23 Nov 2024
Sunday 15 March 2020 - 16:45
Story Code : 372335

Teachers adapting to remote teaching as COVID-19 shuts schools

Teachers adapting to remote teaching as COVID-19 shuts schools
Iran Front Page - As schools remain shut down in Iran due to the outbreak of COVID-19 disease, teachers began using social media and various other methods to keep students involved with learning and to compensate for the shortage of teaching hours.

In the past few weeks, several videos of teachers went viral while they were teaching their students from home by recording videos.

According to Fars News Agency, teachers share the videos on the internet and the school channel on social networks in order to prevent any disruption in the education process. Alongside these measures, students are also assigned and tracked by teachers.

Students with special needs are an exception, because just learning from television or social media is not enough for them. Therefore, some teachers go to the students homes.

[caption id="attachment_172149" align="alignnone" width="1020"]Teachers Adapting to Remote Teaching as COVID-19 Shuts Schools 1 The above image shows Saeedeh Saki teaching at the home of one of the eighth grade students in the city of Hoveizeh in Irans Khuzestan province.[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_172150" align="alignnone" width="599"]Teachers Adapting to Remote Teaching as COVID-19 Shuts Schools 2 Aziza Qaleie, a sixth grade elementary school teacher for students with disabilities, teaches her students at their homes while the schools are closed due to the spread of the coronavirus.[/caption]

Seyyed Javad Hosseini, Deputy Education Minister and Head of Irans Special Education Organisation says 164,384 hours of educational courses, counseling services for seven groups of students with special needs are accessible through cyberspace, home-based education and tutoring during school holidays.

Students with autism, emotional-behavioural disorders, visual impairments, hearing problems, physical disabilities, mental retardation and multi-disability can use these materials in 2034 schools, continued Hosseini.

He went on to say that more than 22,500 staff, administrators, advisors and teachers are providing such students with education when schools are shut down.

Teachers have run 9,930 online classrooms and students are given virtual training through these channels.

 

[caption id="attachment_172151" align="alignnone" width="957"]Teachers Adapting to Remote Teaching as COVID-19 Shuts Schools 3 Soheila Taheri, Al-Zahra Elementary School teacher in Darreh-Shahr city of Ilam Province, writes daily lessons on her wardrobe door and delivers them through cyberspace to students.[/caption]

 

 

[caption id="attachment_172153" align="alignnone" width="1076"]School Education in Iran During Coronavirus Ali Akbar Sahrai, a physics teacher in Dehloran, Khuzestan province, put a piece of simple nylon with a few thumbtacks on the wall at home to provide his students with virtual education. Since the early days of coronavirus outbreak he recorded educational videos and sent them to the parents.[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_172154" align="alignnone" width="275"]School Education in Iran During Coronavirus Days A teacher of an elementary school in Khuzestan province uses her white fridge as a classroom board. Masoumeh Onsori is a third grade elementary school teacher in the city of Hamidiyeh who writes tutorials on her fridge and sends the videos to her students.[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_172155" align="alignnone" width="773"]Teachers Hold Online Courses During Coronavirus Outbreak in Iran Teachers remember their students even in times of illness. Although she is hospitalised due to being suspected of having coronavirus, Ms Shokrollahi, sixth grade teacher, has not forgotten her teaching duties while struggling with the disease. She teaches her students through social media while lying on hospital bed.[/caption]

Maryam Sadeghzadeh Tabatabai, a third grade teacher in Ahwaz, says To produce visual content, my daughter records a video of my teaching on a white paper at home, and I send it to my students on social media.

My students also have a great deal of creativity in cyberspace. For example, one of the students makes songs for the textbook poems, and after playing those songs with a guitar, she sends them to the virtual classroom.

[caption id="attachment_172157" align="alignnone" width="639"]Teachers Adapting to Remote Teaching as COVID-19 Shuts Schools 7 Students at Jam Poindegan Elementary School communicate online with their teachers using interactive webinars. They receive educational content through the Schools Technology Assistant. The class is fully interactive, with all students watching the audio and video of their teachers and classmates.[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_172158" align="alignnone" width="1276"]Teachers Adapting to Remote Teaching as COVID-19 Shuts Schools 8 Rahil Basooli is a third grade elementary school teacher in Dashtestan, Bushehr, who has been teaching her students by creating an educational animation and sharing it on social media.[/caption]

Irans Minister of Education, Mohsen Haji-Mirzaee also wrote on his twitter page recently that My colleagues across the country have been able to creatively continue the teaching process while the schools are closed. I thank all my good colleagues, especially the teacher who used her own home stuff to educate her students in Hamidiyeh.

The death toll from the new coronavirus outbreak in the Islamic republic is on the rise. Hundreds of people have lost their lives, while thousands are confirmed infected with the virus. Besides China, Italy and South Korea, Iran is among the worst-affected countries since the outbreak of the disease last December. US cruel sanctions also add insult to the injury.

As part of its efforts to contain the virus, Tehran has taken several measures including the closure of all schools and higher learning institutions, calling off sports events and restricting travel.

The deadly coronavirus, known as COVID-19, has spread to over 130 countries so far. The World Health Organisation has declared the outbreak a pandemic.
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