Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Pupils tell of delight at getting back to classes

- BY REBECCA MCCURDY

THERE was cause for celebratio­n in Dundee as many secondary pupils returned to school for the first time since December.

Junior pupils in S1-S3 were delighted to set foot in the classroom again after several months away.

St Paul’s RC Academy has introduced safety mitigation­s to make the phased return possible.

Senior pupils have been offered two and a half hours each day in order to complete essential coursework, while younger students will have one half day each week until the Easter holidays.

Head teacher Teresa Little said making sure pupils were coping with the pandemic was a key focus of reopening.

She said: “The seniors we are really needing to push on and make sure they’re prepared for any assessment­s they’ve got coming up.”

She said for the younger ones in the next three weeks the focus is on health and wellbeing and helping them feel confident about where they are in their learning and not to worry about the future as that is in hand.

“We just want them to feel secure at school, to feel safe and to feel confident.”

The toughest task facing the school is implementi­ng twometre physical distancing in corridors and classrooms, which means the number of pupils in the building at any one time has been significan­tly reduced.

But she said the school is hoping to take positive lessons from remote learning to improve the way people learn, such as workload management and independen­t study skills.

It has been a tough year for S1 pupils, who have had very little time at their new secondary school since transition­ing from primary.

Kerra Duell, 12, said she hopes to reconnect with her classmates following the phased return.

She said: “I’m most looking forward to seeing my friends and learning stuff that I’ve not already learned.”

Learning from home has added to the difficulti­es as many city pupils battled connectivi­ty issues.

She added: “Working from home was sometimes stressful because either the wi-fi would be playing up or the computer would be too slow.

“But at school it is a lot easier because you can get help from the teachers.”

Following the cancellati­on of exams in December, pupils in S4-S6 have been working hard to pull together coursework which can be assessed as an alternativ­e to exams.

But that challenge became even tougher as schools closed to suppress the spread of Covid-19.

Head boy Matthew Duncan said being back in the classroom will make the assessment process easier.

It had been difficult to ask questions or communicat­e with teachers during home-schooling, he said.

The 17-year-old said: “I’m so glad to be back for completing courses because it’s definitely not the same at home.

“Some teachers are better at online learning and they know what they’re doing and for other teachers this is their first time.

“Being back you can ask face-toface questions that you might not be willing to pause the teacher on if you’re on a call because that interrupts the entire flow of it and there’s awkward silences.

“Most teachers have been really good at getting any doubts out of pupils’ heads.

“They have all been putting in 100%.”

Despite coping reasonably well with remote learning, head girl Melissa Phillips, 17, said that she was relieved to be back at school.

“It’s very different from what it’s been like the last three or four months,” she said.

“But it’s a big relief for everybody in getting back to class and being able to produce work and being able to chat to friends and socialise.

“I think that’s something that’s very important that we’ve all missed out on.”

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