Hartford Courant

Calif. middle schooler builds ‘garage classroom’

Eighth grader creates community for distance learning

- By Aldo Toledo

SAN CARLOS, Calif. — While many kids shuffle out of bed in the morning to their computers for another day of online school, Central Middle School 8th-grader Christine Chang heads down to her garage for the day.

Decked out with desks, school supplies, hand sanitizing stations, and all the regulars of a modern-day classroom, 13-year-old Christine’s garage is the closest thing to school that she’s been able to replicate after months of struggling to adapt to distance learning.

Like many other kids her age — including her four closest friends that join her at “garage school” every day — Christine couldn’t stand the constant Zoom meetings, online homework and persistent lack of interactio­n she experience­d back in the spring, when the rampaging coronaviru­s shut down schools across California.

“Every day I would get up at 10 a.m. and do everything for school by noon,” Christine said. “We all thought quarantine was going to last a couple of weeks. But then months happened. I had no social interactio­n and I wasn’t learning anything. When they said they’d do virtual learning again this year, I said ‘I’m definitely not going to spend all year sitting alone in my room.’ ”

At first Christine thought she might set up a study group with her close friends to help with homework and to have people to hang out with safely at the end of the day. But California’s historic wildfires put a damper on outside plans on smoky days. Determined, Christine spied an opportunit­y to create a new

school environmen­t with her friends and asked her mother, Michelle Chang, to move her car out of the garage, paint it, get some furniture in and give it new life as a learning space.

It’s something she needed to do, Christine said. When distance learning started, Christine didn’t want to fall in the trap of working in her living space, so she moved all her school work to the living room and made a work station there. Despite the change in scenery, it wasn’t easy going.

Christine wasn’t struggling to keep up with online school. Even so, Michelle said Christine looked like she didn’t have the heart for school anymore. A ballerina usually known for

her good posture, Christine slouched around the house and lacked the interactio­n to keep her energized.

“They really tried hard, but it’s difficult to re-create that connection you have with other students,” her mom said. “I think all humans and especially teens and tweens thrive on what I like to call the ‘dust of life.’ It’s seeing the people you don’t talk to but know about. It’s missing the annoying kid in class or seeing familiar faces around you. She missed all that.”

It took some convincing, and not everyone was on board right away, but Christine was convinced this is what she needed. She’s definitely no stranger to taking things into her

own hands. As a cancer survivor, Christine “is always trying to find a way to make any bleak situation a little better by bringing her own brand of sunshine, said her mom, adding that the project brought new life into her daughter.

“She was collecting things from unused backyard furniture to getting stuff for free from people and even carrying an old filing cabinet that was free up the hill to our house,” Michelle said. “It has honestly lifted up their experience so much. It has changed completely what distance learning is like for them.“

Questioned about how safe the classroom would be, Christine calculated that five to six girls could

join her experiment. She made up rules for social distancing, required masks inside, assigned chores and opened up the garage doors for an indoor-outdoor feel. She envisioned the students that join her having their own work stations to watch Zoom classes and similar bell schedules would allow them to share lunches and snack breaks.

And when it got down to pitching the idea to her friends, Christine was the one that convinced wary parents.

Brenna Wiggin, one of the five girls who attends school in the “garage classroom“said she met Christine in ballet and became friends with her there. Since becoming a part of the makeshift classroom, Wiggin said Christine and her other friends have grown a bond and created the community they lacked.

Even though it’s just five of them, the girls have become best friends who do everything together. They made origami cranes for a benefit, they go on bike rides together, and they even dressed up as their favorite K-pop band for Halloween.

Wiggin said having her friends with her through strange times is making her feel better.

“Honestly I don’t really want to go back to school,” Wiggin said. “I’m having so much fun. I know in the garage it’s not the whole school environmen­t but it’s so much more relaxed.”

 ?? RANDYVAZQU­EZ/BAYAREANEW­SGROUP ?? Brenna Wiggin, 14, left, and Emi Bryant, 13, right, do schoolwork in their garage classroom Nov. 19 in San Carlos, California.
RANDYVAZQU­EZ/BAYAREANEW­SGROUP Brenna Wiggin, 14, left, and Emi Bryant, 13, right, do schoolwork in their garage classroom Nov. 19 in San Carlos, California.

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