Disaster Educators teaching online and in person at the same time feel burnt out - I'm not even in school anymore and I'm burnt out


Every weekday morning, Paul Yenne sets up five different devices — including two laptops, an iPhone and a screen-caster that projects videos to a large screen — to get ready for the 19 fifth-grade students who come to his classroom and the six who log on from home.

The Colorado school district where Yenne works offers in-person and online classes simultaneously, with one teacher responsible for both as the Covid-19 pandemic touches every facet of education.

Yenne, 31, delivers the day’s lesson, his eyes continuously darting between the students in front of him and those stacked on a virtual grid on a laptop at the front of the room.

Despite his desire to create a seamless classroom experience for both groups, one inevitably gets left out, he said. If the technology breaks down, his classroom students have to wait until he fixes it, and if there's an in-person issue, it's the other way around, he said.

“The most exhausting thing is just to try and hold attention in two different places and give them at least somewhat equal weight,” he said. “What kind of wears on me the most is just thinking, 'I don't know that I did the best for every kid,' which is what I try and do every day when I go in."

While most K-12 schools have chosen to go either online or in person at one time, the double duty model is among the most labor-intensive, according to education experts. Yet it's increasingly becoming the new norm around the country, and with less than a quarter of the school year down, many teachers say they're already exhausted.

They have received little training and resources are scarce, they say, but they worry that speaking up could cost them their jobs.

”I think that kind of exhaustion we had from last year has kind of compounded as now we're being asked to do essentially two jobs at once,” Yenne said. “The big question right now is, 'How long can we continue doing this?'"

Afraid to speak out​

While many schools call this form of teaching “hybrid,” experts label it “concurrent teaching” or “hyflex," modes originally designed for university and graduate-level students.

Brian Beatty, an associate professor at San Francisco State University who pioneered the hyflex program, said it was designed to have more than a single mode of interaction going on in the same class and typically involves classroom and online modes that can be synchronous or asynchronous.

The aim was to provide students not in the classroom with as good an educational experience as those who were, and it was intended for students who chose to be taught that way on a regular or frequent basis, he said. The model was created for adults at the undergraduate and graduate level who made the choice and were able to manage themselves.

“The context of the situation at the elementary level is so different than the situation that we designed this for," he said. "A lot of the principles can work but challenges are also a lot more extreme, especially around managing students.”

Sophia Smith, a literary enrichment teacher for kindergarten through third-grade students in Des Plaines, Illinois, said her elementary school allowed little time for training and planning before teachers were thrust into the dual mode.

She said 40 percent of her students are online, and she spends much of her time going back and forth between online and classroom students, leaving little time for meaningful instruction.

"It's extremely chaotic," she said, adding that if school officials were to visit her classroom, they would understand how their decisions about hybrid education really affected teachers.

Smith worries the model will become an accepted norm, mostly because teachers who are struggling to keep up are scared to speak out.

“We're afraid to lose our jobs," she said. "We're afraid that the district will come back and treat us differently or say things differently, like, 'Nobody else is complaining, so why is it you?'"

Smith said she is speaking up now because she wants other teachers to feel more comfortable doing so.

Matthew Rhoads, an education researcher and author of "Navigating the Toggled Term: Preparing Secondary Educators for Navigating Fall 2020 and Beyond," said schools added a livestream component to their curriculum in a panicked effort to offer an online choice to families. But much of the implementation was not thought out, he said, leaving teachers to deal with the fallout.

Teachers are beyond exhausted, said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, one of the largest teachers unions in the country.

“This is the worst of all worlds,” she said. “The choice to do that came down to money and convenience, because it certainly wasn’t about efficacy and instruction.”

Long-term consequences​

David Finkle, a ninth-grade teacher at a Florida high school, said he has not been able to sleep despite being depleted of energy after a full day of online and in-person instruction. The veteran teacher of nearly 30 years stopped running, writing creatively and doing any of the other activities he enjoys when school began in August.

