The Daily - The Struggle to Teach From Afar
Episode Date: June 12, 2020Ronda McIntyre’s classroom is built around a big rug, where her students crowd together often for group instruction. But since March, when schools across the country shut down because of the coronav...irus, she has had to try to create the same sense of community remotely. Her class, and her job, are not the same — and they may never be.Guest: Ronda McIntyre, a grade-school teacher at Indianola Informal K-8 school in Columbus, Ohio. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily Background reading: Elizabeth A. Harris, a Times reporter, spoke with Ms. McIntyre earlier this year in the course of reporting about the frustrations of parents trying to do their jobs while helping children with class work.The realities of remote learning for fourteen other teachers, in illustrated vignettes.Restarting classes is central to reviving economies. But even as students in Europe return to school, a question hangs over the efforts: What’s the risk of children getting, and spreading, the virus?
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Good morning, everybody. I hope you had a great spring break.
We are starting a new book today, and it is called Same Sun Here by Silas House and Neela Vaswani.
I think you're really going to like it.
It's written as a series of letters between two characters.
And I'm going to go ahead and get started. to you like you're a human being. You are the first American I know whose name means something.
So I think maybe you're not from this country. My brother says you are. He says all people in
Kentucky are Americans, not like in New York City, where most people are from everywhere in the world.
are from everywhere in the world.
From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
My brother is 17 years old.
He has a big smile and strong legs because he's a bike messenger.
Today.
All the girls love him,
which makes him very conceited.
As the school year comes to a close, a conversation with Rhonda McIntyre, a fifth grade teacher in Ohio, about the struggle to educate from afar.
It's Friday, June 12th.
Hey.
Hi there.
So I feel like I should be calling you Mrs. McIntyre.
Actually, no.
We have an informal philosophy at our school, and I have always been called Rhonda.
The kids call me Rhonda.
So when somebody calls me Mrs. McIntyre,
it makes me feel really old.
So no, Rhonda, perfect. Okay, okay, this is very progressive.
Not at all like when I was a student,
but I will participate.
Great.
So I wonder if you can tell me about the school
where you're teaching now.
So the name of my school is Indianola Informal K-8, and it's in Columbus, Ohio.
We are in a neighborhood in Columbus called Clintonville, but we draw from every corner of the city.
We're 100% lottery.
Meaning literally people get their names
kind of pulled out of a hat or it's by merit?
They do.
I mean, now it's by computer
and I teach fourth or fifth grade.
So I wonder if you could describe your classroom.
describe your classroom? My classroom is, it's a pretty typical informal classroom.
We have a little library nook area, you know, bookshelf surrounding it and pillows.
We've got posters hanging around the room and student work displayed. And the hub of the classroom is our rug space.
The rug space is where we meet as a group for instruction. Kids bring their materials to the rug. We do not have desks. Wow. So you teach the kids for a lot of the day,
basically on a rug seated around you. Yeah, the rug is the center. They come to the rug
for the lesson, and then they often return to tables in table groups or in other spaces around
the room. It's important to me because of the proximity. You know, I can
look into their eyes. I mean, I can do classroom management easier when they're on the rug, but I
can also connect with them in a more personable way than I can if I'm standing and they're all
seated around the room. And I think that it helps their focus
and their attention span as well.
Do you have anything in your classroom,
whether it's an object or a sign,
something that kids really love or are attached to?
Well, something that really is,
has resonated with this group
is something that I have called the calming caddy
and it's a literal caddy with a handle that is large enough to hold many objects
little stuffed animals smooth river stonesented lotion, a battery operated candle.
Wow.
And the idea being you pick it up, you find a spot in the room, you try and deal with your
powerful emotions that are, you know, creating you distraction or maybe driving you to anger.
You know, kids, they come in from recess. There's been a friend issue. They're not over it. And they might to the point where there were kids that would zero in on someone that was,
you could tell they were struggling.
They were having a hard time with something.
And they would walk the calming caddy over to someone.
They knew how to use it.
They did. And there are some people that just kind of took it upon themselves to, you know, to be
a helper in that way.
And does it work?
You know what?
It does work.
I mean, it's not 100%, but it does work.
Given everything you've just described
and how kind of powerfully intimate
a lot of these interactions are,
I have to imagine that it was very alarming to you
and disruptive to suddenly have to go from regular teaching
to the kind of remote teaching of this pandemic?
Very much so, because this is a group, and not just socially and emotionally, but, you
know, academically, they needed a lot of support.
They needed a lot of support. And I have seen the results of not being able to be there and, you know, check in with the kids I know I need to check what's not happened since this not being in a physical school building happened.
I wonder if you could take me through that whole process, starting with when you first realized that the school was going to be sending kids home? Well, initially, we learned on Thursday, March 12th,
that school would be closing for three weeks
and that our district's last day would be Friday.
We had, you know, 24 hours notice.
