Site icon Tinybeans

Tips to Curb the Coronavirus Academic Slide

As the bow wave of Coronavirus (COVID-19) school closures continues to sweep across the country, millions of parents are coming to grips with a frightening new reality: How do they fill the void of a child at home and prevent “academic slide?”

For most parents, this new challenge is both daunting and bewildering. They’re worried their child will lose momentum in school and want to keep them engaged but the virtual education industry has an overwhelming online bazaar of videos, content, tutors, tests, and noise to sift and sort. Lesson plans come in all shapes and sizes. So, where to start?

I’ve been working on the front lines of virtual homeschooling for many years, from early childhood lesson planning to preparing high schoolers for college exams to most recently helping design Varsity Tutors’ new Virtual School Day—a free remote learning program that includes live, online classes and educational resources intended to help keep students from sliding academically. The good news is you can do this, it just takes some planning and patience. Here are some tips on how to successfully lean into your child’s new homeschool reality: 

Finally, unless you are a trained educator, set reasonable expectations for you and your child during this temporary school closure time. Getting into an Ivy League school will most likely not depend on completing a difficult online math problem. All indications are the COVID-19 crisis is a moment in time and will recede at some point. 

For most parents, reasonable success is keeping your child engaged in learning, preventing academic slide, and using quality virtual learning to fill the void of downtime instead of video games and iPhones. Schools will reopen and your child’s educational world will return to normal—and so will your sanity.  

It can take time for your family to adjust to homeschooling. It will also take time for you, the parent, to acclimate to being a teacher. Patience is essential but also be realistic.