Faced with the great unknown of a novel virus
pandemic, governors ordered school doors closed to the face-to-face
education process and quickly promoted remote education as a
replacement. Parents had to reshuffle to having their children home
during the day, educators adapted to the challenges of completely
changed curriculum and processes, and administrators to the rigors
of student discipline, teacher encouragement and moving their
schools to changing government regulations in this charged
landscape.
Since the pandemic came on fast in March 2020, many things like
proms, student sports, and the typical graduation processes were
flat out abruptly cancelled. Important social interactions and
community affirmations went away for students. Communities did their
best to replace important processes like graduation with
socially-distanced parades and drive-bys. Many students felt like
the lost generation, victims of the pandemic.

Many, but not all teachers and students did well in this changed
environment. Personal mentoring and the conveyance of character from
teacher to student took a back seat. Teacher and student motivation
devolved to burnout, exhaustion, and depression for many as part of
the daily reality.
Teachers reported working harder than ever. Grades suffered and some
school systems even went to gradeless instruction.
Remote learning brought with it new challenges. Parents had to
assist with homework that was foreign and confusing. And now that it
is instituted, failures corrected, fine-tuned and better understood,
remote learning in varying degrees could become a continuing part of
education for some institutions in the future.
While many students and teachers went back to the
school environment for education in 2020-2021, masks, social
distancing, an unsure future and all the stress of living during the
coronavirus pandemic continued to take its toll. CEL Principal
Ashley Aper said, "The social emotional needs of students are more
important now than ever.
[to top of second column] |

Teachers can't teach when students are not
emotionally regulated or ready to learn. We have a social worker
that comes two days a week and we generally refer kids to her if it
is an ongoing issue -- but anymore home and school life are
intertwined."
A return to high school sports and recent teacher vaccinations have
perhaps shown us that there may be a light at the end of this tunnel
in the education process for parents, students, teachers and
administrators in K to 12th grade systems.
To all the students, their loving and patient parents, their
courageous teachers and abiding administrators, we say thank you for
working so hard, creatively adapting and staying the educational
path. Well done!
Read all the articles in our
new
2021 Education Magazine
Title
CLICK ON TITLES TO GO TO PAGES |
Page |
Educating
in a most challenging year |
4 |
A
preschool that is exciting, educational and
engaging |
5 |
Locan
educators creating practical math |
6 |
The
efficacy of remote learning |
9 |
Differences in college education during the
pandemic |
13 |
Changing the social dynamics of education |
19 |
School
resource officer makes positive impact |
24 |
What's
a dog doing in school? |
26 |
Academics and meaningful lessons blended |
31 |
The
return of school sports |
35 |
Logan
County School profiles |
38 |
|
|