On her first day as a pandemic substitute teacher, Kitty Kremer got a face shield, a mask, a microphone, some wipes and directions to the classroom where the children were waiting behind plexiglass.
"I felt like a space person, walking from room to room," Kremer — one of Minnesota's irreplaceable replacement teachers — said with a laugh.
When it feels like the pandemic is tearing Minnesota apart, remember the people who help hold it together.
Kremer is a veteran educator who taught art in the St. Paul Public Schools for nearly 30 years. After she retired, she turned to substitute teaching. All the joy and creativity of teaching without all the paperwork and professional development courses.
Then came COVID.
"It was a learning curve like no learning curve you could imagine," said Kremer, who navigated the distance-learning software of half a dozen different schools, then navigated those school hallways, pushing a cart piled high with art supplies from classroom to classroom.
She was teaching students at school, students online, students who were offline but might watch the video of her lesson sometime later, and students interrupting art class to ask if she knew the password to get them into science class.
Through it all, through the past two years and into a third, teachers have really wanted only two things: Keep everyone safe. Keep everyone learning.