Education
You teach, you explain, you engage. The students are there — in a sense. But the energy of a physical classroom, the spontaneous moments, the human mess of real learning, is largely absent.
Many remote teachers describe the experience of speaking to black squares — students with cameras off, participation limited to occasional typed messages. You're performing the role of teacher with no social feedback to work with. No nodding, no confused faces to respond to, no laughter at the right moment. Teaching is an inherently relational act; remote teaching removes most of the relationship.
Teachers who find their work meaningful often describe the energy of a responsive classroom as what sustains them. Remote teaching strips this away, replacing it with something that looks like teaching but feels like broadcasting.
Teaching has always been emotionally demanding work, partially sustained by the collegial support of other teachers — the quick debrief between classes, the shared frustration in the staffroom, the mutual recognition between professionals who face similar challenges. Remote teachers lose this support structure along with everything else. The emotional demands remain; the collegial sustenance doesn't.
Many remote teachers feel more alone than any other point in their career, including student teaching when they had supervisors to talk to.
Mindfuse is an anonymous voice call app — you're not a teacher on it, just a person. Real stranger, unscripted conversation, no curriculum. First conversation free. €4/month. iOS and Android.
Anonymous voice. Real person. No students to manage.
One free conversation · €4/month · iOS and Android