Arlington, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Youth

School days: Former Dallas-area teacher launches a virtual classroom for marooned students

This article by David Tarrant was originally published in The Dallas Morning News, March 18, 2020. A link to the full article along with a link to her website that is chock-full of learning links and teaching techniques can be found below.

In a world turned upside down, students and teacher come together on YouTube to learn.

Lisa Van Gemert, a former Martin High assistant principal and Lamar High teacher who now trains teachers, delivers her live, daily English class (12pm-1pm CT) on YouTube from her north Arlington, Texas home, Tuesday March 17, 2020. She's teaching short stories to 7th-12th graders. After hearing that schools had shut down because of the coronavirus spread, she felt compelled to share her expertise for those wanting to learn and stay engaged. Her first day of class on Monday, she had 500 students from around the country -- more viewed the video later on line. Those watching the class include student teachers, who need to observe classroom time but can't now. (Tom Fox/The Dallas Morning News)
Lisa Van Gemert, a former Martin High assistant principal and Lamar High teacher who now trains teachers, delivers her live, daily English class (12pm-1pm CT) on YouTube from her north Arlington, Texas home, Tuesday March 17, 2020. She’s teaching short stories to 7th-12th graders. After hearing that schools had shut down because of the coronavirus spread, she felt compelled to share her expertise for those wanting to learn and stay engaged. Her first day of class on Monday, she had 500 students from around the country — more viewed the video later on line. Those watching the class include student teachers, who need to observe classroom time but can’t now. (Tom Fox/The Dallas Morning News)(Tom Fox / Staff Photographer)

By David Tarrant

12:10 PM on Mar 18, 2020

The smiling face of Lisa Van Gemert filled the screen, all cheery and welcoming like it was the first day of school.

And in a way it was.

“And, I’m live. Here we go. It’s very exciting,” she said, greeting the class on Monday.

“I’ve never done anything like this.”

Wait, what?

A little background.

With schools closing here and around the country in order to slow the spread of the coronavirus, Van Gemert, a former high school teacher in Arlington, woke up Saturday morning and started thinking about all the teachers she knew, and all her former students who now have school-age kids, and thought: “I wonder what I can do to help.”

That thought was followed by another: “I wonder if I could teach a class online.”

A quick search showed lots of options and resources for elementary-age kids but not as many targeting secondary students. So that’s where she put her focus — to come up with material suitable for students in grades seven through 12.

Over the weekend she crammed the basics of YouTube, learning how to stream live and share slides. She put together a syllabus for a two-week English class, focused on short stories, to stream live online at noon Central time on weekdays.

She posted a flyer on her Facebook page, complete with links to the stories.

“And it went wild,” she said.

Over 120,000 people saw the flyer even before the first class. “It’s been incredibly awesome and amazing and humbling,” Van Gemert said.

Lisa Van Gemert, a former Lamar High School teacher who now trains teachers, delivered her daily English class on YouTube from her home in north Arlington on Tuesday.
Lisa Van Gemert, a former Lamar High School teacher who now trains teachers, delivered her daily English class on YouTube from her home in north Arlington on Tuesday. (Tom Fox / Staff Photographer)

Teachers are nothing if not resourceful. So it’s not a surprise to see some quickly adapt to the new circumstances caused by the sudden closing of schools due to the coronavirus.

That includes Van Gemert, a former teacher at Arlington’s Lamar High School who now trains teachers as a consultant and author.

Van Gemert launched her first class on her YouTube channel Monday with a smile and easy-to-remember handle.

“I’m Mrs. Van,” she said. “I’m your friendly neighborhood English teacher, and I want to thank you for joining me.”

Off to the side of the screen, in the chat forum, someone named Jujimon wrote: “Hello thank you for this class.”

And then another student, Nathanael, asked: “Do y’all know how long this thing will last?”

She sat at a desk in an office of her north Arlington home, with natural light streaming in from a window next to her, and used slides to supplement her discussion. She seemed perfectly at ease, like she’d been doing it for years.

“It went really well,” she said later.

About 500 students tuned in live and another 500 watched the video later. Those watching included student teachers in college, who are required to observe teachers in elementary or secondary school class, “but they can’t because schools have shut down,” Van Gemert said.

“Student teachers are watching,” she said. “They’re observing us.”

She even noticed there was a teacher who asked her own students to take the class, Van Gemert said. “That was really cool and very helpful.”

Since that first class, she’s received emails from parents who sent pictures of their kids watching.

“And I got tons of writing samples from the students,” she said.

The class doesn’t just help the kids but also their families “who are looking for structure for their kids,” she said. “They know we’re going to do this at this time.”

Tuesday’s class featured the short story classic The Necklace by Guy de Maupassant. While Van Gemert talked, a live chat ran along on the right side of the screen. One young student said, “​I think it is interesting to reflect on times our vanity has made our life so much more difficult. I feel like we are all like the main character (just not so extreme).”

In case the comments are inappropriate — these are teenagers, after all — Van Gemert’s husband steps in and puts the students in YouTube time-out.

To read the rest of the story click Here.

To go to Lisa Van Gemert’s website which is chock-full of learning links and teaching techniques click HERE.

About Lisa Van Gemert: A former Arlington, Texas, high school teacher, Lisa Van Gemert is the Teacher Improvement Director in the Arlington Texas Stake of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

By Janene Nielsen

Janene Nielsen is a novelist, freelance journalist and Multi-Stake Public Affairs Assistant Director over Media Relations for the Fort Worth Coordinating Council of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints