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Should parents teach their kids at home during COVID-19 school closures?

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Should parents teach their kids at home during COVID-19 school closures?

91亚色 educator available to explain how to encourage learning while stressed

TORONTO, April 15, 2020 鈥 Tomorrow is the one-month anniversary of Ontario's elementary school closures due to March Break and the COVID-19 pandemic, creating high anxiety for parents trying to teach their kids at home while juggling work and childcare.

, an assistant professor in 91亚色鈥檚 Faculty of Education, says many parents and educators are struggling with the shift to teacher-led online learning, and while we can鈥檛 expect parents to take on the role of teachers, we also have to change our expectations of teachers.

Some parents are helping their kids adjust to online learning which began last week, plus managing their household and the stress from working at home, she says. That stress is multiplied for parents who are essential workers, who are living in poverty, who have been laid off from their jobs and are worrying about food insecurity and paying their mounting bills.

鈥淲e are asking too much of parents and teachers and we need to pull back on what the expectations are for children learning at home,鈥 said Shah, a former Toronto District School Board teacher who used to teach primary, junior and intermediate聽classes.

鈥淭his is a time of tremendous fear and trauma,鈥 she says. 鈥淎s best as they can, parents are encouraged to connect with their children, focus on their social and emotional well-being and ask them how they鈥檙e doing.鈥

COVID-19 has changed life as we know it, with self-isolation being the new reality, so our approach to education has to adapt too, she says.

鈥淟earning doesn鈥檛 happen because of a perfect, pre-packaged lesson,鈥 says Shah. 鈥淟earning is happening everywhere and all the time 鈥 in the kitchen when you鈥檙e cooking, when you鈥檙e going for a walk and in conversation with your children about what鈥檚 happening on TV.鈥

鈥淲e as educators need to take the pressure off of parents who feel like they have to teach their children,鈥 says Shah, who now teaches classes for prospective teachers. 鈥淲e also need to recognize the tremendous work that teachers are doing in this time while navigating their own families, challenges and realities.鈥

With the new online learning at home, parents need to assess whether it鈥檚 supporting or hurting their children. For elementary students who need routines to feel safe and connected to the larger world, formal learning tasks make sense, explains Shah. But if schoolwork becomes overwhelming for kids and is damaging to their social, emotional or academic well-being, parents should feel empowered to let their teachers know, and ask for adjustments to deadlines and workload, she says.

Shah, an education expert on issues of equity and justice, says families living in poverty, many of which are racialized, are especially vulnerable in an environment of online learning.

鈥淭he current approach to online learning will exacerbate the inequities that have always existed in schooling systems and will inevitably create new inequities for children,鈥 she says, citing the examples of varying access to a quiet work space, family stress, and lack of WiFi and technology access.

Shah is encouraging educators to focus on relationships (continuing to build deep connections with their students), student-led inquiry (encouraging students to ask questions based on their interests and engage in critical thinking to seek thoughtful answers to their questions), self-reflection (inviting students to reflect on their thoughts and feelings during these times) 聽and structure (creating routines that help make students feel safe).

She can comment on:

  • The best ways to support elementary school children in their at-home learning
  • How to encourage kids to ask questions to foster learning opportunities
  • Why it鈥檚 important for parents to focus more on their kids鈥 social and emotional well-being and less on education during stressful times
  • How online learning has worsened inequities for populations of marginalized and racialized children

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91亚色 U's fully bilingual Glendon Campus is home to Southern Ontario's Centre of Excellence for French Language and Bilingual Postsecondary Education.

Media Contact: Vanessa Thompson, 91亚色 Media Relations, 647-654-9452,聽vthomps@yorku.ca

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