Rappahannock News

Students speak out

What’s it like to be in school during a pandemic? A look at how Rapp students are faring.

- By Rachel Needham Rappahanno­ck News Staff

Olivia Scheulen had big plans for her senior year at Rappahanno­ck County High School. She was going to run for president of the student council after serving as the vice president her junior year. She was going to be the vice president of the community service- oriented Leo Club. The secretary of the RCHS chapter of the National Honor Society. She was on the basketball team.

“I’ve waited my whole life for this year that everyone has said would be the best year of high school,” Olivia said, “and it’s definitely not.”

“This year we definitely don’t get to do anything normal, like no dances, which I guess I should have expected, but I thought they would find a loophole somehow to let us do stuff like that.”

Olivia and her siblings, Isaac, 14, and Emily, 10, attend school two days a week. Since August, Rappahanno­ck County Public Schools have been operating under a hybrid model. Half of the students attend school on Mondays and Tuesdays and the other half attend on Thursdays and Fridays. Wednesdays are reserved for teacher planning and deep cleaning so all students have assignment­s to do remotely.

On the days she goes to school, Olivia and her close friends share some of the same classes. “I got lucky,” she said. But she doesn’t see them very often, she added, because at lunch the students stay in their classrooms and in their classrooms they stay at their desks.

“You’re across the room and you can’t really get up and talk to each other so that’s definitely weird,” Olivia explained. “And you can’t stop and see [ friends] in the hallway like we used to.”

The students spend most of their days in school either in masks or behind plexiglass desk shields, always six feet apart. The safety protocols, devised in collaborat­ion with the Virginia Department of Health, have already helped the schools successful­ly contain two unrelated cases of COVID- 19.

Neverthele­ss, learning in such an environmen­t has been anything but easy.

“The desks are already small, so then when you have a barrier you can’t hang anything off the desk which is very hard. In one of my classes [ the teacher] lets us take off the barriers because they’re foggy and you can’t see through them anyway … but depending on who the teacher is they’ll let you take your

mask off behind the barrier,” Olivia said.

When asked what it was like to wear a mask all day, Olivia said that at first it was no big deal. “But when you’re wearing it all day it’s annoying,” she said. “Today I wore my glasses for the first time and with the mask they were fogging up every five seconds and it was very frustratin­g.”

And though they’re in class two days a week, Olivia feels like it’s not enough. “I’m basically teaching myself,” she said. “It seems like there’s no time [ for the teachers] to teach you anything in two days. So you go home and you sit there and you read and you try to teach yourself and you do all the assignment­s and I’m basically just doing them to get them done.”

A reopening success story?

In September, US Assistant Secretary of Education Frank Brogan visited RCPS to observe how the schools have managed to reopen. And he commended the hardworkin­g administra­tion for the success of its strategy, praising Rappahanno­ck as a “reopening success story.”

“We looked for schools where people are doing it differentl­y … and getting positive results,” Brogan said. “It is so impressive what you have done here.”

And it was impressive. The Rappahanno­ck County Board of Supervisor­s allocated close to half of its federal coronaviru­s relief dollars to the RCPS reopening effort. Superinten­dent Shannon Grimsley acted quickly to secure the equipment needed for reopening, from desk barriers to touchless hand sanitizer stations to HVAC upgrades. A reopening task force thought through best practices to prepare for possible scenarios. And to top it all off, the schools made sure every student who needed one was given a device for doing schoolwork at home.

But just seven weeks later, RCHS Principal Jimmy Swindler held a staff meeting and told teachers that just under 45 percent of students were failing. In an email addressed to faculty, Swindler attributed the number of failing grades to an unpreceden­ted volume of assignment­s that students either hadn’t finished or hadn’t completed.

“A failure rate of such high percentage is, rightfully, cause for alarm,” Swindler said.

Despite Dr. Grimsley’s unwavering dedication to the schools, despite teachers’ tireless commitment to their students, and despite the community’s good faith efforts to provide some sense of normalcy in a time of upheaval, students were — and are — still struggling.

“As trauma-informed educators,” Grimsley said in an interview, “we can presume that this time is traumatic for students and their families. Seeing a zero on a report card is reflective of challenges with the remote learning model, not necessaril­y of teachers or their students.”

