Teaching in a Pandemic
Whether you are teaching in-person with facemasks, outdoors spread far apart, remotely with technology or a hybrid of any of these methods, we are all [still] teaching in a pandemic. There are important considerations of our selves and our students as we navigate these [not so] new teaching and learning environments.
Teaching with Care
Understanding our students needs as well as sustaining self-care is critical to best practice at this time (and all times). In fact, there are entire frameworks based on “pedagogies of care.” These include awareness of making all learning accessible for all students, inclusive and equitable practices, as well as explicit teaching of anti-racism and culturally responsive curricula. A few resources…
Pedagogies of Care Collection – West Virginia University
Coping with Coronavirus – The Chronicle of Higher Education
Teaching with Care Online – Crowdsourced (lots of resources applicable to in-person and any learning context)
Trauma-informed Teaching – The Chronicle of Higher Education
Higher Education Responding to Protest and Rebellion – Dr. Brandon Allen
Teaching in Socially Distanced Environment
Communicating with a Mask – UTexas College of Fine Arts
Active Learning while Physical Distancing – Clemson University
Self-care
Student-centered teaching is essential to providing connected learning experiences, but more critical to good teaching is that the teacher stays healthy and well. Self-care is really a thing; we are living in a pandemic, too.
Science of Stress & Burnout – Brain Pickings
Avoid Pandemic Burnout – Inside Higher Ed
Cope with Covid-19 – The Chronicle of Higher Education
I welcome your suggestions and resources as well! Please connect with Kika Stump at estump@bates.edu