1. Surviving During a Pandemic
What is it like to experience a pandemic? How have your life and your world changed? What has happened to all the things you used to do and took for granted? Your government has told you the world is no longer safe. You cannot carry on the way you always have before March 2020. You cannot travel, nor can you socialize. You must wear a mask to protect yourself and keep six feet from another person. What does daily life look like in the US, in China, Turkey, Guatemala, India, and Europe? Find out what the authors recordedin their journals about their lives.
Surviving During a Pandemic shares a glimpse of different lives and stories from around the globe, told by young adults, and older adults. Men and women share their concerns, their sorrow, and their hopes during this extraordinary time. The human condition, the suffering, the introspection and character development is not a unique phenomenon, but a shared one.
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2. Necessary Narratives in Uncertain Times
COVID 19 or Coronavirus or Corona has undoubtedly affected every facet of life for every citizen of the world. In early 2020 most of the world had not even contemplated its name. Economic, health, labor, and social sectors have suffered tremendously during this pandemic. Education changed, quite literally, overnight. We now find ourselves in a digital landscape trying to engage with our ‘new normal.’ We realize that many educators from pre-schools through graduate colleges are engaging different realities other than what we are used to. These realities have sparked many narratives and stories, some verbalized, others shared on social media, and others still communicated within our contexts of learning.
This groundbreaking volume, the first of two, carefully weaves together over 30 narratives of faculty, K-12 teachers, students, parents, and community members that center the experience of COVID-19. This volume is centered on a commitment to not losing the power of these narratives – the power to chronicle, the power to transform, the power to inspire, the power to build allyship through hardship.
This volume chronicle how a variety of people have experienced the moments of COVID at personal and/or professional levels: lessons they are learning and tales that help provide context, content, or convergence for readers. Individual narratives work together to center issues of advocacy, diversity, equity, family, labor, technology, society, struggle, and trepidation.
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3. On Leadership, Processes, Commitments, and Hope in Uncertain Times
This groundbreaking volume, the second of two, carefully weaves together, over 33 chapters, perspectives on the processes, leadership, commitments, and hope associated with the experience of COVID-19. Both volumes center a commitment to not losing the power narrative – the power to chronicle, the power to transform, the power to inspire, the power to build allyship through hardship.
Pandemic Special
Surviving During a Pandemic:
Dr. Garinger earned a Doctorate in Educational Psychology from the University of Connecticut, an Ed.M. from Harvard University, Graduate School of Education. She also has a Masters Degree from Tufts University and a Bachelors Degree from Syracuse University in Art History.
Corona Chronicles and The Corona Chronicles:
Kenneth J. Fasching-Varner is Associate Professor in the College of Education at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Fasching-Varner earned his PhD from The Ohio State University.
Steven T. Bickmore is Associate Professor in the College of Education at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Bickmore earned his PhD from the University of Georgia.
Danica G. Hays is Professor and Executive Associate Dean in the College of Education at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Hays earned her PhD from Georgia State University.
P.G. Schrader is Professor and Department Chair of Teaching and Learning in the College of Education at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Schrader earned his PhD from the University of Connecticut.
David Lee Carlson is Associate Professor in Mary Lou Foulton College of Education at Arizona State University. Carlson earned his EdD from Teachers College, Columbia University.
Dorothea Anagnostopolous is Associate Professorin the Neag School of Education at the University of Connecticut. Anagnostopolous earned her PhD from the University of Chicago.