It would be an understatement to say that I miss our students! I can honestly share that there is an enormous void in my day, as I work away in my office. The halls are empty, the classrooms are silent and the yard (although greening nicely as a result of no one playing on the field) is vacant. There is a feeling of loneliness. Schools in spring are meant to be full of energy, excitement, and effervescent chatter. By this time in the school year, classroom communities are strong and vibrant. They are places where students are comfortable with each. They are full of laughter and full of intentional and dedicated learning activities.
Each day I try my best to fill that emptiness by virtually popping into as many Google Classrooms as possible. Today, as I logged into one of our Grade 5 classes, the students were in the midst of sharing some of their latest writing. I was immediately impressed with so much of what was happening.
- Their courage to share their work with their peers, with at quick “sharing of their screen”
- Their kind and heartfelt compliments that they were exchanging in the Chat
- Their choice of literacy devices; including rich vocabulary
- Their choice of form and format ~ ranging from biography to Pixton
- Their excitement about wanting to share their work with me
One student created a Pixton about a group of friends who follow their dog, Prince through a magic mirror into another land. I readily shared my connection to that story, as it reminded me of C.S. Lewis’, “The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe”. I reminisced about my days as a Grade 5 teacher and my love of sharing this story with my class, complete with making Turkish Delight (which sometimes turned out as an edible treat and sometimes resembled jelly) and heated debates about the White Witch.
Another student was excited to share their biography of Jeff Kenny, the author of, “The Diary of a Wimpy Kid”. I revealed that I had met Jeff Kenny about seven years ago when I attended a Literacy Conference in New Orleans. Oh, my goodness, the chat feature lit up with so many positive comments. For a fleeting moment, I was a direct link to an author that almost every grade 5 student is aware of and loves their work.
Even though my visit was about 10 minutes in length, the positives and excitement left me smiling and much less lonely for the remainder of the day.
As I do every day, I give props and Kudos to educators are working their magic and making this latest shift to online learning work.
How are you filling the void left my online learning?
Come write with me….
Today someone posted this picture from Shanghai. It’s a scannable QR code that will allow users to download a video game. Talk about taking information to the airwaves in a whole new way. Think about the potential of this technology for advertisements. We’ve already witnessed the evolution of the billboards. Many of today’s billboards have already advanced to digital displays that can be updated remotely. It is rare to see scaffolding and a team of workers affixing huge sheets of papers, only to have them come unaffixed and start to dangle in the wind. Passersby would have to use their inference skills to figure out what products were being advertised. With QR technology, companies can quickly change the advertisement from their iPhones on a regular basis, with the hopes of enticing potential customers.
(which would allow the Caped Crusader know that he was needed it Gotham City) and now to this form of visual communication, to say, “The sky’s the limit” continues to hold true ~ probably even more so!!
Today’s call from dad was also about attendance, but it wasn’t confirmation about logging on, it was that his girls would not be logging on at this time as their internet was compromised because where the family is staying is very close to the fighting in Palestine. His words stopped me in my tracks. It was a sobering reminder that, in the midst of COVID and all of the challenges that our current circumstances are creating, on the other side of the world, there is a member of our school family who is doing their best to survive this unprecedented wave of violence and the walk between the bedroom and the kitchen may indeed not be that safe.
As a admin team we have tried to make some of the learning experiences of our students, who are working online, memorable by donning our dramatic hats and portraying stories that connect to curriculum expectations. Our outstanding and amazing TL, Danielle Cadieux wrote a short story to share the importance of insects in the lives of plants. With her amazing technology skills, my admin partner and I were magically transported into the story. I can’t help but wonder if our “film” may help solidify those curriculum expectations more solidly than just reading the same text.
“Sign, sign
The comments on social media have been both positive and comical as each post automatically leads to a response and ultimately an updated sign from the “tagged” school ~ a whole new meaning to the definition of being “tagged”.

Over the past few evenings, we’ve had the pleasure of meeting a number of candidates for our open positions at our school. We have met candidates with a great deal of experience and varied backgrounds, and we’ve met educators who are within the first five years of their career. What is remarkably different this year is the vast number of educators who, through either their own choice in late August or as a result of a late fall reorganization, have found themselves teaching students whose families have selected full remote as their learning model. Last spring, potential candidates could have drawn from their experiences as an Emergency Online educator, where the expectation was to provide 5 hours per week of asynchronous learning opportunities ~ a very different experience.
At the end of each interview, my admin partner and myself “tipped our hats” to these educators for the remarkable feat that they have successfully accomplished this year. When we were growing up and pretending to play school, none of us imagined this world. We didn’t set up our dolls in front of a computer screen and pretend to teach them. And yet, these educators have made it work. In the midst of a pandemic, they have created classroom environments where students want to log on each morning, where students can’t wait to share, where students are uniquely demonstrating their learning and where students feel loved and cared for.
