Look at what students are doing.  Even when you can't see them.
Kelley S. Miller Kelley S. Miller

Look at what students are doing. Even when you can't see them.

This is a story about looking at the wrong thing.

In a recent coaching cycle with a teacher, we set out to examine- and improve- student engagement in a high school math class. Hybrid and remote instruction had supplanted the usual back-and-forth energy of learning math together, with a grid of silent black boxes. The fatigue of trying to keep up the energy of class, when all that energy seemed to go one way, was a stark contrast to this teacher’s typically strong rapport with students.

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