On top of everything else, Rappahanno­ck, like many rural parts of the country, is contending with a “digital divide.” An RCPS survey of Rappahanno­ck families found that a mere 34 percent of students have access to reliable broadband at home — meaning some Rappahanno­ck students do their homework in parking lots where the school has set up WiFi hotspots, and others don’t do it at all.

Teachers, saddled with the tremendous task of educating children from a distance amidst a serious global pandemic, are figuring it out as they go along. And children, saddled with the tremendous task of learning and developing as people at the same time, are doing the best they can.

Teaching themselves

The Scheulens are fortunate that they do have high-speed internet at their house. Before the pandemic, Olivia’s mother Jennifer worked remotely five days a week. Now that her kids are at home for three of those, she often parents during the day and gets her own work done late at night.

“We have a very small house and our youngest doesn’t even have her own bedroom so there’s nowhere to go to really work where [she’s] not sitting in the middle of the house,” Jennifer said. “During the day

when we’re all trying to get work done, it’s very hard to keep her focused … I have work to do, too, but every few minutes she gets distracted so I have to say, Emily, are you doing your work?”

“Usually when I’m doing my work, I do it in the living room,” Emily added. “and there’s a bunch of like, little things in the living room … like notepads everywhere, and usually I get on those and I just get carried away,” she said.

Even with broadband access at home, remote students still face distractio­n, low-motivation, and frustratio­n with the online learning platform.

Isaac Scheulen, a ninth grader this year, said that sometimes he’ll be ready to do work in the morning but teachers won’t get around to posting his assignment­s until the a ernoon. That can be enough, Isaac said, to determine whether or not he nishes an assignment on time.

Plus, if Isaac has a question about the homework during the day, he has to email his teachers and wait for an answer.

“It will normally take an hour for a response back just because they’re teaching classes,” Isaac said. “So that can halt your progress on a certain topic if you can’t get past this one thing.”

Like his older sister, Isaac said most of the time he feels like he’s teaching himself. And because of that, it takes him longer and the workload feels heavier than normal.

Still, Isaac said his grades haven’t been a ected very much. Olivia, on the other hand, is having a harder time.

“I’ve always gotten straight-As all throughout elementary school, all throughout high school, and this year I have Bs and Cs. That’s something I’m de nitely not used to,” she said.

“I’d say I’m struggling,” Olivia continued. “Some days are really good, like some days I tell myself, okay, if I just sit down and do it I’ve got this.

It’s no problem. I don’t need to stress about it. And then some days it’s bad and I’m not doing well.”

A year ago, Olivia was planning on going straight to a four-year college right a er high school. Now, though, she’s not so sure.

“I de nitely think a er this year that I don’t like school as much as I thought I did. I want to go to college, but at the same time a lot of the stu we’ve been doing in school is pointless to me at this point,” she said.

Her shi in attitude toward college makes her mom worry about her daughter. “She’s been a straight-A student forever and this year with the way things are and the way she’s having to do things, her grades have slipped,” Jenn er said. “She’s been trying really hard and still her grades are slipping.”

A few weeks ago, Olivia told Jennifer she didn’t want to apply to colleges because she didn’t want to send them her grades from this year. “She doesn’t know if she wants to go to school if it’s going to be like this,” Jennifer said.

Relief coming soon?

In January, RCPS plans to bring kindergart­en and rst grade back to school four days a week, and the schools plan to gradually welcome back the older grades.

Like many families in Rappahanno­ck County and throughout the country, the Scheulens are looking forward to returning to some kind of normal. “Even though nobody’s happy with the way things are right now, I think if they do go back to school four days a week, we’ll send them,” Jennifer said. “I think it’s time, you know?”

Some of Emily’s paintings hang on the walls of the Scheulen family home, below.

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 ?? COURTESY PHOTOS ?? Isaac (9th grade), Emily (5th grade) and Olivia (12th grade) Scheulen pose for a family photo before they leave home for their first day of school in August.
COURTESY PHOTOS Isaac (9th grade), Emily (5th grade) and Olivia (12th grade) Scheulen pose for a family photo before they leave home for their first day of school in August.
 ??  ?? Fi h grader Emily Scheulen paints a ceramic elf in an art class. Emily says art is "super fun," and spends a lot of her free time drawing.
Fi h grader Emily Scheulen paints a ceramic elf in an art class. Emily says art is "super fun," and spends a lot of her free time drawing.
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