During the Covid-19 pandemic, Montreal Jewish Day Schools shifted to online distance learning. This study follows eight elementary and high school teachers in real-time through observations and group interviews. Applying a Community of Inquiry framework, we unpack the social, conceptual, and pedagogical elements of this pedagogical shift to understand its three “modes”: survival, transition, and innovation, distinguished by stability and connectivity. Peer-to-peer and student-teacher connectivity was mostly underdeveloped and fostered feelings of disappointment and frustration. Teachers varied in their engagement with specific Judaic traditions within their online classrooms and relied on school-wide resources to sustain Jewish identity connectivity for students. The ever-changing timeline of the shifts in conjunction with personally- and community- attributed pressures contributed to teachers’ experiences of anxiety.
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Lauren Thurber
McGill University
Sivane Hirsch
Devorah Feldman
McGill Journal of Education / Revue des sciences de l éducation de McGill
McGill University
Erasmus University Rotterdam
Université Laval
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Thurber et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a75e82c6e9836116a292d2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.26443/mje/rsem.v59i3.10086