“It's been very hard for me to focus on my other creative stuff outside of school because school is wiping me out," he said, adding that it's difficult to keep up with grading because it takes so long to plan lessons for the two groups.

"I wish I could focus on one set of students," he said.

Teachers are reporting high levels of stress and burnout around the country, including in Kansas, Michigan and Arkansas. In Utah, the Salt Lake Tribune reported, principals say their teachers are having panic attacks while juggling both.

High levels of teacher stress affect not only students and their quality of education, but the entire profession, said Christopher McCarthy, chair of the educational psychology department at the University of Texas at Austin.

"When teachers are under a lot of stress, they are also a lot more likely to leave the profession, which is a very bad outcome," he said.

Already, 28 percent of educators said the Covid-19 pandemic has made them more likely to retire early or leave the profession, according to a nationwide poll of educators published in Augustby the National Education Association, the country's largest teachers union.

Rhoads, the education researcher, said retaining high-caliber teachers is crucial, especially now, but if the hyflex model continues without adequate support, a mass teacher shortage is inevitable.

Such an event would have far-reaching effects, accelerating school district consolidations and causing some states to lower their standards and licensing requirements for teachers, he said.

For instance, the Missouri Board of Education passed an emergency rule in anticipation of a pandemic-related teacher shortage that made it easier to become a substitute. Instead of 60 hours of college credit, eligible substitutes need only a high school diploma, to complete a 20-hour online training course and pass a background check, according to the Associated Press.

Iowa relaxed relaxed coursework requirements and lowered the minimum age for newly hired substitutes from 21 to 20, the AP reported, and in Connecticut, college students have been asked to step in as substitutes.

Supporting teachers​

Paige, a middle school teacher in central Florida who did not want her full name used to protect her job, said teachers at her school received less than a week’s notice that they would be teaching in the classroom and online concurrently. They received no training on platforms or logistics, she said.

Since the beginning of the year, she has struggled with internet accessibility and technical glitches.

“We need greater bandwidth," she said. "I have five kids turn on the camera and suddenly nothing is working in real time anymore. We need more devices."

She said teachers doing double duty should receive improved products, technology training and professional guidance and mentorship. Other teachers said having a day or even half a day for planning would help.

McCarthy, the educational psychologist, said the best support teachers can get when demands are high are the resources to deal with the challenges.

"What's happening right now is lack of resources mixed with a lot of uncertainty," he said, "and that is a toxic blend."

Related Threads of mine:
 
Despite his desire to create a seamless classroom experience for both groups, one inevitably gets left out, he said. If the technology breaks down, his classroom students have to wait until he fixes it, and if there's an in-person issue, it's the other way around, he said.
Stupid question probably, but aren't these schools still using Zoom for their meetings? Doesn't every teacher have their own computer with an Ethernet hook-up? How the fuck can the "technology break down" if you have impeccable internet in the school? Or are they talking about the students who are most likely using wifi? If so, then that's the student's issue, not the teachers.
 
It's not the devices, hell, it's not even the dumb "hybrid" model, it's the fact that they are kids not physically located in the classroom. Kids hate school and take every effort to rebel against it without getting detention, and that's to say nothing of the ones that don't care if they do get it. Take them out of the classroom where unfettered access to the internet is available and good luck getting any time to actually educate because you're spending 90% of your energy trying to herd a particularly bored bundle of cats. It's why you take the cell phones away. It's why you have assigned seating. It's why you intercept the notes passed in class and read them aloud at the student's chagrin. You need structure, and the distance eliminates it. Online education does not work for grades K-12 and this is proof positive.

Stupid question probably, but aren't these schools still using Zoom for their meetings? Doesn't every teacher have their own computer with an Ethernet hook-up? How the fuck can the "technology break down" if you have impeccable internet in the school? Or are they talking about the students who are most likely using wifi? If so, then that's the student's issue, not the teachers.
The teachers are expected to deal with any distraction to keep the education process going, so yes, it's their issue to deal with at the expense of learning. If a student's wifi just so happens to "go out" then it's like a student gets up from his desk and walks out of the room. It's a disruption the teacher cannot ignore lest it become clear they have no authority over these kids.
 
