Lockdown teacher reflects on unexpected success

Katy Lewis
BBC News, Bedfordshire
Holly King-Mand Holly King-Mand is looking at the camera and smiling. She has dark blonde shoulder length hair and pale blue eyes and wears a leopard print blouse. Behind her is a background of colourful painted flowers.Holly King-Mand
Holly King-Mand now runs a tutoring business and has not returned to the school classroom

An English teacher who amassed thousands of followers by offering online lessons during the Covid-19 pandemic said she was still "amazed" by how quickly the service took off.

On 23 March 2020, the day the first lockdown started, Holly King-Mand began hosting free 30-minute lessons on Facebook from her home to support parents all over the world.

Her 74 Facebook followers quickly rose to about 60,000 across three social media platforms.

"I still can't believe it," said the 41-year-old from Leighton Buzzard in Bedfordshire.

"Even five years on it doesn't quite seem real that you could put a little advert out on social media and a few days later thousands of people are watching you live."

Holly King-Mand Holly King-Mand is conducting an online lesson in 2020. She has blond hair and glasses and wears a short-sleeved green blouse with yellow flowers on it. She has a colourful beaded necklace on and holds a pen and a clip board. Next to her is a board which reads "carefully, I meandered through the chattering groups of families, their light laughter tickling my ears. Holly King-Mand
The 41-year-old began teaching online during the first lockdown in March 2020

Ms King-Mand was on maternity leave after having her second child and was yet to return to the classroom when the first lockdown started, so decided to put her skills to use.

Since then, she has not returned to the conventional classroom but turned her teaching into a business, continuing to offer one-to-one tutoring and online workshops for GCSE and Key Stage 3 and 4.

She also works with the National Literary Trust, talks about her lockdown experiences and her love of books in schools, and writes a regular column in The Week Junior.

Three years ago she ran free English classes for Ukrainian youngsters who had come to the UK.

Holly King-Mand Holly King-Mand has dark blonde shoulder-length hair and pale blue eyes and is smiling at the camera. She is carrying a bag of books, individually wrapped with Christmas wrapping paper. She is outside Leighton Buzzard children's centre.Holly King-Mand
In December 2021, Holly King-Mand collected and delivered 1,030 books to individual families, schools, hospitals and a women's shelter

Ms King-Mand, who has had two more children since 2020, said she always reflected on her "unexpected success" at this time of year.

"It's just wild that it even happened in the first place," she said.

"That first live lesson, I started going live and my mum messaged me and said you're back to front, so I had to quickly cancel the live and adjust the iPad - I had no idea what I was doing at all and no expectation that there would be thousands of people watching."

Her work saw her recognised by then Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who invited her and 19 other educators to a reception at No 10 to celebrate their innovative work during the pandemic.

No 10 Downing Street Holly King-Mand is talking to Prime Minister Boris Johnson in the garden at No 10 Downing Street in 2021. She has blond shoulder-length hair and is wearing a red dress with a white pattern and is looking at the prime minister and laughing.  Boris Johnson, who has bright blond hair is wearing a dark suit, white shirt and maroon tie. He is looking at Ms King-Mand and is smiling. Both and holding glasses with liquid in them.No 10 Downing Street
The teacher gave Johnson advice on keeping an audience engaged at a Downing Street reception for lockdown educators

She previously said that we need to "focus on the good to help us recover from the pandemic" and her view has not changed.

"There is so much coverage of the difficulties a generation face as a result of lockdown," she said.

"But I think we are yet to acknowledge the positive impact it also had on many of them."

She continued: "The biggest change I have seen is the quality of online learning and how tutors have adapted so quickly to using technology... and technology improving to support that. It's phenomenal.

"Online teachers have mastered their craft and found ways to do this without being in the same room as their students.

Holly King-Mand Holly King-Mand has shoulder-length blond hair and wears a black and white striped top. She sits in front of a laptop and ring lights.Holly King-Mand
The former secondary school teacher said children today had "great technical skills and can type really, really fast"

While Ms King-Mand does not work in a school, her husband is a teacher, and she said many children still had "difficulty in their oral communication and expression which we can only assume is a direct result of lockdown".

"But I also see a lot of resilience and determination in teenagers and parents; they refuse to be defined by the difficulties they faced during that period.

"It's not just about getting top grades, it's about wanting children to really enjoy learning and I wonder if this is off the back of a period where to start with, the sort of learning children were doing at home, such as worksheets at the kitchen table, was not enjoyable.

"I still have children who come to me five years on just for the love of it."

Brad Gommon Holly King-Mand has blond hair and is looking at the camera and smiling. She wears a pink dress with black polkadots and is clutching a black and white striped folder in front of her. There are books and papers on a table behind her.Brad Gommon
Holly King-Mand says we need to "focus on the good to help us recover from the pandemic"

Follow Beds, Herts and Bucks news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Related Internet Links