So we were making it up as we went along. Basically, it was sort of
each teacher, each school was making their plan for those first three weeks. So I said, everybody
go to the bookshelves and take some books. And we tried to send them home with their math books.
We were not operating with any kind of, this is the plan.
It was sort of each teacher, each school was making their plan for those first three weeks.
So there really was no formal structure for distance learning,
for virtual classrooms? No, there wasn't. I think it blindsided everyone.
What were the first couple of days and weeks of trying to teach remotely once you realized that
this was not going to be an extended spring break? This is going to be
a kind of new reality. What did that look like for you?
So the main issue was we were trying to develop curriculum.
We were trying to develop a routine.
And it became clear that teaching, saying,
hey, everybody, be in front of your computer at 11 o'clock for this, that,
or the other thing was not going to work. What do you mean? I mean, I was interacting with parents
by email. I was interacting with parents by a phone app that I have. And, you know, I was getting some feedback, you know, that I'm working
14 hours a day now, and I'm not able to oversee or so-and-so is sharing a device with their sibling,
you know, I mean, just these sorts of things. So it was not going to be a situation where you could teach online.
Once you've done your best to try to get as many students as possible on a device, and it sounds like not all of them could,
how many students are actually there on the other end, as best you can tell, in these early days participating?
Very few. So in the early days, I would say maybe six to eight.
Wow.
Yeah.
Out of 25. Yeah. And then I started hearing from parents about how my child doesn't have any motivation. They have nothing to look forward to. I totally get this.
That's how I started then talking on the phone with people weekly. And one of the students I checked in with was Axel. Hi, Axel.
Axel is a really hard worker, but very reserved, shy, oftentimes you doing, man? It's the home stretch. I don't like it.
His mother was working so hard to manage four boys, one in high school, two identical twins
in eighth grade and Axel in fifth grade while she was furloughed as a massage therapist.
Wow.
And she reached out to me and she said, I am completely overwhelmed.
And so is Axel.
He'll go through the first part of it and he'll be like, okay, okay, I've got it.
I've got it.
And then he does the test and the test is harder than the material.
It is. And it's just like a little bit harder, like 50 times harder.
Yeah. And whenever I click on the answer, it goes, nope.
He hated the platform that the district was using called iReady. It gives you this test. And then
if you don't earn the passing score, it says try again. Well, try again is pretty demoralizing.
And he had had it like he was done. I mean, the computer doesn't really know you right as a person, as a student.
And you are just so good at giving your best effort, Axel.
And I do you think if you did half the lesson that you could give it better focus?
No, but just.
no bitches I hate it
and so we talked about it
and I told him that you know
I have been hearing this from
other kids too and it
sounds like you're really
really struggling so let's just forget
I ready
so you just kind of erased it from his curriculum
I could tell that he needed
something that was going to
seem more applicable to real life.
And we were studying economics.
Have you taken a look at any of the economics lessons?
No.
Some of them are kind of fun.
Let's see.
One of them is about shopping for groceries.
What I want to buy is probably going to be Skittles.
So we struck a bargain.
Okay, so Axel, you feel okay about looking at the economics?
It's under social studies this week.
And he did those things.
Well, it's always good to hear your voice, and it's good to see you on the zoom meeting
yeah thank you it was great to talk to you and i did that with several kids and it just needed to
happen i mean i learned to back off and i started assigning less and um i could just tell that they needed a lot of grace and that the academics had to be
secondary. I mean, I always felt that, but when, when you have a parent basically telling you,
look, this is, this is crushing my child, like this is crushing their spirit. And I'm so overwhelmed. You know, it just really
informed me. I mean, because I have not felt like I've been able to,
to be there for everyone in the way that they need. And I always questioned, am I doing enough?
Am I doing enough? I mean, am I doing enough? I mean, I think that's a teacher's existential dilemma always, but this has taken it to a whole new level. We'll be right back.
Rhonda, have you been back to your classroom since the school closed because of the pandemic?
Yes.
And it was really startling.
It's Tuesday, May 19th. I'm heading into my classroom because I opened my email like first thing in the morning,
and I saw an email that talked about getting our students' belongings
out of our classrooms and out of their lockers
and closing down our classrooms, which is a very lengthy process, by this Friday.
So as I look around my room, the things that strike me are just the mundane, ordinary things.
When I think about how are we going to do this as a class again, I have this lovely, brand new rug.
The rug even has multicolored circles, which can actually be a spot for kids to sit.
Those circles are about an inch apart.
That is going to need to change.
I'm just getting a little emotional thinking about all the changes.
I look at my tables.
I have six of them.
I have a class of 25 this year.
If we're going to socially distance in classrooms,
the only way I can see this working is one at each end.
That's 12 kids.
We have a caddy on every table.
It has markers.
It has colored pencils. It has glue sticks.
Because we have communal supplies. One of the things I have to pack today is the math area.
Pattern blocks. Fraction kits. How We can't share them anymore.
