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I was recently reading the November/December 2020 issue of "Science and Children" a publication of the National Science Teaching Association. In this issue, I read the "Editor's Note" column written by Elizabeth Barrett-Zahn. Her article was entitled "What a Year."
As we move toward the early winter of 2020 we look back at schools following a patchwork of face-to-face, hybrid, and virtual models of instruction. All teachers, at whatever grade-level, have been returned to their "rookie year" of teaching as they struggle to find ways to meet the needs of learners in their physical classrooms and on screens.
By David BydlowskiI was recently reading the November/December 2020 issue of "Science and Children" a publication of the National Science Teaching Association. In this issue, I read the "Editor's Note" column written by Elizabeth Barrett-Zahn. Her article was entitled "What a Year."
As we move toward the early winter of 2020 we look back at schools following a patchwork of face-to-face, hybrid, and virtual models of instruction. All teachers, at whatever grade-level, have been returned to their "rookie year" of teaching as they struggle to find ways to meet the needs of learners in their physical classrooms and on screens.

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