Dayton Daily News

BACKTO SCHOOLTIME MEANS TOUGH DECISIONS

Parents, teachers and students strugglewi­th difficult choices during the pandemic.

- ByMeredith­Moss

One of the biggest challenges of living through this pandemic has been making critical decisions along the way.

“I just wantmy children and extended family to stay safe,” says Anita Craighead of Springboro. The mother of two, who is also a teacher, says these uncertain times mean being bombarded with opposing informatio­n flying at you from all directions.

Whenthe stay-at-home orders began, Craighead and her husband decided to create a pod with one other neighborho­od family. The two families have dinner together at least a couple of times a week. “I feel this was one of the best decisions we could have made for my 9-year- old and our own sanity,” she says now. “I am not sure howwewould have coped without having another family to be with. Humans are generally social animals that need others.”

The new school year has presented more challengin­g decisions, often with no clear “right or wrong” answers.

Centervill­e psychother­apist Amanda Matthias says we are living in unpreceden­ted times. “I know many families are dealing with a difficult decision right now when it comes to whether or not to send kids back to school this fall,” she says. “It is all about the planning and thought we engage in prior to making a decision that makes a difference in our ability to accept and live with the consequenc­es once the decision has been made. We cannot prevent the storm from

coming, but we can prepare for it.”

A parent’s perspectiv­e

Craighead describes the virtual learning that began in March as a nightmare. A teacher by trade, she still found teaching her daughter one of the most difficult things she’s ever had to do.

“Evie was a third- grader who loved school and reading,” Craighead says. “Within a couple of short weeks, she hated school and started to despise reading. My 17-year- old, who hated school to begin with, disliked it even more and asked when he could go back to in-person learning. It was rough and something I had hoped would miraculous­ly go away by the beginning of the school year.”

In recent weeks, Craighead has faced more decisions. “I pondered our choices daily as the deadline to choose ticked closer and closer,” she recalls. “Both of our children wanted to return to school.”

She says the more she read, the more she knew she didn’twant her children to be guinea pigs while the schools did the best they could to meet state guidelines, keep the children safe, and teach them.

“Doesbeing ina classroom full of kids withmasks, where facial expression­s are difficult to read and trying to remain socially distantmak­e sense?” she wondered. “Is

that socially and emotionall­y safe? Does it set the children up for being successful at school? "

A supporter of the public school system, she considered enrolling her children in virtual learning through the school district, but realized virtual learning had been a real challenge for them. “I also worried if I enrolledmy children in an establishe­d virtual school it would pull money fromthe public school,” she says. “And where would I even start in weeding through the numerous options?”

Another option was to home school her kids while working full time or join a local “pod” where another parentwoul­d teach her children in a small group.

Craighead says these decisions for herself and other parentswer­e impossible. She decided to keep her daughter at home for virtual learning and to let her 17-year-old son, Bobby, make his own decision. Enrolled ina career tech school, he requires hands- on smaller classes and a practical, career-based environmen­t. His school has opted to do a hybrid schedule for the first three weeks and then head to the classroom.

“He is disappoint­ed that he will have an assigned lunch seat that is socially distant from others,” says Craighead. “He will have to take precaution­s when returning home fromschool each day to reduce the risk of him bringing COVID into our home. We are all doing the best we can with what we have.”

A student’s perspectiv­e

When Beavercree­k High School senior Gibson Ernst first heard he’d have free time away fromschool last March, he and his friends were pretty excited. Itwould be like an extended spring break, they assumed. When he learned schoolwoul­d be closed for the rest of the year and he’d have classes online only, he was at first confused, and later depressed.

“We began to realize we wouldn’t get to see our friends,” he says. “I’m a soccer player and my season got canceled. I was by myself with nothing to do and nowhere to go.”

By mid-summer, he and his friends were eager to get back into the classroom. “Whatwe do online is nothing like what we’re seeing in the classroom,” says GIbson, who said his teachers would upload documents for

students to complete from Google Classroom. “The structure last year wasn’t very cohesive and it’s hard to learn things without the face- to- face communicat­ion with the teacher. You don’t get an individual­ized approach when you need assistance.”

Although Gibson had an online option for the new school year, he and his parents agreed he should return to school. The majority of his friends are also returning, although some have opted to be online. Gibson sayswhile he’s been excited to go back, he’s also been anxious not knowing “what it was going to look like or be like.”

“We’re wearing masks, and there are different procedures in the hallways and ways we can walk,” he explains. “And of course we’re focusing on sanitation techniques.”

A teacher’s perspectiv­e

Interventi­on specialist Melanie Lewis is a teacher in the Springfiel­d City School system who teaches children on the autism spectrumat Snyder Park Elementary School. The first decision she had to makew as whether or not to return to school this fall.

Although many of her colleagues chose other options, Lewis says that was the easiest decision she’s had to make during the pandemic.

Some of her friends, already close to retirement, decided to retire early. Some, with underlying health issues, asked to be virtual teachers.

“For me, those weren’t issues because I teach students with autism,” she explains. “I teach kindergart­en to second grade in the same classroom so I have strong bonds with all ofmy students and strong communicat­ion and rapport with my families. And because of the special needs of these students, it’s not conducive to have them in a virtual setting.”

She’s back at school with an additional challenge. Instead of having her students for part of the day for their social and emotional learning and then sending them to other classrooms for general education subjects, she is now expected to teach it all so they can remain in the same room throughout the school day.

“The problem is that they are not going to be getting any interactio­n with their typically developing peers,” she says.

Another personal decision she’s had to face is what to do with her 7-yearold, who will be going to school virtually this first quarter.

“For me, the decision was trying to figure out howhewould be takencare of,” she says. ” He could stay with his grandparen­ts, but I’m going to be in a classroom where our students generally struggle with responding appropriat­ely to social cues, so sometimes personal space is an issue. Many of our students have sensory sensitivit­ies, which may make wearing a mask difficult to enforce. My fear is that I will be exposed to the virus and bring it home to my 7-year- old who would be staying with my parents who are in their mid-70s.”

 ??  ?? Gibson Ernst is a Beavercree­k High School studentwho is eager to be back in the classroomw­ith his friends.
Gibson Ernst is a Beavercree­k High School studentwho is eager to be back in the classroomw­ith his friends.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS ?? Anita Craighead is pictured with her 9-year- old daughter, Evie.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS Anita Craighead is pictured with her 9-year- old daughter, Evie.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS ?? Anita Craighead is pictured with her 9-year- old daughter, Evie.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS Anita Craighead is pictured with her 9-year- old daughter, Evie.
 ??  ?? Melanie Lewis teaches children with autism in the Springfiel­d school district.
Melanie Lewis teaches children with autism in the Springfiel­d school district.

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