And yet my wife (in her second year as a teacher at 50 years old) starts making video presentations for her kids at 7am, has at least one group video conference with her class every day, and numerous smaller group video conferences throughout the day.
She finishes about 5pm, then is back on computer after tea until about 9pm making more presentations, and pictorials, and generally lots of fun activities to try to help keep the kids engaged while they suffer through this home schooling saga.
In summary, it is not good for teachers or students. The school holidays have come just in time as I have started to worry about her well being.
my wife is a pre-school teacher (in Sydney) and is diabetic and asthmatic. So she is high risk. Back in March/April, because they didn't "officially" close the schools down... she was given a choice by her employer (a local council).
work and be paid... or stay at home (with their blessing). And
not be paid.
after much heart wrenching we were ready to redo our home budget to allow her to stay home and be safe. But her immediate manager went to bat for her and got her 2 weeks working from home (paid) leading into the school holidays. Then two weeks of school holidays (
UNPAID... thank you Penrith City Council), then another 4 weeks working from home (paid again)
she spent every day, from 7.30am to 7.30pm, on zoom chats with groups of kids, with individual kids and recording herself reading books to them, then Zoom meetings with parents in groups and individually and with her co workers.
She was, in the end, happy to go back to work... and thankfully by then, the main wave in Sydney had passed slightly.
end of this week, she is on (forced) "holidays" again for two weeks. (as always... without pay) And... as always... she'll spend most of the "holidays" doing advance prep work for when she goes back.
nope... I wouldn't be a teacher for quits.