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Monday, April 29, 2024

Armstrong's Virtual Teacher

Credit: WCBI
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Armstrong's Virtual Teacher
Armstrong's Virtual Teacher

Armstrong junior high school teachers have chosen Tri Nason as teacher of the month because of his commitment to helping students succeed.

Armstrong junior high school teachers have chosen tri nason as teacher of the month because of his commitment to helping students succeed.

Wcbi reporter stephen pimpo sat down with the history teacher today and joins us in studio with his story.

If those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it...can people who teach history predict it?

Tri nason has been using zoom to help students since back in 2016.

So when armstrong junior high was planning how to handle classes during the pandemic...nason was more than ready to help students through the virtual learning experience.

This is what class looks like for tri nason.

In just his second year armstrong junior high school...the history teacher and football coach has been running fully virtual classes since the semester started back up in late august...but his experience with teaching through zoom predates the covid-19 pandemic.

"in order to help my students not fall too far behind, we had to come up with a way to still meet even if we were out of school for snow, so what we started doing was i actually started using zoom in 2016."

Su: about 40 percent of the student body at armstrong junior high take virtual classes.

Coach nason is responsible for 140 students this semester.

Zoom sessions with students start at 8:45 in the morning.

The first thing he does is review how exactly they can find the material and do their assignments."

"before i can teach them history, i need to make sure they understand the learning system."

Nason's set-up includes a video camera, a high-end microphone and light stands to give students the best zoom sessions possible.

He uses a green screen background to display images related to that day's lesson.

"if they get tired of looking at me, which, i believe they would, i would get tired of looking at me, they can zone out into the background that they see and they can be learning that way."

Nason says he often will play a pre-recorded lecture, then use zoom sessions for class discussion.

"instead of me telling them what they need to know, i've already given them what they need to know and they can come to zoom and they can ask me, 'i didn't quite understand it, help me understand this better."

He says the more personal setting of the online classes can help students learn at their own pace.

"they have the chance to come into a smaller group setting without 25-30 peers and ask a real question they may have been scared to ask in a classroom full of people their age."

" nason says that early on, adapting to the virtual learning style was like asking students to go from ridding a tricycle to a motorcycle.

But he says since then, they've improved in leaps and bounds and are moving in

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