Santa Cruz Sentinel

Resorts to RV parks: Parents take school year on the road

- By Leanne Italie

NEW YORK >> In RVs, rental homes and five- star resorts, families untethered by the constraint­s of physical classrooms for their kids have turned the new school year into an extended summer vacation, some lured by the ailing hotel industry catering to parents with remote learners through “roadschool­ing” amenities.

With the pandemic ongoing, the change of scene for desperate work- and schoolfrom-home families boils down to “risk versus reward,” said Amanda Poses, a travel consultant and mother of two teenagers in Austin, Texas. “God willing, we don’t have the opportunit­y to do this again.”

Poses and her husband let 13-year- old Addison attend school from Park City, Utah, for three days of a five-night stay in early September. In search of a flight of three hours or less, they rode horses, hiked and ziplined. They went tubing and enjoyed an alpine slide. And, yes, there was a bit of logging in to school.

“I ended up skipping like half of my classes,” Addison smiled. “It was nice. It was like a new start.”

Addison’s 16- year- old brother sat out the trip. “He was concerned about being distracted,” mom said.

One of the places the family stayed, the luxury Montage Deer Valley mountain resort, now offers “Montage Academy” for distance learners, complete with an all- day monitored “study hall” and access to virtual tutors. Other hotels are offering on- site tutors and tickets for “field trips” at area attraction­s.

Anna Khazenzon, a data and learning scientist for the online study platform Quizlet, said the monotony of weeks stuck at home for school on top of six months of pandemic restrictio­ns risks bringing on burnout for distance learners.

But there are dangers lurking in schoolcati­ons as well.

“Formal schoolcati­on programs have the potential

to create further achievemen­t gaps between highand low-income families, and more cost-effective versions should be developed, but overall there are many learning benefits for taking children on schoolcati­ons,” Khazenzon said. “If students are burnt out and under-stimulated studying at home, then they may not be engaged in class at all.”

Jennifer Steele, an associate professor of education at American University, said that if distance learners don’t show up for class during schoolcati­ons, “we would expect them to lose some knowledge and skills.” In addition, she said, the idea “exposes socioecono­mic inequities in terms of people’s inability to leave and go to difference places.”

Since the start of the pandemic, families of means have decamped to second homes or taken long-term rentals in vacation spots around the world. With summer over, schoolcati­ons offer others similar experience­s, whether they’re roughing it on the road for extended periods or spending on hotels and resorts trying to make up for a summer slump.

For Jayson and Tammy Brown, schoolcati­ons for their three kids have been both ongoing and life-affirming over the past five

years. The parents and 11-year- old Jayde, 13-yearold Jay’Elle and 14-year-old Jayson are used to traveling the world with school topics in mind, but the pandemic has them avoiding planes.

Before the pandemic, there was a trip to Israel at a time Jay’Elle was studying the Mideast. Young Jayson made science connection­s between rock formations there and biolumines­cent organisms he saw on another adventure.

In South Africa, the family focused on Nelson Mandela, visiting the former prison and military fort Constituti­on Hill, which has been turned into a history museum on the country’s journey to democracy.

The Browns have taken a few road trips within driving distance of home in Atlanta since March, and have more planned. Tammy, a special education teacher, is handling her students remotely. She and her husband make sure their kids log on to school when attendance is required.

“Oh we stay on them for sure,” dad said.

What do the kids think they’re gaining?

“I find it much more fun than school, being able to experience firsthand what I’m actually learning in class,” Jay’Elle said.

 ?? JAYSON E. BROWN ?? This photo shows the Brown family of Atlanta, from left, Jayde Brown, Jay’Elle Brown, Jayson R. Brown, Tammy Brown and Jayson E. Brown at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem on Dec. 27, 2019. Parents Tammy and Jayson have been taking their kids on educationa­l trips for five years and are among families heading out with remote-learning kids during the new school year rather than leaving them stuck at home.
JAYSON E. BROWN This photo shows the Brown family of Atlanta, from left, Jayde Brown, Jay’Elle Brown, Jayson R. Brown, Tammy Brown and Jayson E. Brown at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem on Dec. 27, 2019. Parents Tammy and Jayson have been taking their kids on educationa­l trips for five years and are among families heading out with remote-learning kids during the new school year rather than leaving them stuck at home.

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