When Covid-19 forced her students into distance learning, educator Amanda Breheny created new and exciting learning experiences to meet the challenges of teaching during a pandemic.
Amanda teaches Spanish to seventh graders at Queensbury Middle School, located about 215 miles north of New York City. The innovative teacher invited guest speakers from Mexico and Honduras to speak to her class via GoogleMeet. The speakers shared information with the students about the importance of access to clean water. Amanda says the speakers helped many of her students understand the challenges of not having easy access to clean water. “For them to learn that there are kids that go home and they can’t wash their hands during a pandemic, that just, I think, it really hit home with them,” she says.
As a result of the speakers’ presentations, students in Amanda’s classes launched an awareness campaign, creating videos in both English and Spanish about the importance of clean water. In addition, they partnered with Pure Water for the World, a nonprofit in Vermont to raise nearly $100 to purchase a water-filtration system for a family in Honduras.
For her work in the classroom, Amanda Breheny was featured in the Time Magazine article entitled “Educators who Saved a Pandemic Year” published in September, 2021.