Recommendations of 7 Secrets of Teaching Online

  • Playwrights Foundation: 7 Secrets of Teaching Online

    The community of national & local readers for the 45th Bay Area Playwrights Festival in 2022 enthusiastically recommends 7 SECRETS OF TEACHING ONLINE as a Semi-Finalist at Playwrights Foundation. We were deeply moved by this play's perspective on pandemic learning from the educators' point of view. This play acutely and satirically captures the precarious existences of higher education’s exploited adjunct lecturer workforce. We were compelled by this play's promise in its clear characters, structure, and intrigue. We hope this play is widely read, finds dedicated collaborators, and moves...

    The community of national & local readers for the 45th Bay Area Playwrights Festival in 2022 enthusiastically recommends 7 SECRETS OF TEACHING ONLINE as a Semi-Finalist at Playwrights Foundation. We were deeply moved by this play's perspective on pandemic learning from the educators' point of view. This play acutely and satirically captures the precarious existences of higher education’s exploited adjunct lecturer workforce. We were compelled by this play's promise in its clear characters, structure, and intrigue. We hope this play is widely read, finds dedicated collaborators, and moves swiftly towards production. #BAPF2022

  • Diane Sampson: 7 Secrets of Teaching Online

    In "7 Secrets..." Evelyn Pine employs the exigencies of Covid as inspiration to write a play that is both touching and very funny. If teachers need to learn how to teach on zoom, why not write a play about that... teachers learning on-line how to teach on-line? What a brilliant idea! Each character has his/her amusing eccentricity and gradually-revealed vulnerability, so that you're often laughing or close to tears. This is a play that doesn't suffer from being performed on Zoom, as it was designed to be done that way. (It'd be great seen live in a theatre, as well.)

    In "7 Secrets..." Evelyn Pine employs the exigencies of Covid as inspiration to write a play that is both touching and very funny. If teachers need to learn how to teach on zoom, why not write a play about that... teachers learning on-line how to teach on-line? What a brilliant idea! Each character has his/her amusing eccentricity and gradually-revealed vulnerability, so that you're often laughing or close to tears. This is a play that doesn't suffer from being performed on Zoom, as it was designed to be done that way. (It'd be great seen live in a theatre, as well.)

  • Maury Zeff: 7 Secrets of Teaching Online

    "7 Secrets of Teaching Online" is a play borne of the Zoom age that somehow delightfully transcends the Zoom age. This play is one of the few 'Zoom plays' I've seen that manages to use Zoom to enhance the storytelling. Using the wickedly funny (and wildly meta) setup of university professors taking an online class on how to teach online, the play then veers into the interpersonal lives of its characters in a way that makes it both hilarious and deeply affecting.

    "7 Secrets of Teaching Online" is a play borne of the Zoom age that somehow delightfully transcends the Zoom age. This play is one of the few 'Zoom plays' I've seen that manages to use Zoom to enhance the storytelling. Using the wickedly funny (and wildly meta) setup of university professors taking an online class on how to teach online, the play then veers into the interpersonal lives of its characters in a way that makes it both hilarious and deeply affecting.

  • Jonathan Luskin: 7 Secrets of Teaching Online

    7 Secrets of Teaching Online is a play with its fingers on the pulse of the zeitgeist, and a comic mirror reflecting our online migration during the pandemic. A half-dozen college professors sign up for a remote, collaborative class, and their interpersonal conflicts play out through the type of video chat and texting tools we both depend on and loathe. The virtual connections are tightly woven into the play and ignite an abundance of engaging misadventure and deceit. 

    7 Secrets of Teaching Online is a play with its fingers on the pulse of the zeitgeist, and a comic mirror reflecting our online migration during the pandemic. A half-dozen college professors sign up for a remote, collaborative class, and their interpersonal conflicts play out through the type of video chat and texting tools we both depend on and loathe. The virtual connections are tightly woven into the play and ignite an abundance of engaging misadventure and deceit.