
Throughout the month, we鈥檝e been bringing you stories about how the campus is reacting to the coronavirus pandemic, and you may have noticed, we haven鈥檛 yet given you a glimpse of how faculty are coping. That was, in fact, intentional. Given how quickly our professors had to transition, we wanted to give them a couple weeks to find their stride before hitting them up to share their triumphs and struggles. However, in the brief gap between the end of classes and the start of finals, we hit up three faculty to get their thoughts. Associate Professor Lisa Martin, Lecturer Grace Helms Kotre and Assistant Professor Amy Brainer all had interesting things to say about their teaching. But they had another message: Being a 鈥済ood鈥 professor to your students in this moment goes way beyond academics. Here鈥檚 our discussion, which has been condensed and edited lightly for clarity.
The Reporter: So I guess let鈥檚 start with the obvious: How has the switch to remote classes been going?
Lisa Martin: I鈥檓 teaching two classes this semester; one was online before this situation and those students haven't really missed a beat. My in-person, once-a-week, three-hour Monday night class was the challenge. It鈥檚 a high-level class, where the groups facilitate a lot of the discussion and the readings, and really, a senior seminar should never be an online experience. In addition to that, it鈥檚 a class with a lot of Health and Human Services students, and many of them work, in some capacity, in hospitals. So they're all being asked to work overtime, some of them were quarantined, and a couple of them are in home situations that are not the best for them to live and learn.
For me, the focus became much less about content very quickly and much more about their ability to engage safely and make some sense of all this. Since we couldn鈥檛 have in-person discussions, I made online discussions that were focused on the content of the class. But I also gave them assignments to do journal entries that weren鈥檛 content related, so that if nothing else, I could check in on them. Nobody else sees those journals, and they鈥檝e been blunt about what鈥檚 dark in their lives, what鈥檚 good in their lives, what they鈥檙e learning about themselves in this crisis. And the completion rate for the journals is much higher than the completion rate for the discussions.
The Reporter: And what does that tell you?
Lisa: That they want someone checking on them. It鈥檚 the isolation that they鈥檙e struggling with the most, and they鈥檙e repeatedly telling me, for instance, that they鈥檙e trying to do the final paper, but their brains just aren鈥檛 focusing. I think we have to be sympathetic to that. Given that they鈥檙e public health- and gender-oriented students, there鈥檚 a lot in this current crisis that鈥檚 about health, gender and reproduction. So instead of the regular assigned readings, I鈥檓 telling them to figure out what鈥檚 going on in the world that鈥檚 relevant to our class. That鈥檚 where their heads are. So they鈥檙e still doing the critical thinking, but the content is a little different.
The Reporter: And Grace and Amy, how鈥檚 it been going for you?
Grace Helms Kotre: Well, like Lisa, I鈥檝e been adapting the content to what鈥檚 going on all around them. One of the classes I鈥檓 teaching is actually about stress management, so there are many direct connections. The challenge for me is that my courses are highly interactive, so suddenly not being able to see my students was psychologically overwhelming for me at first. Right now, I鈥檓 recording all my lectures, which is interesting, because I never just lecture for an hour and then get their feedback at the end. I鈥檓 also recording them in my 鈥渉ome office鈥 鈥 my daughter's room with stuffed animals and butterflies and flowers all over the wall 鈥 by myself, talking to myself, which is hilarious.
I鈥檓 also offering live office hours, but almost no one comes. Like Lisa, I鈥檝e heard from many students who are feeling isolated, aren鈥檛 feeling motivated, are working 12-hour days in a hospital, or who are struggling with their home situations. So I get why they鈥檙e not coming to these optional check-ins with me. But then there鈥檚 no face-to-face time, and I really worry about my students who seem to have just fallen off the face of the Earth. I鈥檓 also lengthening the guided meditations that I鈥檝e been doing at the start of classes. The majority of students have said that鈥檚 really helpful. I feel almost like the main point of my communication with them needs to be self-care.
Amy Brainer: I resonate with what Lisa and Grace have said. When we moved online, I created two syllabi for each of my three courses. In the first syllabus, I tried to approximate the in-class content and flow in an online format. In the second, I pared down the course to only key assignments. I let students pick the one that made sense for them given their circumstances, no questions asked. I haven't been counting, but I'd say it's about 50-50. Some people feel comforted by business as usual, while others genuinely need a reprieve.
The Reporter: Inside the higher education community, there鈥檚 a lot of discussion around whether students are getting the same quality of education with this switch to online. But I think I鈥檓 hearing you push back a bit about the framing of that issue.
Lisa: The reality is you鈥檙e not teaching an online course; you鈥檙e teaching during a pandemic. You鈥檙e all experiencing a trauma and it doesn鈥檛 have to be perfect. Like, this class that I moved online, I would never revise it and teach it as an online class under normal circumstances. We鈥檙e doing this because it鈥檚 an emergency. There are several other courses that, if I knew we had to teach online for the next year, I would teach those instead because they鈥檙e more adaptable and I know the students could thrive.
