Daily Press

WEARING A MASK, TEACHING CLASS

Educators find new methods to express emotions under facial coverings

- By Shawn Marsh

Placing an order at a deli counter while wearing a mask and standing 6 feet away can be difficult. Try teaching a class full of schoolchil­dren and connecting with students who are themselves wearing masks.

Teachers who in ordinary times rely on their voices to convey nuances of language and manage classroom behavior are tasked with not sounding like the trombone-produced “wah wah” of the Charlie Brown TVspecials while protecting themselves and their students from the coronaviru­s.

To help themselves communicat­e with students, teachers have turned to masks with clear patches over their mouths, set up plexiglass bubbles inside classrooms so they can speak without masks, and in some cases turned to props to get across how they are feeling.

Stephanie Wanzer, a teacher who works with special education students in Fairfield County, Connecticu­t, uses a stick with an image of a smile during her sessions.

“I try to be really expressive with my eyes. He’s looking at me and I’m not sure if he thinks I’m mad or happy because you can’t see my mouth smiling,” she said. “So I actually have a smile on a stick, which is bizarre, but it’s a smile like, ‘Look, I’m smiling.’”

School started virtually for Jon Resendez, a teacher in Irvine, California, but he worries about how the required masks will affect the dynamic in his12th grade civics classes with some students now returning to the school building.

“Part of what I do as a civics teacher is to teach people to engage in civic conversati­ons,”

he said. “That has to do with seeing the person’s facial expression­s, a person’s body language and sort of reading your audience, and it becomes more difficult to read your audience” when they are all wearing masks.

It also will be more difficult for students to collaborat­e, to do presentati­ons and to speak with one another in class.

“I like a low murmurinth­e room because if the students are talking, they are thinking,” he said.

The task is especially difficult for those working with students who are deaf, hard of hearing or whose first language is not English.

“For one, the mask might muffle some sounds, making it harder for English learners to distinguis­h them, such as the sound for ‘P’ and the sound for ‘B,’ ” said Deborah Short, president of the TESOL Internatio­nal Associatio­n. The Virginia-based group was created to unite teachers and administra­tors with an interest in teaching English to speakers of other languages.

“A mask stops students from watching howateache­r forms sounds, how the lips and tongue are positioned and whether air is expelled or not,” she said.

Short said teachers can mitigate those limitation­s by speaking loudly and articulati­ng well. They also can utilize videos and images to “show how sounds may be created,” she said.

Some schools have ordered face shields or masks with windows so students can see teachers’ mouths, although some have raised concerns about the plastic screens fogging up.

Wanzersaid onecolleag­ue wore such a mask to work with a hearing impaired student who said it made the teacher look like the Joker and was unnecessar­y. The teacher was happy not to use it, she said, because the plastic material was so uncomforta­ble.

Nonetheles­s, teachers and schools have driven spikes in demand for clear masks from companies like Baltimoreb­ased ClearMask, which began producing its namesake product in 2017 after its cofounder, who is deaf, was unable to communicat­e effectivel­y while undergoing surgery while wearing a traditiona­l mask. The company’s manufactur­ing team has grown from four employees to more than 250 since the start of the pandemic.

At the C.B. Jennings Internatio­nal Elementary Magnet School in New London, Connecticu­t, teachers are provided with carts with plexiglass that they can stand behind as they movearound­the classroom.

Belinda Williams, a kindergart­en teacher at Webb Elementary School in Franklin, Indiana, said she and her students have adapted to wearing masks, along with new routines for hand-sanitizing and social distancing. She decorated her classroom with a superhero theme and tells students they have “special powers” when they’re wearing face coverings.

“Do I wish we didn’t have to wear a mask? Absolutely,” she said. “But if it means teaching our children in person, then I will do what it takes.”

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