(Looking back at my writing during the pandemic.)
In the first piece, I wrote about how to be a knowledgeable citizen during a pandemic. In focusing on controlling what I can control, I created a list of knowledgeable citizenship compass points I tried to follow during that moment of extraordinary transformation:
The second piece, “Calling Out and Calling on Myself in the Face of Coronavirus,” feels a bit like an artifact from an archeological dig even though it captures something only four years old. Perhaps this is a result of the fact that it captures such a precise moment in history.
Schools, school leaders, faculty and staff emphasize topics related to character education because they know strength of character is of vital importance and that it is too often in short supply. I really hope all that talk has worked. It really needs to have worked. Now more than ever, we need the adults that great teachers dreamed their students would become. After years in the classroom, I am confident they are out there. In education, we should always have in mind who our students should become. That vision of who students should become as family members, citizens, colleagues, should drive education far more than test scores and college lists. A moment of crisis, like the one we now face, should solidify this understanding for us.
Recently, I have been thinking about: who are we going to be at the end of this? Knowing that in only a few days the world has changed so dramatically as a result of Covid-19 and that it will change again and again and again in the days, weeks, and months to come, who will we be by the time we get our coronavirus vaccinations? There are myriad signals about the future of the pandemic that taken together create a confusing stew and taken apart either create naive optimism or equally naive cynicism. I have a sinking feeling that if we think that trying to predict the future of the virus and its effects accurately is virtually impossible, understanding what happened when it is over will be no less difficult. If clarity was ever achievable, we may have just seen it pass away with the first fatalities.
So…rather than pull out a crystal ball of specific predictions and hyper-generalize a to-do list for everyone, it makes more sense to me to simply create a list for myself regarding who I want to be during the pandemic. First, some general assumptions:
While facing the pandemic, I will strive to:
While I was writing things down that I thought were specifically applicable to that moment, I was obviously writing something more, and I have referred to these two lists often even as the worst days of the pandemic faded. For me, two things emerge in these pieces. The first is that they are grounded in hope–not wishfulness–but hope. Hope only exists in as much as it is represented by actions we take in the world. Second, to navigate great challenges we must devote ourselves to our most essential aspirations. For productive adults, particularly educators, those aspirations have to do with the impact we might have on the world to come through our students.