A stress-free guide to homeschooling in Coronavirus Lockdown

Homeschooling during lockdown
Image: Annie Spratt via: unsplash

Homeschooling has become a reality for many parents during the Covid19 Lockdown, here is some advice from a Headteacher.

Many of us are now having to turn to homeschooling our children during the Coronavirus/Covid19 Lockdown. The thing is we’re not teachers, this duty has dropped upon us and we don’t get to send our kids home at the end of the day!

Many of us are finding it fairly stressful to say the least, well a letter from a headteacher has been circulating on social media, here is that letter reproduced, that we hope will help you lower your stress levels.

A letter to parents about homeschooling during the lockdown.

Dear Parents and Carers,

Lots of people are feeling stressed, overwhelmed, and under pressure by everything that’s happening. This includes the work being sent home for your child. I wanted to just give my perspective on it all as a Headteacher and I hope this can help with that somewhat.

A few points to note about homeschooling:

1) This is not homeschooling. This is an unprecedented emergency situation impacting the whole world. Let’s keep perspective. Homeschooling is a choice, where you considered, you plan for it and you are your child’s school teacher in whatever form you choose. This is, at best, distance learning. In reality, it’s everyone trying to separate their bums from their elbows, because none of us know what we’re doing and what’s right and wrong here.

2) You are, and always have been, your child’s primary educator. If you decide that your child isn’t going to engage with anything sent home and is going to spend the entire period playing in the dirt, or baking, or watching TV, then that is your choice. That is your right. There is nothing to stress or feel guilty about.

3) Schools don’t know what they’re doing either. They had no notice, no preparation time and we were NOT told to ‘continue to plan lessons as normal and just send them home’ – that’s NOT possible. If it were, we’d all be out of a job!

4) It is absolutely not possible to facilitate distance learning with a primary aged child and work from home at the same time. The very idea is nonsense. If you’re trying to do that, stop now. You can certainly have activities where your child learns, but your focus is your job and survival. Again, unprecedented. Stop trying to be superheroes.

So, a few FAQs:-

My school has sent home lots of physical work. Pages and pages, hours, and hours. How am I supposed to get through it all?

You’re not, don’t try. Your child’s teacher spent a couple of hours in utter panic gathering things to send home so they could say they did their best and there weren’t a lot of complaints that enough didn’t go home. It’s not a competition or a race, it’s unlikely the teacher will even manage to look at it all.

My school keeps sending home links and emails with more work. How do I make it stop?

Ahhhhhh!See above. These are suggestions and ideas because the school is worried they’re not offering enough. Use them if they suit you, don’t if they don’t suit you. If you’re getting stressed, stop opening the emails. No one will know!

Someone in my child’s class has everything done and we’ve barely started. Will they fall behind?

Even if everything were equal in terms of support, time, and the number of children (which it’s not) all children learn at different rates. In the class there’s a wide range of levels in all subjects, there are different paces and there are many children working on differentiated levels of work. It’s almost impossible for teachers to differentiate at the moment, so you don’t have to do it either. Your child will not fall behind. This is all revision and reminder work. If children could all learn new concepts without specific teaching, we wouldn’t need teachers. They will cover all of this again, multiple times.

I’m not doing any work with my kids. All they’re doing is building Lego, cooking, and playing outside.

All of this is learning -very valuable learning. Give yourself and them a break.

How can I get three different lots of work done with 3 different kids of different ages?

You can’t, stop trying. If they’re old enough, try to get them to do little bits independently. Otherwise try to do something they can all engage with, reading a story together, some freewriting, baking etc.

So what’s the bare minimum you’d expect?

For me, survival mode. I won’t pretend that may be true of all teachers, but you know what? if they can’t have perspective in a time like this then I wouldn’t overly worry about their opinion anyway.

My ideal for the children in our school:

  • A bit of reading every day (independent or to them or via audiobook etc)
  • Some free writing now and then. If they’ll keep a diary or something, great.
  • If not, would they draw a comic?
  • Practical hands-on maths. Be that via cooking, cleaning, outside, or some maths games, physical or digital.
  • Some fine motor work. Lego, cutting, playdough, tidying up small toys.
  • Physical exercise every day
  • Some art/music where possible throughout the week. It doesn’t need to be guided.-
  • Stretch goal, if old enough getting them to independently work on a project is great for keeping brains ticking over.
  • Get them researching in a book or online and putting together something to present to you or your family.
  • If younger, lots of imaginative free play, the more independent the better

You are doing enough. You are loving your kids and supporting them through a difficult time. Look after yourself. Minimising stress during homeschooling is absolutely vital. Especially in a time like this for mental health for parents and kids. Don’t let this be something that stresses you. Only you can control that by accepting it is in your circle of control, you are the primary educator and this is all your call.

Homeschooling resources

The BBC has put together lots of useful resources together called BBC Bitesized. For those that are attempting to teach their kids at home, you can find out more on the BBC’s Bitesized website here.

Like you, we hope this lockdown ends soon and we can start getting back to some sort of normalcy. Now the Covid-19 vaccine is being rolled out we’ve been asked if kids can get it, you can read about that here. We wish you the best of luck with your homeschooling.

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