Boo-hoo-. Cry me a fucking river. I used to have respect for teachers but I have seen how, more than once, their jobs are so easy that they can manipulate facts at classes and get away with it scott free. Most of them also take deep enjoyment out of mistreating and belittling students that happen to have problems with their subjects and teaching methods.
If they are exausting themselves, great, hope they suffer an aneurysm mid online class so kids can internally celebrate the asshole finally shut up.

If they dont like their jobs, then leave, there are other jobs that pay better and will "exaust" them less, like construction.

Or you know, cease this faggotry with online classes and return to how it was, god damn it.

So quit? Go work at a supermarket you'll probably make more money.
Dude, how else will they work towards the next generation of commies and anti-nationalists?
 
It's not the devices, hell, it's not even the dumb "hybrid" model, it's the fact that they are kids not physically located in the classroom. Kids hate school and take every effort to rebel against it without getting detention, and that's to say nothing of the ones that don't care if they do get it. Take them out of the classroom where unfettered access to the internet is available and good luck getting any time to actually educate because you're spending 90% of your energy trying to herd a particularly bored bundle of cats. It's why you take the cell phones away. It's why you have assigned seating. It's why you intercept the notes passed in class and read them aloud at the student's chagrin. You need structure, and the distance eliminates it. Online education does not work for grades K-12 and this is proof positive.


The teachers are expected to deal with any distraction to keep the education process going, so yes, it's their issue to deal with at the expense of learning. If a student's wifi just so happens to "go out" then it's like a student gets up from his desk and walks out of the room. It's a disruption the teacher cannot ignore lest it become clear they have no authority over these kids.
Online learning also doesn't address the need for social interaction and education. Kids educated solely online are going to be even more autistic than the ones who are educated in the classroom and spend the rest of their time online.
 
Stupid question probably, but aren't these schools still using Zoom for their meetings? Doesn't every teacher have their own computer with an Ethernet hook-up? How the fuck can the "technology break down" if you have impeccable internet in the school? Or are they talking about the students who are most likely using wifi? If so, then that's the student's issue, not the teachers.
Because it's straight up spyware and tracks all of your movements and reports it to the instructor
 
Online learning also doesn't address the need for social interaction and education. Kids educated solely online are going to be even more autistic than the ones who are educated in the classroom and spend the rest of their time online.
I agree. There's going to be a really big gap in the future when it comes to simply understanding one another. There's so much lost without body language or just simple verbal remarks that these kids are not going to be trained on, and real-world interactions are going to be hitting them like a truck.
 
Reinstate a leave behind mentality.

If a kid is from home on zoom, its the job of the parent to make sure he attends his class. Let the teacher teach and if some kid decides to fuck around and not watch the call or disturb then just kick him out and continue with the rest of the class. Education has became even worse for everyone when we literally have to stop class for every single tards and kids that act out and everyone is wrose off for it.

Leave the tards behind and keep on trucking.
 
I think the entire current day education system is rotten to the core, among other major factors contributing to it. No amount of pinning blame on internet teaching is ever going to detract from that.

As I've noticed in the vocalized responses in chat, there's no effort to give children ever a reason, let alone inspire the spirit of learning into them. Putting everything online only exacerbates this, because again and as said before, kids are going to try and find a way to dodge the boring routine they don't even know why they are attending or find the motivation to attend.

I typically say Fuck school a lot, but that's because it's a clusterfuck of Education Department agendas and instills people from a young age a lot of bullshit. Maybe if this was unfucked, I wouldn't say Fuck school so much.
 
The education system is unfit for purpose and children should generally be educated by their parents, given books & equipment and allowed the freedom to explore subjects instead of being at the mercy of a curriculum. Instead of trying to continue to shoehorn the old system into the current context just leave kids alone.

>reports your activity to the instructor
Got a source on that one? That's the first time I heard of Zoom doing that.
I think it only tells them whether or not the window is focused.
 
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