Comic: 'Radiating love and positivity' while teaching in the pandemic
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It's been a year since teachers were handed an unprecedented request: educate students in entirely new ways amid the backdrop of a pandemic. In this comic series, we'll illustrate one teacher's story each week from now until the end of the school year.
Episode 5
Shameem Patel, a second-grade teacher in Dallas, on personal growth and loss — and the skills needed to get through the pandemic

!["One day, I looked in the [Google Meet] chat box, and one of my students was like ... Hi, I worked out the problem and I did it on my Jamboard. And I was like ... What is The Jam Board? And this little 6-year-old was like ... I'll share it to your email — which is another skill they have developed —and I was like ... Oh my gosh, OK!"](https://media.npr.org/assets/img/2021/04/19/teacherfeature-shameem-final-2_custom-db20e8d9f11e81611ddb175a26fdfbef475f8619.jpg?s=600)

!["Very quickly, in a span of three to four weeks, my kids' phonetic spelling improved dramatically because [they] now have to type to communicate. When this is over, I still want to actually use a lot of the digital tools that I'm using for teaching."](https://media.npr.org/assets/img/2021/04/19/teacherfeature-shameem-final-4_custom-8f199a1543b83002a4e2c141a9a5466dbdc386ef.jpg?s=600)






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