Teacher Interview: Paige Bagby

Title

Teacher Interview: Paige Bagby

Subject

Education in the Pandemic

Description

High school AP teacher, Paige Bagby, answers questions about the changes to education during the coronavirus pandemic.

Creator

Abigail Walls

Date

April 1, 2021

Contributor

Abigail Walls, History Intern Spring 2021

Transcription

Walls: Your name, grade you teach, school you teach in.

Bagby: Laura Bagby, 10th and 11th grade AP-US and AP Psych, Creekside High School

Walls: How has the pandemic changed the way you teach?

Bagby: Synchronous teaching model. Difference between what the expectation was last year to this year. End of last year, feeling like we are making this up as we go along. Not required to do in person conferences, although most of us did. Pre-recorded. Only 2 assignments a week. School did give out computers and that took a while. Internet is spotty in some areas. Didn’t want to overwhelm family and kids. Teach all AP classes, college board announced a bridge of the exam that doesn’t include anything from the start of quarantine. This year, this feels normal, which is weird. The big expectation is to live stream your classes. The teaching doesn’t feel much different besides the fact that I have to carry my computer around. Standards have dropped. No way of monitoring if students are using their notes or books or computer. Everything is open book and notes. We’ll see what it looks like with the standardized tests. Maybe with students using their books and notes it’s helping them. All the requirements are the same. No group work, a lot more lectures. This year we have to post everything online and they want to minimize handouts. Just about everything is online. We have shields at the desks and students will hide their phones.

Walls: What was the biggest challenge in the beginning?

Bagby: The biggest challenge in the beginning was convincing everybody that school was still happening. I had some students drop off the face of the earth for the first couple of weeks. I had a rumor that some students weren’t doing work because they thought none of the work counted. Some showed up to the conference but didn’t do work and some didn’t show up or do work. You never really know if your distance learners are there. You’ll see their name but you can’t actually see them. I’ll look and see that a distance learner hasn’t started their quiz yet, because they aren’t at their computer. I will say I have some distance learners who are doing the absolute best.

Walls: What is the biggest challenge now?

Bagby: The buy in. Getting students to understand that this is still school and that they still have to do the work.

Walls: How do you think students are doing? What are their biggest challenges?

Bagby: I think that it all depends on the individual student. Some students are looking at this pandemic like it’s a big joke. I’ll overhear conversations where they talk about getting Covid so they can have two weeks off. Some of them aren’t taking it seriously at all. I have a student whose father died and parents who’ve lost their jobs and multiple students whose parents have separated or divorced from the pressures that this puts on the relationship. It really depends on their home situation. There are students that are really struggling, but I guess thats true every year. On the whole the grades are good, but there is an individual case of the student. It takes what you see throughout the whole year amplified. Normally APUSH is difficult and some students are making solid A’s, it isn’t a bad thing.

Walls: Do you see anything beneficial coming from the changes you have had to implement?

Bagby: I would say that it’s been a real exercise in communication. I think that; for instance, for older teachers who refused to use technology have really stepped it up. I think a lot of them are tired too. The idea of being flexible and embracing something new. If I've learned anything at all from teaching in the pandemic, it is flexibility. Be flexible. I’ve had to learn to let go. I don’t know. I’ve always heard the argument that technology is going to replace teachers. I hope that people have grown a new respect for teachers. I feel like most parents around the country have learned that their child learns better in the classroom and not online. We still need classrooms.

Walls: Are you noticing a change in parent involvement?

Bagby: My parents, by the way, have been wonderful this year. I have this one family, their son is distance learning and each quarter they send an email to the teachers thanking them and they give us presents.

Interviewer

Abigail Walls

Interviewee

Paige Bagby

Location

St. Augustine, Fl

Collection

Citation

Abigail Walls, “Teacher Interview: Paige Bagby,” accessed April 28, 2024, https://publichumanities.omeka.net/items/show/327.

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