be time well spent because
as I build connections and address social-emotional
needs, it will also create an environment that helps
students learn the curriculum.
During remote learning I dedicated days for
students to journal or free write. The format for
writing has varied and allowed students to use prose,
poetry, or images to share their ideas, thoughts, and
feelings. I wrote and shared my own responses before
asking them to write one of their own. This allowed
them to see a little into my life while providing an
authentic model for their writing. Students had the
option to share their response digitally with peers
or keep it private and share only with me. Through
these consistent writing opportunities, we learned
a lot about each other, and some students produced
their most creative and detailed writing of the year.
When I return to my physical classroom, I look forward
to assigning free writing assignments to students in
order to build relationships, increase opportunities for
authentic writing, and address the social-emotional
needs of students.
Clear Communication
During remote learning, I began posting short
screencasts online with a video of me explaining
assignments and concepts. I have always given verbal
and written directions; however, I have never provided
students a place to access verbal instructions after
class. Remote teaching showed me how quickly I could
screencast directions and share them with students.
Students voiced their appreciation for the opportunity
to go back and watch the videos any time they needed.
When I return to my classroom, I will continue to make
and post these video clips for complex assignments
and concepts. This extra layer of communication will
help a variety of students including those who need
extra time to process, or who are absent, benefit from
previewing material, or gain reassurance that they
remember the directions correctly.
A Little Grace Goes a Long Way
Throughout remote teaching, I have thought about
how students are in different situations at home and
the variety of factors that might affect their ability to complete assignments. I have made a point to address
every situation of late, incorrect, and missing work
with understanding and grace. I have focused on first
checking in with how students are doing, then asking
if they need help completing the assignment and then
inquiring about the status of the assignment.
Before remote teaching, I would often simply
remind students to turn in an assignment by stating
verbally or through an email that the assignment
was late. I did not take time to first ask what caused
them to not complete the assignment or inquire if
they needed help turning it in. Teaching remotely has
changed how I address late, missing, and incomplete
work. It has shown me how beneficial and easy it is
to address all situations with compassion first. It has
also caused me to stop and think about how many
students throughout the years needed someone
to check in on them or offer help instead of simply
saying, “you haven’t turned in your essay, you know it
was due yesterday.”
Remote teaching, a global pandemic, and a total
shift in how I can interact with students taught me
that content comes after connection and compassion.
I am naturally a task-driven person and I admit that
I needed this reminder. I needed to remember that I
don’t always know everything that is going on in a
child’s life, and it doesn’t take a global pandemic for
students to have valid reasons they need some grace,
someone to check in on them, a little help, and after all
that, a gentle reminder to turn in that essay.
Kasey Short teaches English and social studies at
Charlotte Country Day School, where she also serves
as English Department chair and Spotlight Challenge
coordinator.
kasey.short@charlottecountryday.org
@shortisweet3
Published in AMLE Magazine, August 2020.