Teachers win hearts and minds as returning students show appreciation

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Surprised staff at Chatham Primary stepped over a riot of chalk-drawn love hearts and rainbows on their way through the school gates on Monday.

The school’s steel perimeter fencing was also festooned with fluttering paper hearts bearing messages of thanks from students at the small government school in Surrey Hills.

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Students at Chatham Primary School in Surrey Hills surprised staff with thank you messages on Monday.Penny Stephens

School council president Kristy McIlvenna said parents had used messaging service WhatsApp on Sunday to organise the children to craft their messages and stick them up the night before teachers arrived for work on Monday morning.

“We just wanted to send them a message of thanks and show our support in some way for them and the great job they’re doing for us,” Ms McIlvenna said.

Teachers have been working from home since March, but returned to the school for a pupil-free day ahead of the return to class of grades prep, one and two on Tuesday.

They celebrated the return with a Greek feast at lunchtime.

[Teachers] have done an exceptional job in pretty tough timesChristopher Cotching, principal

Chatham Primary principal Christopher Cotching said he had never seen school staff on a learning curve as steep as the one his had been on while teaching remotely during the pandemic lockdown.

Having started the remote learning period by putting together hard-copy learning packs for parents, teachers had graduated to holding WebEx sessions and producing instructional video clips for students and parents on digital learning tool Seesaw.

“It’s just been phenomenal, particularly when they have had limited serious IT training and limited IT support provided by the department, so they’ve done an exceptional job in pretty tough times,” Mr Cotching said.

Many had also worked 10- to 12-hour days.

“I’ve been a principal for 26 years and I can tell you this is the zenith in terms of people’s response to difficulties and a capacity to push through and make it happen,” Mr Cotching said.

"The can-do attitude of my staff; they’re just absolutely adorable."

The school has eschewed the Department of Education and Training’s recommendation to stagger drop-off times, and has instead allocated one of its three entry gates to each year level.

Teachers are expecting plenty of tears and separation anxiety from returning children and even parents after more than two months away.

Mr Cotching said he was also prepared for the likelihood that many will have fallen behind in their learning.

Much of the final five weeks of term two will be an exercise in catching up.

“Of course they will have [lost learning], but then they will have gained in other things we didn’t anticipate as well,” he said.

“What the challenge will be between now and the end of the term will be to forensically assess exactly where these children are, particularly in relation to literacy and numeracy.”