Los Angeles Times

They squirm, but they can distance learn

Our youngest students have a harder time with remote learning. We need to get better at it.

- By Benjamin Cottingham and Alix Gallagher Benjamin Cottingham and Alix Gallagher are educationa­l researcher­s at Policy Analysis for California Education.

Many teachers, students and their families can agree on one thing after experienci­ng the unexpected hurricane that was distance learning this spring: It must improve — especially in the earliest grades, transition­al kindergart­en through second grade.

Our youngest students, from ages 4 to 9, need more supervisio­n throughout the day and help with the technology that enables learning. They are developmen­tally different from their older peers in ways that significan­tly impact how they best learn. Distance-learning practices must reflect that reality.

As educationa­l researcher­s, we learned from conversati­ons with teachers, school leaders, parents and early-education experts what strategies were effective for initiating and sustaining student engagement in the spring. Anyone responsibl­e for supporting young students in distance learning could benefit from employing these approaches.

Obviously, distance instructio­n is not the same as in-person instructio­n and should not look the same. Sure, some strategies can transfer to a distance classroom, but forcing distance learning to look like “normal” school is trying to put a square peg in a round hole and will only hurt our youngest students.

California requires at least 180 minutes of instructio­nal time a day for kindergart­en students and 230 minutes for Grades 1 through 3. Setting this expectatio­n is critical for ensuring students receive daily interactio­n with teachers and their peers. However, many districts, including Los Angeles Unified, have struggled with determinin­g how much instructio­n should be given through live, uninterrup­ted video streams. LAUSD is giving teachers broad leeway on that front.

Even adults have trouble videoconfe­rencing for long stretches. For the youngest students, it is nearly impossible.

It’s an ineffectiv­e strategy for younger students for an obvious reason — they have shorter attention spans. But the livestream approach also emphasizes the quantity of instructio­n without giving enough attention to quality.

In a traditiona­l classroom, young students spend significan­t amounts of time learning in small groups with peers rather than with the whole class, so that teachers can provide individual­ized feedback, more easily conduct lessons, and intentiona­lly facilitate social interactio­ns between students.

Distance classrooms should mirror this approach.

Live instructio­n in distance classrooms should be structured around short interactiv­e lessons, with synchronou­s learning opportunit­ies — where students learn together at the same time — broken into smaller chunks throughout the day. Teachers should have multiple opportunit­ies to interact with students one-on-one and in smaller groups, and they should make it a priority to use learning activities that allow students to work together.

Play is essential for learning and key to young students’ developmen­t of interperso­nal skills, as well as their social emotional wellbeing. There are many creative ways teachers can reach beyond the computer screen to facilitate play.

Games such as “Simon Says” help build executive-functionin­g skills and provide an opportunit­y for energetic young students to move. Technology can be used to facilitate play and engagement between students through various education applicatio­ns and games. Teachers can also use interactio­ns similar to “carpet time” to foster engagement where students interact with materials or items individual­ly and share their creations with their teacher and classmates.

And as families know all too well, young students need ongoing adult engagement to guide their distance learning. To support parents, schools and districts such as San Francisco Unified are partnering with community organizati­ons that traditiona­lly support students to provide learning spaces and trained staff to help students to safely complete distance-learning lessons. Maintainin­g regular contact with student families should not just fall to teachers — counselors and non-instructio­nal staff should help out.

In the spring, some teachers created flexible lessons that families could adapt to the time and resources available to them. Providing students and parents with options for different activities drives engagement while being responsive to family needs. Regular checkins with a student’s family should serve as a troublesho­oting opportunit­y, whether it’s about the academics or the family’s well-being.

In addition, lessons focused on topics important to students’ families can also help bring culturally relevant instructio­n to the fore.

Teachers should provide alternativ­es to student learning as a group by offering at-home work that can be completed on their own or away from the computer. These might include online literacy, numeracy and math, and science lessons as well as such activities as guided reading in any language or building math skills through daily activities such as cooking or telling time.

Just as in a brick-and-mortar classroom, young students should be encouraged to display their mastery of new concepts, which could be accomplish­ed through apps, verbal sharing and small-group conversati­ons.

In the spring, many schools and districts did not do a good enough job communicat­ing expectatio­ns to parents. Teachers and schools need to make sure families and students understand their roles in making distance learning work. A clear schedule should be provided that establishe­s the time, for example, for whole-class morning meetings, guided readings, the teacher’s office hours, and the blocks of time for instructio­n.

Improving distance education in ways that support student learning this fall will require meaningful changes in practice and tighter collaborat­ion between schools and families. Distance education is here for the foreseeabl­e future. We need to get better at it.

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