What helps me is to simplify. It鈥檚 not keeping it simple to erase the complexity, it鈥檚 about taking away anything that鈥檚 unneeded. Like, I don鈥檛 have a late policy right now, because that鈥檚 something I can let go of. Assignments still have a due date, but I use that to follow up with you if you miss a due date. A penalty is not an important learning tool right now. Having structure with flexibility is what鈥檚 important. The other thing I would add is that I don鈥檛 equate quality with rigidity. And I don鈥檛 even equate quality with content knowledge. For right now, quality is recognizing humanity, practicing empathy 鈥 and we can still do critical thinking. If those are the three things they get out of this experience from having interactions with me, I鈥檓 convinced they 鈥榞ot their money鈥檚 worth鈥 or have had a good experience.
Grace: I agree completely. I think we鈥檙e often 鈥渄oing鈥-oriented in our culture, and when we鈥檙e hit with a challenge like this, we want to try to fix it or make it better. But one of the interesting lessons from this crisis is that if you鈥檙e not a health care or essential worker, the way you make it better is to stay home. But being at home, by yourself, can be extremely uncomfortable. And it鈥檚 not necessarily 鈥渟tay home, stay safe鈥 if you鈥檙e a student dealing with severe depression. I think students look to us as mentors or as people who can offer guidance and support. And right now, they're needing that more than anything. I mean, I鈥檒l have students reply to my check-in emails, just thanking me for reaching out, because no one was doing that for them. That shows you what the priorities have to be right now.
Amy: Yes to all of this. Going online shines a spotlight on the inequities that already exist among our students. Home situations, access to the internet, economic precarity 鈥 all of these are factors in the learning experience. I have students who are themselves very sick with the virus. I have students who are caring for sick loved ones and who have lost people close to them. They are grieving alone. I am experiencing this, too, as the pandemic touches my social circle. I think it's important for me to model self-compassion and let students know that it's OK to do less.
I鈥檝e actually had some energizing moments as an instructor during this period, especially teleconferences with students about their projects. For half an hour, an hour, we lose ourselves in ideas, in learning. It鈥檚 such a good feeling. Then we reemerge into this difficult environment. We ask after loved ones, wish each other good health and hang up the call. There鈥檚 something life affirming about the ability to use our imaginations and to grow intellectually, while also being together as people in this experience.
The Reporter: Finally, many people are already beginning to think about how this pandemic may have lasting impacts on our institutions. Does anything about your experience thus far hint at how higher education might be fundamentally changed by this?
Lisa: I don't know that we know yet. When we go through something that鈥檚 difficult, we often want to rush to process it so we can feel like we鈥檙e on the other side of it. So I don鈥檛 have expectations yet about that kind of impact, other than it will have an impact. But I am jotting down my thoughts now, so that in a year, I鈥檒l have a record of that and can understand it better. I鈥檓 thinking about things like the ability of students to engage with their emotions and connect their mental health to being good students. I see potential in that 鈥 even in classes where that鈥檚 not the focus. Can that happen in a chem lab? Can that happen in a political science course? I鈥檓 already seeing a lot of colleagues who were very content-focused and maybe more rigid starting to open up.
Grace: The other thing, for me, is that this crisis has helped me pay more attention to what is most important as an instructor. When I鈥檓 grading papers, for example, is it really important that I鈥檓 nitpicking about citation formats? I mean, I can still make a note of that, but am I going to take off a ton of points? This is something we talk about in the context of supporting students from international backgrounds or ESL students or students who鈥檝e not had educational experiences that have built them up as writers. So what鈥檚 really important? Is it that they have perfect APA citations? Or is it that they got the point?
Amy: I think education is strongest and most useful when we don't ask students to compartmentalize their lives, but welcome them in their wholeness. I hope that academia moves in this direction. In addition, as a social scientist, I hope that we continue to fight hard against the deep cleavages in our society that make this pandemic deadlier for black people; for people who are incarcerated in detention centers, prisons, and jails; and for people with asthma, diabetes, and other conditions that we know are exacerbated by poverty. As a queer person, I inherited from my elders the AIDS pandemic slogan 鈥渟ilence equals death.鈥 Our silence about these issues is not an option.
Lisa: I don鈥檛 want to end the interview without saying that I鈥檝e talked with lots of colleagues at other institutions, and I鈥檝e been really happy with how our institution has provided resources but tried not to overwhelm. The library staff, in particular, has stepped up in ways nobody saw coming. I mean, who thought, 鈥楬ere鈥檚 a global pandemic 鈥 librarians, you are the first line of support for the entire campus!鈥 But they have been. For example, there was a movie I was going to show in class that we didn鈥檛 have the streaming rights for. And three different librarians got me access to two alternatives that we did have rights to, and then ultimately came through with rights to the movie I wanted to show in the first place. They did it quickly and efficiently, and I didn鈥檛 have to worry about it. So those types of supports have been so key in helping us to make this shift 鈥 and they didn鈥檛 have more lead time than the rest of us.