Critically Considering Empathy in the Classroom: A Graduate Student�s Perspective on Pandemic Pedagogy

Brian Doyle
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The year 2020 introduced the world to the pandemic that is COVID-19. As of October 6, 2020, there were in the United States alone 7,436,278 total cases, with 209,560 deaths (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC], 2020). This number of positive cases had skyrocketed from under 1,000 in March, making this pandemic unlike any encountered in the past (CDC, 2020). Due to the severity of COVID-19, the United States, along with most of the world, shut down all non-essential public spaces early on in the pandemic. With that, colleges and universities moved to an online model for the end of the Spring 2020 semester, with many schools utilizing either remote or hybrid classes for their Summer and Fall 2020 sessions. These changes have been challenging, as faculty and students have transitioned to teaching and learning in a time of constant anxiety. As a PhD student in the Composition and Applied Linguistics program at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, I am writing this note from the perspective of both a student in the last semester of her coursework and a teacher of first-year composition before the pandemic as well as during the Fall 2020 semester. From this dual perspective, I will reflect on how the changes that have occurred due to COVID-19 can help educators consider empathy in conjunction with critical thinking.
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批判性地考虑课堂上的同理心:一个研究生对流行病教学法的看法
2020年向世界介绍了COVID-19大流行病。截至2020年10月6日,仅美国就有7436278例病例,209560例死亡(美国疾病控制与预防中心,2020年)。这一阳性病例数从3月份的不到1000例飙升,使这次大流行不同于过去遇到的任何一次(CDC, 2020年)。由于COVID-19的严重程度,美国和世界上大多数国家在大流行初期关闭了所有非必要的公共场所。因此,学院和大学在2020年春季学期结束时转向了在线模式,许多学校在2020年夏季和秋季课程中使用远程或混合课程。这些变化是具有挑战性的,因为教师和学生已经在一个持续焦虑的时代过渡到教学和学习。作为宾夕法尼亚印第安纳大学写作与应用语言学专业的一名博士生,我以一名最后一学期的学生和一名在疫情前以及2020年秋季学期教一年级作文的老师的角度写这篇文章。从这一双重视角出发,我将思考COVID-19带来的变化如何帮助教育工作者将同理心与批判性思维结合起来。
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