新冠肺炎在犹他谷

IF 0.5 4区 计算机科学 Q4 COMPUTER SCIENCE, INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Michael A. Owens
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As both of my children at home are competitive gymnasts, we faced another decision about whether to keep them home from training. \nAs my work and personal email boxes began filling with announcements from my university, my department, my children’s school, my children’s gym, and even my church and extended out-of-state family, I had to fight back a growing sense of anxiety about the outside world as I looked after my physical recovery. Staying home from work, just as a symbolic gesture, made a lot of sense to me. I’d already afflicted my colleagues with my occasional coughing from my isolated office way down the corridor, but I didn’t want to leave anything to chance. Although I presumed my odds of having COVID-19 were small after three trips to the doctor in the last month for secondary infections resulting from my allergies, who really knew? So, from my home office, I put into practice the skills I learned from doing remote instruction over the last several years. \nUp until the present challenge, I had tried to access my email only in the morning and afternoon. As news and instructions came in from my university and department, email communication became a near-constant distraction/source of information. Following our university’s lead, our college moved to all-remote instruction and social isolating. This meant moving to the Zoom video conferencing app. Fortunately, I was quite familiar with the app, so I didn’t have too hard a transition. However, at least a few of my colleagues had to make substantial changes to what and how they taught. Moreover, our students varied widely in how familiar and comfortable they were with the online interface. They valued our programs for their face-to-face emphasis, and now they were being asked to adjust everything about their experience within days. Moreover, most of my students are educational professionals themselves, so they were scrambling to provide direction and services to their own students. In the days following the university’s move to all-remote instruction, I participated in several instructional and organizational meetings with administrators and colleagues to ensure we were all in accord about the adjustments we would make to classes, and I spent hours on email coordinating with students and responding to their personal and professional concerns. I greatly reduced planned whole-group instruction in favor of individual consultation. I felt frustration at my students as they requested that I take my class instruction down to the basics. As I was teaching a course on qualitative research methods, I already felt I was barely touching on the tip of the iceberg as it was. How more stripped down could I get? At the same time, I was still recovering physically from (what I hoped were) my allergies, so I recognized that some of my frustration was my body demanding time to recover. \nTo add to the challenges/opportunities of the first week into this at-home learning experiment, I had my two elementary-aged children at home with their own learning needs to consider. Even as I type, my third grader (who has an IEP) is in my office with me on i-Ready doing her daily math lesson on my university-issued iPad while my wife works with our sixth grader on her laptop. I find myself dividing my time between my third grader and my professional work, and I feel like neither is getting the attention they deserve. And yet, in the midst of the chaos, things are happening. Our children are getting more one-on-one time than they have in quite a while. They’re happy and adjusting. I wonder about their peers. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

2020年3月的第二周,我调整了工作和家庭生活,以应对COVID-19病毒,在职业和个人方面都面临着一系列独特的挑战。在我们的大学和学区宣布我们应该开始自我隔离并准备在家指导之前,我已经患有(我希望)季节性过敏,这让我咳嗽、睡眼惺忪,并怀疑我是否可能感染了COVID-19。由于我家里的两个孩子都是竞技体操运动员,我们面临着另一个决定,是否让他们在家不参加训练。当我的工作邮箱和个人邮箱开始被来自我的大学、系里、孩子的学校、孩子的健身房、甚至我的教堂和州外大家庭的通知填满时,我不得不在照顾身体恢复的同时,抑制对外部世界日益增长的焦虑感。呆在家里不工作,只是一种象征性的姿态,对我来说很有意义。我偶尔会在走廊那头的办公室里咳嗽,这已经让我的同事们很难受了,但我不想让任何事情发生。虽然在上个月因过敏引起的继发感染三次去看医生后,我认为自己感染COVID-19的几率很小,但谁真的知道呢?所以,在我的家庭办公室里,我把过去几年从远程教学中学到的技能付诸实践。在这次挑战之前,我一直只在早上和下午查看电子邮件。当我的大学和院系传来新闻和指示时,电子邮件沟通几乎成了一种持续的干扰/信息来源。在我们大学的领导下,我们学院转向了远程教学和社会隔离。这意味着我要改用Zoom视频会议应用。幸运的是,我对这款应用非常熟悉,所以过渡过程并不太困难。然而,至少我的一些同事不得不对他们的教学内容和方式做出实质性的改变。此外,我们的学生对在线界面的熟悉程度和舒适程度差异很大。他们看重我们的课程,因为它强调面对面的交流,而现在他们被要求在几天内调整自己的一切经历。此外,我的大多数学生本身就是教育专业人士,所以他们争先恐后地为自己的学生提供指导和服务。在学校实行全远程教学后的几天里,我与管理人员和同事参加了几次教学和组织会议,以确保我们对课程的调整意见一致。我花了几个小时收发电子邮件,与学生协调,回应他们的个人和专业问题。我大大减少了计划中的集体指导,转而进行个人咨询。我对我的学生感到沮丧,因为他们要求我把课堂教学简化到最基本的部分。当我在教一门关于定性研究方法的课程时,我已经觉得我几乎没有触及冰山一角。我还能再精简到什么程度?与此同时,我的身体还在从过敏中恢复(我希望是这样),所以我意识到我的一些沮丧是我的身体需要时间来恢复。为了增加这个在家学习实验第一周的挑战/机会,我让我的两个小学年龄的孩子在家,他们有自己的学习需要考虑。就在我打字的时候,我的三年级学生(她有IEP)正在我的办公室里和我一起用I - ready在我大学发给她的iPad上做她每天的数学课,而我的妻子在她的笔记本电脑上和我们的六年级学生一起工作。我发现自己把时间都花在了三年级和专业工作上,我觉得两者都没有得到应有的关注。然而,在混乱之中,事情正在发生。我们的孩子得到了比以往更多的一对一时间。他们很开心,也在适应。我想知道他们的同龄人。我的孩子们就读于Title I学校,他们的许多父母和看护人无法像他们一样获得远程学习资源。许多人没有父母在家监督他们的老师通过b谷歌教室(几乎是奇迹般地)提供的组织良好的教学。在隔离初期,这是一个陌生的新世界,我相信未来会有很多机遇和挑战。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
COVID-19 in Utah Valley
