heldel00 wrote: » Murple, is that app Seesaw?
heldel00 wrote: » Well said. We each have a school laptop (5 teachers) and we had to have a big song&dance of an assembly because the Parents' assoc donated 5 Samsung tablets. That is the height of our access to tech in the school. (Btw I'm not knocking the Par. Assoc. They are working with very limited funds but for a modern country, trying to run shoulders with the creme de la creme of Europe and the world, we are a bloody joke.)
Murple wrote: » We asked the parents in the school for feedback on remote learning and how it's been going and if they had any suggestions. Some said the app we were using was great. Others said they didn't want their child using technology that much. Some said they loved the way the child could answer directly onto the screen. Others said they would wanted work to be emailed to them as a PDF. Some said they wanted all work sent for the whole week in one go. Others said they wanted work set each day. Some said they wanted the work sent the night before. Others said they wanted it sent each morning. Some said they were getting too much work. Others said there wasn't enough. Some said they had access to a printer. Others don't. Some have a laptop for the child's use. Others need it for their own work. Some access every link sent. Others say the link won't work. Some have worked consistently, doing a bit each day. Others aren't doing anything. Our SET have contacted parents of their pupils individually by email to see if they would like invidualised work for their child. Some said yes. Others said no. Others didn't respond at all. We can't please everyone so we have to do what is most manageable and practical. Maybe some of the parents whose preference is not being met are on boards complaining about what is or isn't being done but equally there could be twenty five other sets perfectly happy with how things are going. On the app we are using, you can see the number of things you have responded to. That is after setting the work, children post their responses whether it is a screen grab of their work, a photo, a typed response or a voice recording. My class have posted over eight hundred times. We are on day seven of using this app. I have looked at every one of these and added a typed comment, correction or voice recording. I'm working with a middle primary class. That is in addition to whole staff online meetings, group whatsapp conversations on school related business, communication with SET and emailing parents to respond to individual concerns. I am not trying to justify what I do but I am sick of seeing comments that teachers are doing very little or that we should be prepared to work though July and August as schools are closed now. I also don't think it's up to individual schools to come up with a plan for September as firstly we have to take direction from health bodies as this is a public health emergency not an education one and secondly, who knows what way things will be in June, let alone September. If you had been told at the middle of February that schools would be closed from the middle of March and still closed at the start of May, you might not have believed it. If you had asked me the week before Easter whether we would be considering reopening schools in May or June, I'd have said absolutely not. Give it two weeks and we may be saying absolutely we can open schools for the last month of the primary term. Get to the end of June and we may be saying, along with plenty other countries, that it was a big mistake to do so. Or we may be closing for normal summer holidays thinking that was the strangest school year ever and can we believe that it all happened.
CinemaGuy45 wrote: » I hope you don't write like that on the blackboard for the poor kids. I take it you don't teach English?:p
TheValeyard wrote: » Blackboard? When were you last in a school?
CinemaGuy45 wrote: » Why what have they now a massive Ipad or something?
gnf_ireland wrote: That said, and I repeated this on another thread earlier, some teachers are going above and beyond but seem to be in the minority (albeit based on chats I have had with people). But to those teachers fair play and keep up the good work. It is appreciated by parents and children alike
gnf_ireland wrote: » Absolutely. No child needs any more Easter eggs. And leave the current martyrdom efforts to the medical staff. Teachers extra efforts are needed when the kids go back to school
collywobble7 wrote: » God forbid a parent would have to help their own child. I do think people forget that a teacher educates your child for 1 school year and then forgets about them. See ya later, goodbye. These are your kids. If they fall behind it's your responsibility and it's you that will have to prop them up in years to come when their teachers won't even remember their names.
Teach30 wrote: » Right and have my mother roaring at me do I want my dinner/am I going to the shop now/will I answer the phone/what am I doing etc etc or their grandchildren running in on top of me - they have NO boundaries. I would actually be mortified for my students to see that living situation. I am not willing to risk it to be honest. Overall I’d like to point out that while it may seem that a teacher is doing very little you have no idea what is going on in their lives. I’m struggling as it is being at home caring for my elderly parents. The lack of contact with friends, the fact my wedding has been cancelled and I can’t see my fiance. My nerves are in shreds, I can’t sleep and I also have to worry about not getting in trouble for lack of internet access. When in reality I am trying my very best to stay on top of things but I feel like I’m sinking as I have no routine in my life. Let me back in a classroom and I will gladly teach from there.
pwurple wrote: » Don't be a prat about it. We are all dealing with different circumstances. Our neighbours, 4 primary age children (twins in there). Both parents work in the hospital, doing opposite shifts at the moment to cover childcare. They put the kids watching TV and screens for hours each day so they can get a few hours of sleep themselves, to function. And are wracked with guilt about not educating them enough. You sneer at people for letting their kids fall behind? What choice do they have? I don't think it's unreasonable to ask teachers to be flexible where they can. It is their job.
Sheep breeder wrote: » Important thing to do with that phone call from the parent is record the time and date and number and basic content of the conversation and any follow up you have the details of the abuse. Work in the coal face and have received same and ask them to put it writing soon softened the cough. We ourselves are grateful to the way our teachers are trying their best. What annoying is the poor teacher.
JizzBeans wrote: » A lot of non-teachers passing unfair judgement here. Why is there an expectation that teachers will "work around this" or "come up with alternative solutions"? Some Boardies are never happy, they think teachers and their salaries are a joke but then expect teachers to fix the current situation.
runawaybishop wrote: » If they cant work then they shouldn't get paid maybe? Some teachers on this thread seem to have the most spurious reasons why they should get paid for doing nothing.
Caledonia wrote: » As the teacher said in Irish Times re colleagues ‘if you don’t have a laptop can I suggest you buy one’
beggars_bush wrote: » I hope children don't carry the same level of vitriol into school everyday that many parents and posters here seem to harbour towards teachers and schools