I’m writing this blog post in the midst of the announcement that school closures in Ontario will continue until May 4th. While I know that we are sure to hear more about what this means from a school and Board perspective, this blog post is not about that. It’s about me trying to work through something that I’m struggling with, and hopefully hearing from others about how they’re addressing these same concerns: what does play-based learning look like at home?
I know that our current reality is different than anyone could have expected. As educators, we’re not sitting here designing an online course that students are choosing to take. Instead, we’re looking at how teaching and learning can continue in a new format when social distancing and increasing Coronavirus case numbers do not allow school buildings to re-open. Maybe this means that programming needs to change, and yet, there are certain non-negotiables for me. Holding true to the pedagogy in the Kindergarten Program Document is one of them.
Now then, comes the challenge of figuring out how we can make this possible.
- Could we provide open-ended ideas to support home learning, and then allow students to share photographs, videos, and written commentary about their thinking and learning?
- Could we have class meetings or small group meetings, maybe even through Microsoft Teams, to provide instruction, facilitate conversations, and show provocations for home learning? This could also be a great way to connect with children and families, knowing the value in fostering relationships with both.
- Could we provide parents with some question prompts to use to help further extend play at home?
- Could we share with parents a list of some of the ways that we extend play in the classroom to also link with reading, writing, oral language, and math possibilities, since these seem to be the areas of focus in the coming weeks?
- Could we provide an online forum — maybe even a class blog with individual student login names — where children could upload and share their thinking and learning in different formats (from text to video)?
- Could we share provocations through video messages, such as this wonderful inquiry one that Kristi Keery-Bishop shared recently?
Today’s morning message: how are you stopping and wondering? https://t.co/JE9T53rdCr
— KKeeryBishop (@BishopKeery) March 27, 2020
These are some of my wonderings. A few came through some recent online discussions with my amazing teaching partner, Paula. Some came from my own contemplations, especially as I look at many online resources and links being tweeted out daily. There is so much stuff out there. While Paula and I continue to share many of these resources with our parents, we also talk a lot about the role that technology has played thus far in our classroom. To document learning. To share thinking. But not to have our young learners in front of a screen all day. If tactile experiences, social interactions, Self-Reg, and problem solving matter so much in our face-to-face classroom, how can we still prioritize and support these experiences at home?
Maybe some of our hopes are Utopian ideals. Maybe we’ll need to make changes that we don’t love and that merely become a reality of the time. I’m not sure that we’re there yet. Online learning doesn’t necessarily need to mean simply screentime and assessment and evaluation don’t need to mean worksheets and typed assignments. What might be possible thanks to photographs, videos, oral recordings, and online meetings? I’ve always been one to appreciate a challenge. This might be one of our biggest, and least expected, challenges yet, but this seems like the perfect opportunity for creativity. We’re game. Are you? What might home instruction look like for your students and families? Let’s share thoughts, wonders, and questions as we all navigate this very “new normal” together.
Aviva