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Keeping Connection and Equity at the Center of Teaching and Learning during the Time of COVID-19: An Interview with Two Rivers. Field Facing Memo #7

Authors :
Stanford Center for Opportunity Policy in Education (SCOPE)
Social Policy Research Associates (SPR)
Assessment for Learning Project (ALP)
Snyder, Jon
Source :
Stanford Center for Opportunity Policy in Education. 2020.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

This memo, which is the seventh in the series, features an interview with the Director of Curriculum and Instruction at the Two Rivers Public Charter School in Washington, DC. Originally planned as a piece analyzing the long-term work of the school, this memo was redesigned to feature an interview highlighting how the school rapidly responded to the changing education environment during the COVID-19 pandemic. Two Rivers, a Tier One, high-performing EL Education School (Expeditionary Learning School), has a mission to "nurture a diverse group of students to become lifelong, active participants in their own education, develop a sense of self and community, and become responsible and compassionate members of society." When the COVID-19 crisis hit, the community of educators used this mission to guide their creation of a distance education program. The full memo situates the interview in the context of the Assessment for Learning Project and the long-term work of the Two Rivers network of schools. The interview itself highlights how the values of connection, core content, and curiosity/creativity became most important as they adjusted their long-term work to fit into the new and shifting world created by the pandemic. [To read the sixth memo of the series, "A Systems Approach to Creating an Ecology of Equity in a High-Poverty School District," see ED609359.]

Details

Language :
English
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
Stanford Center for Opportunity Policy in Education
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
ED609389
Document Type :
Reports - Descriptive<br />Opinion Papers