With the advent of Covid-19, we have an influx of Stay at
Home orders across the United States, Italy, Bulgaria, France, Spain, China,
and many other countries in attempts to slow the spread of the virus. Whether
you feel this was necessary or not doesn’t really matter, it is the current
situation and what we are dealing with.
With so many people being told to stay at home and not
gather in groups the Covid-19 virus is causing a lot of changes to erupt in the
way people do things. The good news is
humans as a whole have been extremely adept at adapting to change. This is one
of those events in our history we are adapting to rapidly.
Trial by Fire
Right now many children across the United States are
currently either being home schooled by their parents with some direction
coming from schools, or actively participating in online learning with schools
and teachers who haven’t had formal learning on how to switch from classroom to
virtual.
Also important to note, employees at supermarkets,
pharmacies, and some other retail stores are now front line people in the face
of the pandemic. If you go to the store like I do, more and more people are
going through the self-checkout lines. Even deliveries are changing slightly, by
using prepay, and by simply leaving the items or food delivered at the door.
Office employees who were never forced to work remotely are
now using virtual conferencing systems, and we are seeing it is not the easiest
transition for those being thrown into it out of necessity. I have many friends
from my world of remote employees giggling at their friends who are struggling,
but have no fear, they will adapt, and then they will never want to go back to
the way it was before.
Families are having game nights using Zoom, so they can play
online with family members in other communities. Friends are getting together
and playing online darts from their homes, just so they can stay in touch and
have fun. These things happened prior to the pandemic but have become much more
commonplace in just 3 weeks in the United States.
The New Normal
This pandemic will move us even faster towards less direct
human interaction when it comes to things such as learning and retail sales. There
will be a “new normal” when this is all said and done. The digital age was
already upon us, but necessity has made people adapt rapidly in the past month
or so to take up things they had been reluctant to do prior.
We are approaching a time when children may no longer have
“snow days” if they get snowed in. Children who get mono or another long
illness may be able to participate in their classwork remotely more easily. We
will be quickly getting to the point where in-class learning and virtual
learning are more clearly intertwined in a true blended learning experience for
our children. I see this happening already on the corporate side. We will need
to adjust our teacher training to prepare them to work more easily in a virtual/online
environment now that they have been thrown into it out of necessity.
Retail stores and restaurants will move towards more
self-checkout and ordering kiosks immediately to remove the direct contact. More
companies will be allowing work from home than ever before, as they are seeing
that people are still being productive now working remotely.
The world was already moving into the digital age and the
age of automation at a rapid pace, but the onset of a pandemic will push us
forward as the change agent we didn’t see coming. The next few years will be an interesting
ride as we see what the “new normal” will bring us.
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