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fun in threes, sometimes fours

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First Day 2020

It's an odd thing, repeating the same thing four times. Four times. Four times. Four times. But that's what I did today, doing the first day scenario four times as I have four English I Honors classes this year. But in fact, I'll be repeating today's lessons four days, hitting a quarter of the students in a given period each day. That's an altogether different issue: repeating the same lesson sixteen times.

That's the Covid-19, 2020-school-year reality.

The only exception to this is journalism, which is not journalism this year because it's logistically impossible. Instead, it's "Creative Nonfiction" -- close but not really the same at all. In that class, I had the kids start their journals, and I wrote in my own to model the expectation and show that when I say "You can write about anything," I mean it:

The first day of the dreaded 2020 school year is over and what do I have to show for it? Well, I'm quite frankly completely sick of this mask: I haven’t worn a mask continually ever. Evetr. During last week, I took it off in the classroom, but GCS requires teachers to wear a mask when around students, and honestly, if the didn’t require it, I would be a little upset. It’s a pain, but it’s for everyone’s safety.

Still, there were a lot of things I didn’t expect. For one thing, it’s much harder to understand what students are saying when they’re wearing masks. I had one girl who spoke very quietly, and I had to ask her to slip her mask off for a second because I couldn’t understand what she was saying at one point. And it happened more than once now that I think about it. Another unexpected element was how warm my face got with it on. Having not worn a mask for more than a hour at a time, I didn’t realize how my face would warm up and just stay warm. My wife had to wear a mask every day when she was still working at __, and she told me how hot it was, but it really didn’t register that it would be my reality when the school year started. A final unexpected element was how I could get used to it. Despite the heat and the other challenges, there were points that I wasn’t even thinking about it -- until my nose itched and I went to scratch it.

Still, it’s a small price to pay. I’m glad to be back in the classroom with students. That 100% online teaching was hardly teaching. Granted, I didn’t do any teaching today to speak of (well, perhaps showing students how to organize their Drive folders a bit), but still, being physically with the students--there’s no substitute for it. I don’t really like that I won’t see these kids for a week after they leave today, though I know it’s necessary for preventing the spread of our covid reality. Will I remember everyone’s name in a week after not having seen them? I kind of doubt it. I’m so terrible with names as it is: having a week between each meeting will make it all the more difficult. That's tempered by the fact that I”m only learning 4-7 names per period. Despite that, I doubt I’ll remember every name next Monday.

(I just had a realization: if we have a snow day, one group of kids is missing essentially a whole week of school. It’s another argument against having in-person days different lessons from what online kids are doing.)

I will have to write a "first" entry three more times this week.

That's the Covid-19, 2020-school-year reality.

The Night Before

Tomorrow is the first day of school. We were supposed to start a week ago, but for whatever reason, the district moved the start date back a week. Kids were supposed to come to the school in shifts and get their Chromebooks and do some other administrative-type things. A lot of kids did; a lot didn't.

We were supposed to have elearning starting tomorrow for those not coming into the school building (75% of the students on any given day). Instead, since the district was having issues with Google Classroom rosters, we're doing school-wide lessons instead of teacher/subject-specific lessons.

Everything is turned, twisted, confused, and confusing. For the first time in my teaching career, including when I was student-teaching, I'm going into the first day of school with no clear idea of how things will go, what we will do, when we will do it.

And I'm completely okay with that. Seriously -- no stress at all. This is going to be the year (as long as we're going to school in person in one form or another) of letting go. This is the year of flexibility.

We -- teachers, students, and parents -- will become figurative contortion artists.

First Communion

Prep

Today was a day of preparation. Rosol for tomorrow; lots of cleaning; a bit of discussion.

Tomorrow is the Boy's first communion. We're having the god-parents and their families over for dinner tomorrow after Mass.

Boston Diner

Stop Everything

How do you plan for elearning without computers? It's a paradox -- an oxymoron, even. You can't do it any more than you can have a book-free book club or a cycling club with members who don't own bikes.

Nevertheless, I spent the day trying to do just that. And when I'd come up with something that wasn't entirely meaningless but not critical for students to complete, the AP comes in my room and tells me, "Don't hate me. I just found out that all the lesson plans for next week will be supplied by the district." It seems there are issues with technology -- Google Classroom, to be specific -- that make any significant rollout next week all but impossible.

What could we do but laugh at that point?

More Surprises

For next week, we're to prepare a week of elearning for the kids. All the students will come in for one class period (for the week), but they'll spend the rest of the time doing elearning at home.

I found out today, though, that I can't make any plans that assume they have computers because they won't be getting their Chromebooks until they come to class that one day. (Never mind that the district set aside this week for students to come in and get their Chromebooks...) So I'm to plan elearning that includes no elearning.

I'm still trying to figure out just how that might work...

Trim

The beard was getting out of hand.

I'd sworn that I wouldn't trim the thing until we went back to school, back to school for good, not in some awkward, inefficient once-a-week/elearning hybrid. Real school.

When I put on a mask, it looked absolutely horrible.

And it left this awful wrinkle in the beard, a little curl that forced the lower part of the beard to shoot straight out, away from my face like a cowlick from hell.

So there was only one thing to do: let L do what she's been begging to do for some time now. "When you trim it, let's put the mask on and the cut around it.

The results, after the initial trim, weren't that promising. I went in and cleaned it up but never got a real "after" picture.

But she enjoyed doing it, and the Boy enjoyed photographing the adventure.

Working with the Dog

The Day After