I have to find a way for everyone to have their own kit.
But I don't have enough for everyone to have their own kit.
This is a city school district.
We have to share things.
Oh, my gosh.
The calming caddy.
That.
the calming caddy.
That...
this is a real loss, not being able to use things like this.
I've been reading that as schools are opening in Europe,
some of the safeguards that they're taking,
and one is teaching with the windows open year round.
I have two windows in my room that open.
And they open about six inches.
The rest of the windows don't open.
I'm afraid. I'm just really afraid. I am not a spring chicken. I'm 57 years old and I want to be safe, just like everyone else.
So I guess my biggest takeaway, as I look around this room,
is how I'm going to do this.
And there's so much ambiguity.
We don't have a plan yet.
Ohio does not have a plan yet for next year.
All right. All right.
So as you're touring your classroom,
you're realizing that it is designed for a pre-pandemic form of teaching.
Yes, it is. Most definitely.
Basically, the whole structure of my classroom is set up for sharing, sharing items, sharing spaces.
And it was really overwhelming.
Let's pretend that you attempt to impose these kinds of restrictions, something like a six-foot distancing system,
and perhaps you yourself as a teacher
physically being further apart from the students
than you've ever been before.
What do you think the impact of all that would be
on your students?
I think it's going to have a numbing kind of effect, you know, just
it's going to be a loss. And telling a child, you know, you need to stay this far away
from your peers. You know, having to do that on top of teaching, but then walking in the hallway,
But then walking in the hallway, using the restroom, I'm not able to picture how this is going to work.
I just, I'm having, I'm having a lot of angst about it.
It seems possible that some hybrid scenario like you're describing would be in place. You know, maybe it's not a full classroom, but it's a half a classroom.
Some distance learning, some in-classroom learning with social distancing. And I wonder if you think that teaching is ever going to really feel the same.
No, it's not going to feel the same by a long shot.
But if that takes a while,
if that takes years,
the foreseeable future,
what does that mean?
I don't know.
I am in the latter part of my career
and, you know, my fulfillment is really tied to those personal connections.
So if I'm not getting that, then I have to reevaluate, I think.
Right. What does it mean to teach? And is this teaching? And is that what you set out to do
a few decades ago?
Yeah, that will be a question that I will ask myself if this extends beyond next year.
And what do you think the answer will be?
I think the answer will be that if I can handle it financially,
that I will leave because it is, it's a calling and without the day-to-day intimacy of connecting with children and colleagues and their families, it just, it leaves a lot of emptiness.
For someone else, it might be a good fit.
For me, I don't think it would be.
It would be a shame to lose you as a teacher, though.
I can say that, and I've only known you for an hour or so.
Well, thank you very much.
Well, Rhonda, thank you.
I do hope that
under the safest possible conditions
that we can resume
the kind of classroom environment
that you care so deeply about
and that I grew up with and that so many
of us treasure. Yeah. Yeah. You and everyone else, I think. Yeah. Thank you very much. We
really appreciate your time. Thank you.
P.S. My brother says there was a famous movie star who died a long time ago with your name.
Is this true?
P.P.S. We live five blocks away from the East River in New York City.
Do you live near a river too? Also, what kind of music do you like?
That's where we're going to stop for today.
All right, I'm going to sign off because it's almost time for the Monday Zoom meeting and
I've got to go get ready. I'll see you guys soon.
Bye. We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
I need those officers to be convicted and charged because my dad, he did not have to die.
The family of Derek Scott, a black man who died in the custody of Oklahoma City police,
are demanding that police there be investigated and charged in his 2019 death
after a video showed Scott telling officers, quote,
I can't breathe, as they pinned him to the ground.
The video,
recorded by police body cameras,
captures one of the officers
responding to Scott's plea
by saying, quote,
I don't care.
Scott died a short time later.
A medical examiner found that his arrest contributed to his death.
And...
As senior leaders, everything you do will be closely watched.
And I am not immune.
On Thursday, the country's top military official, General Mark Milley,
apologized for participating in a photo op in which
President Trump walked across Lafayette Square in Washington in order to hold up
a Bible in front of a church.
As many of you saw the result of the photograph of me at Lafayette Square last week,
that sparked a national debate about the role of the military in civil society. To prepare for that walk,
federal authorities deployed tear gas and rubber bullets on mostly peaceful protesters,
prompting former military officials to criticize Milley for taking part. I should not have been
there. My presence in that moment and in that environment created a perception of the military
involved in domestic politics. As a commissioned uniformed officer, it was a mistake that I've
learned from. Finally, a Times review of arrest records has found that none of the protesters
charged with serious federal crimes over the past few weeks have been linked to the anti-fascist group Antifa, as President Trump and his Attorney General, Bill Barr, have repeatedly claimed.
So far, the records reveal no effort by Antifa to coordinate a campaign of violence.
to coordinate a campaign of violence.
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That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you on Monday.