Coming into this new school year has been a mixed bag of emotions for everyone: anxiety, disappointment, frustration, excitement, sadness. Because many schools are starting the year with remote learning, add stress and hopelessness to the list especially for those juggling more than one child in school, work responsibilities, and maintaining some semblance of balance at home. There are quite a few social media posts of children trying hard to be excited for learning online but struggling (haven’t we all seen the little boy lying across his chair out of view of his teacher during a virtual session?!). Understandably, this leads to concerns of substantial learning loss for our students.
Schools are generally a place where students can feel valued and cared for, finding a comfortable stability in the routines established. Educators play a large part in cultivating these positive feelings, building relationships within the class family as part of the school community. But as more educators and students start the school year with remote learning, the absence of that in-person connection might cause many to struggle. The challenge becomes how to keep students connected, not just during virtual learning sessions but for as long as remote learning is in place. Besides the fact that education is vital for building critical thinking and problem-solving skills that will help them thrive as adults, students need to ‘buy-in’ to regularly connecting and participating in their remote learning environment.
Building buy-in means that educators are cultivating virtual class environments that students are willingly supporting and participating in. Students are showing up for scheduled virtual sessions and engaging, making an effort to complete assignments fully and on time, and actively trying to make academic progress. Here are some ways educators successfully develop buy-in for students:
Of course, this is not an absolute list of what can be done to help our students buy-in to remote learning. The ultimate goal is to instill in them a sense of confidence that educators are doing all that they can to meet their needs, including emotional. Educators, too, must feel confident that their actions will positively affect their students’ lives. It’s going to take hard work but not impossible to achieve. The outcome? Everyone eager and excited to take this new learning path.
Boxlight is working to meet the demand of creating collaborative virtual classrooms, including software and web applications, standards-driven digital curriculum, and quality teacher professional development. Learn more about what Boxlight has to offer by going to mimio.boxlight.com.