This thesis is concerned with how class teachers worked with their classroom communities during the second wave of the COVID-19 epidemic in Slovenia, when distance learning was mandatory.
The theoretical part defines the class and classroom community for our purposes, briefly describes how a class is formed and guided, and presents key educational activities held in a class. Then, a classroom community is described together with the factors relevant for its formation, maintenance, and strengthening. Additionally, some areas in which the epidemic has affected the classroom community are outlined, as well as the results of some research pertaining to education during the epidemic.
The empirical part presents the work that three class teachers have carried out with their class communities for the duration of the distance learning mandate in the second wave of the COVID-19 epidemic, namely between late October 2020 and mid-February 2021. It was discovered that the class teachers were better prepared for distance learning, having accrued experience in the earlier wave, and that they built rapport with their students more efficiently. Care was taken to set up regular meetings of the classroom community via an app named Zoom, which lasted at least 45 minutes. Because of this, the students felt more connected to the school, the class teacher as well as to one another. The classroom community also served as a platform to voice their distress. The interviewed class teachers made themselves available to their students twenty-four hours a day every day, and both sides communicated regularly through various channels of information-communication technology. The most frequent topics for which the students sought their class teacher’s help were study matters and schoolwork, and also current events pertaining to the epidemic. During the distance learning mandate, the class teachers included in the research were joined by school advisory service personnel, other teachers, and other institutions for those classroom community sessions that had been included in the syllabus, and prepared the rest of them alone with the class. The class teachers report spending more time working on study matters and grades than on the classroom community, and also describe working with the classroom community as the most difficult type of work they do. All three interviewed class teachers have said that they formed a stronger bond with the students in the classroom community despite the lack of physical presence. This was made possible by various activities and good teachership carried out with the classroom communities throughout the distance learning mandate.
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