How Remote Learning Negatively Affected Children and Why it Matters

How Remote Learning Negatively Affected Children and Why it Matters

Before the pandemic hit, Harvard Professor Stephanie Jones and Lecturer Emily Hanno were already tracking young children's development as part of the Early Learning Study at Harvard. As the pandemic began unfolding, they started to see shifts among the thousands of families and children participating in the study. Families reported a rise in temper tantrums, anxiety, and a poor ability to manage emotions, especially among the young elementary-aged children participating in remote learning. These findings may not come as a surprise to the many families who dealt with remote learning during the pandemic. However, Jones and Hanno say children's well-being and these experience matter now even as we inch toward a possible endemic. In this episode of the EdCast, they talk about how educators and families need to invest in social emotional learning before learning loss or lost classroom time. They share ways to support educators facilitating classroom experiences for children that allow them to process the experiences they've had. They also offer easy strategies for families to check in with their young children's well-being.

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What “the Talk” Black Parents Have with Their Sons Tells Us About Racism

What “the Talk” Black Parents Have with Their Sons Tells Us About Racism

Columbia University Assistant Professor Raygine DiAquoi shares what she discovered about how black parents talk to their sons today about race and discrimination.

3 Jan 201814min

Lifelong Kindergarten

Lifelong Kindergarten

MIT Professor Mitch Resnick, author of “Lifelong Kindergarten: Cultivating Creativity through Projects, Passion, Peers, and Play”, talks about creativity in learning and explains why kindergarten is the greatest invention of the last millennium.

14 Dec 201719min

Urban Preparation

Urban Preparation

Chezare A. Warren, Assistant Professor at Michigan State University, reflects on urban teacher preparation, culturally responsive teaching, and critical race theory in education.

6 Dec 201717min

A Culture of Anxiety? The Culture is Us

A Culture of Anxiety? The Culture is Us

Psychotherapist Lynn Lyons talks about her work training educators to respond to student anxiety, and provides insight on what schools get right or wrong about anxiety in children.

29 Nov 201721min

The Importance of Refugee Education

The Importance of Refugee Education

John Palmer, Associate Professor and Chair of Educational Studies at Colgate University, reflects on refugee education in the Korean peninsula and beyond.

8 Nov 201714min

Blurred Lines: Rethinking Sex, Power, and Consent on Campus

Blurred Lines: Rethinking Sex, Power, and Consent on Campus

Vanessa Grigoriadis, author, explores what’s really happening behind closed doors on America’s college campuses.

1 Nov 201716min

Advocating for Girl Education Around the World

Advocating for Girl Education Around the World

Documentary filmmaker and girls' education advocate Zuriel Oduwole discusses what inspired her to become an advocate for better access to girls' education across the world.

26 Okt 201711min

Understanding the NCAA

Understanding the NCAA

Mark Emmert, president of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) reflects on the evolving role of college athletics, amateurism in college sports, and his favorite moment as a fan.

18 Okt 201715min

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