We survived the first week of remote learning during the pandemic
Not going to sugar-coat it โ the first day of my twinsโ kindergarten was kind of a shitshow. (BTW, I took the above smiley photo of my husband and our kids an hour before school started.) On Monday, August 24, Zoom conked out just as millions of other kids tried to log on for remote learning during the Coronavirus pandemic.
My daughtersโ teachers pivoted to Google Meet โ but not everyone got the memo. I watched as my daughter Lydiaโs teacher, Mr. Perez, took virtual roll call, his mouth slightly obscured through a shiny plastic shield. Attendance took like 45 minutes, in part because only a few of us figured out how to change our screen names from the generic โUser x 834โ to our kidsโ actual names.
We spent the next hour playing a game of Flashing Faces because no one, including Mr. Perez, seemed to understand that we all need to be muted unless youโre the designated speaker. When Google Meet senses the slightest flicker of sound โ a word, a grunt, a sigh โ it shows that sound makerโs face. Everyone was making noise โ it was a nauseating free-for-all, a visual overload of 20-some kidsโ faces in less than 10 seconds, over and over again. I don’t recommend playing Flashing Faces on the first day of kindergarten.
I didnโt mention that we enrolled Lydia in our districtโs dual language program. Sheโs part Hispanic, but only knows about seven words of Spanish, because we speak English at home. Though my husband, Martin, grew up speaking Spanish at home in Brooklyn, he hasnโt taught Lydia.
Lydiaโs struggling to understand Mr. Perez โ he speaks Spanish 98% of the time, with no English translation, and muffled audio doesnโt do anyone any favors. Thank goodness for Cookie Monster โ Mr. Perez uses a puppet for visual cues โ to signal, for example, that mouth is boca and that eyes are ojos.

This week, Iโve been sitting in on the first hour of Lydiaโs class before I start work, and am piecing together my thoughts on remote learning. Thanks to Abuela, my husbandโs mom, Iโve learned some of the basics of espaรฑol. My mom, whoโs Lydiaโs right-hand teaching assistant, is frustrated because she didn’t know a lick of Spanish, but five days in, I’m impressed with this Scottish ladyโs pronunciations of buenos dias!

Virtual learning = seeing strangers’ lives up close and personal
Iโve seen Lydia’s classmates’ very real lives this week. I saw parents hovering over their kidsโ tablets trying to figure out how to mute and unmute. I saw a kid laying face-down on his couch. I saw another picking her nose. I saw parents cleaning their kitchens and toddlers running about. One kid said, โI need to poop.โ
Hey, when you gotta poop, you gotta poop.

Remote kindergarten for special needs kids during the pandemic
Meanwhile, our daughter Isabel is in remote kindergarten for children with special needs, at a different school than Lydia. Isabel canโt walk or talk and is developmentally delayed, so she needs a lot of assistance. In a non-COVID world in an actual classroom, Isabel would have a paraprofessional, who would make sure she doesnโt fall out of her chair, wheel her to therapy sessions, change her diaper, and feed her at lunchtime.
During COVID, we drive Isabel daily to our daycare providerโs house, where Miss Marianne leads remote learning for Izzy and two other kids, one of whom has Down’s syndrome and, luckily, is also in Isabelโs class. Honestly, I don’t know how Marianne does it. She has way more patience than me.
6:30 am on day 3 of remote school: We found Isabel surrounded in a pile of puke in her bed
Isabel has cyclical vomiting syndrome, and her usual monthly episode came four days earlier than usual this month. Quick pivot: Martin canceled plans to work onsite at the hospital (heโs a social worker) and instead worked from home. Martin and I took turns caring for Isabel in between work meetings.

How do I work full time for a fast-moving tech startup and run Jumble & Flow while my girls do remote learning?
- Our saint of a daycare provider and my parents.
Miss Marianne follows all the safety regulations, and my parents live 10 minutes away. If I didnโt have them, I Could. Not. Do. All. Of. This.
- My husband and I are equals.
Itโs taken years to get to the point where weโre co-breadwinners, but itโs been worth the wait. Also, he cooks and I clean. - Remote work makes the dream work.
Iโve been working remotely in tech for close to six years. Iโm like an old pro. But for the first of those six years, I worked remotely for Minted (they’re based in San Francisco and I’m in the Chicago burbs), a company that was decidedly anti-remote. I was a black sheep at Minted, and wasnโt allowed to be promoted because of my remote status. I endured the black sheep status so that I could make my personal life work.
Now that so many companies are embracing remote work, Iโm grateful that work cultures have shifted.
I’m highly aware that it reallllllly take a village to raise a kid, and my village is working hard every day just so that I can work hard every day. I’m also aware that Martin and I are among very few lucky parents who have so much support.
Weโre gonna get through kindergarten one way or another
And Lydia will learn Spanish. How? One day at a time. This week has been stressful and tear-inducing. In addition to school and childcare woes, weโve dealt with childcare pick-up and drop-off woes, mid-presentation Internet outages at work, and for Martin, the challenges that come with social work in Chicago.
The bright spot? Family dinnertime, when we all sing “Wheels on the bus” with Isabel and Martin and I recap the dayโs Spanish lessons with Lydia. โHow do you say โredโ in Spanish?โ Rojo. ยกMuy bien!