The second week of March 2020 presented an array of unique challenges for me both professionally and personally as I adjusted my work and home life to cope with the COVID-19 virus. I had already been ailing with what (I hoped) were seasonal allergies that left me coughing, bleary-eyed, and wondering if I might be sick with COVID-19 prior to the announcements from our university and school district that we should start self-isolating and preparing for at-home instruction. As both of my children at home are competitive gymnasts, we faced another decision about whether to keep them home from training. As my work and personal email boxes began filling with announcements from my university, my department, my children’s school, my children’s gym, and even my church and extended out-of-state family, I had to fight back a growing sense of anxiety about the outside world as I looked after my physical recovery. Staying home from work, just as a symbolic gesture, made a lot of sense to me. I’d already afflicted my colleagues with my occasional coughing from my isolated office way down the corridor, but I didn’t want to leave anything to chance. Although I presumed my odds of having COVID-19 were small after three trips to the doctor in the last month for secondary infections resulting from my allergies, who really knew? So, from my home office, I put into practice the skills I learned from doing remote instruction over the last several years. Up until the present challenge, I had tried to access my email only in the morning and afternoon. As news and instructions came in from my university and department, email communication became a near-constant distraction/source of information. Following our university’s lead, our college moved to all-remote instruction and social isolating. This meant moving to the Zoom video conferencing app. Fortunately, I was quite familiar with the app, so I didn’t have too hard a transition. However, at least a few of my colleagues had to make substantial changes to what and how they taught. Moreover, our students varied widely in how familiar and comfortable they were with the online interface. They valued our programs for their face-to-face emphasis, and now they were being asked to adjust everything about their experience within days. Moreover, most of my students are educational professionals themselves, so they were scrambling to provide direction and services to their own students. In the days following the university’s move to all-remote instruction, I participated in several instructional and organizational meetings with administrators and colleagues to ensure we were all in accord about the adjustments we would make to classes, and I spent hours on email coordinating with students and responding to their personal and professional concerns. I greatly reduced planned whole-group instruction in favor of individual consultation. I felt frustration at my students as they requested that I take my class instruction down to the basics. As I was teaching a course on qualitative research methods, I already felt I was barely touching on the tip of the iceberg as it was. How more stripped down could I get? At the same time, I was still recovering physically from (what I hoped were) my allergies, so I recognized that some of my frustration was my body demanding time to recover. To add to the challenges/opportunities of the first week into this at-home learning experiment, I had my two elementary-aged children at home with their own learning needs to consider. Even as I type, my third grader (who has an IEP) is in my office with me on i-Ready doing her daily math lesson on my university-issued iPad while my wife works with our sixth grader on her laptop. I find myself dividing my time between my third grader and my professional work, and I feel like neither is getting the attention they deserve. And yet, in the midst of the chaos, things are happening. Our children are getting more one-on-one time than they have in quite a while. They’re happy and adjusting. I wonder about their peers. My children attend a Title I school, and many of their parents and caregivers don’t have access to the same remote learning resources as they do. Many don’t have parents at home to supervise the well-organized instruction their teachers have provided (almost miraculously) via Google Classroom. It’s a strange new world in these early quarantine days, and I’m sure there are many opportunities and challenges ahead.
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来源期刊
Journal of Information Science and Engineering
Journal of Information Science and Engineering 工程技术-计算机:信息系统
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4
审稿时长
8 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Information Science and Engineering is dedicated to the dissemination of information on computer science, computer engineering, and computer systems. This journal encourages articles on original research in the areas of computer hardware, software, man-machine interface, theory and applications. tutorial papers in the above-mentioned areas, and state-of-the-art papers on various aspects of computer systems and applications.
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