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As COVID-19 cases once again spike across the country, parents in school districts like New York City and Detroit face another weeks long stretch of remote learning. This often includes preschool parents, whose children range in age from three to six and are often too young to manage virtual learning on their own.
Many of these parents worry their children are missing out on important parts of the preschool experience—particularly opportunities to develop social, emotional and behavioral skills through interactions with teachers and other children.
As researchers who study children's educational development, we know that preschool helps children develop important academic and social skills they will need for later school success. In April, we surveyed 166 parents of preschool children to examine what they felt was working—and not working—with distance learning. While the data haven't been published yet, they give us important insights into virtual preschool.
Of the 166 parents who responded to our online survey, 73% said their preschool children were provided virtual learning opportunities during the COVID-19 crisis. The children were expected to devote 30 to 60 minutes a day to virtual classes. Two-thirds of parents said they supplemented the school lessons with in-home learning activities, although these primarily focused on reading, not math.
Thirty-seven percent of the parents felt children this age were too young to engage in online instruction without significant support from their caregivers. And 38% of parents reported not having the time to dedicate to distance learning while juggling the demands of work and other child care.
The parents we surveyed recognize that teachers and administrators are doing the best they can in this ever-changing and extraordinary situation. Their frustration and anxiety result from the virtual learning environment itself and the lack of resources to develop children's social, emotional and behavioral learning along with early academic skills.
Preschool classrooms provide opportunities to build social skills like taking turns, waiting until others finish speaking and displaying empathy. These skills enable children to develop friendships, cope with challenges and have conversations with other children and adults.
Suggestions for parents
Based on the results of our survey, here are some ways parents can help make up for the shortcomings of virtual learning.
Suggestions for teachers
And here are some ways that preschool teachers can support parents in their children's learning and development during COVID-19.
Although academic instruction in preschool is important—and math especially should not be forgotten—teachers and parents agree that social interactions are critical at this age. And in a time of remote learning, social distancing and quarantines, keeping young children emotionally healthy, as well as physically healthy, is critical.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.