The Maui News - Weekender

Pandemic tech to shape education in years to come

Schools have adjusted to completely different classroom experience

- By MELISSA TANJI Staff Writer

EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the final segment of a limited series looking back on the year since COVID-19 arrived in Maui County. Each story explores an industry directly impacted and reshaped by the pandemic. Today’s feature focuses on education.

No junior prom. No sports competitio­ns. No in-person learning for months, or even a year.

The COVID-19 pandemic hit Maui County schools hard.

Students, teachers and school administra­tors learned how to pivot, shifting teaching and learning online.

School schedules and in-person learning faced starts and stops as COVID-19 case numbers rose and fell and some campuses had cases among students or staff.

An extended spring break in March 2020 turned to full-time distance learning, a return to the classroom was pushed back multiple times and eventually students never returned for the school year.

“We left spring break mid-March last year, and no one could have predicted that we would not return to in-person classes until August,” said Sacred Hearts School Principal Tonata Lolesio, reflecting over the past year. “The most difficult obstacle was getting students and parents alike to embrace the norm of online learning. Kids got a crash course on being tech savvy.”

Many schools are still relying on distance or hybrid learning as they slowly bring students back to campuses, though some are still more comfortabl­e learning from home.

Currently, all state Department of Education campuses in Maui County have implemente­d some type of blended learning, said Kathleen Dimino, superinten­dent for the Baldwin-Kekaulike-Maui Complex Area, which includes the largest schools in the county.

“While some schools have more students back than others, all schools are working on getting as many students back as possible for the remainder of this school year,” Dimino said Thursday.

For students and teachers, “back to school” as they once knew it is still a long ways off.

Brave new world

Even though the island of Lanai saw zero cases until October, “the onset of the pandemic was still very

disruptive to our school,” Lanai High & Elementary School Principal Elton Kinoshita said.

“The initial pivot to distance learning was challengin­g for everyone: students, teachers, staff, parents, administra­tors and even employers,” he said Wednesday. “Teachers had to learn how to adjust to online instructio­n. Students had to learn to focus in their virtual classrooms, often with the distractio­n of other siblings who were also attending virtual classrooms.”

The changes not only impacted teachers but other staff as well. Cafeteria workers “had their workload substantia­lly increase with the move to the summer feeding program, which distribute­d a lunch and a breakfast together,” Kinoshita said. Custodians adjusted to increased sanitation duties.

About two months into the new school year, Lanai had a COVID-19 cluster that went from zero to nearly 100 in about a month. In total, Kinoshita said there were 33 confirmed positive student cases on campus. None were staff members.

“The outbreak in October 2020 was a wake-up call for our community,” Kinoshita said. “Prior to that, the community was cautious but the outbreak reinforced the need to be vigilant at all times and in all situations. The school’s response was to implement all DOH and DOE safety precaution­s.”

Teachers said last year that they tried everything they could to keep students engaged, especially in middle to high school grades. They turned to YouTube and TikTok videos and even gave away prizes for those who participat­ed in online lessons.

Students struggled with distance learning, especially if they had internet connectivi­ty issues or not enough devices at home. Some were just not motivated after they learned their grades from first through third quarter would be used to determine their final grade while they learned at home during the fourth quarter.

But others who needed to boost their grades, especially to graduate, responded better than others. Kids who preferred to choose their own assignment­s, a feature of some virtual platforms, thrived in the new environmen­t.

At the top administra­tive level, challenges included “making a rapid shift” to distance learning and securing resources to ensure students and staff had the technology to support virtual learning, said Lindsay Ball, Hana-Lahainalun­aLanai-Molokai Complex Area superinten­dent. The new education landscape also meant “managing the fears of our school communitie­s, from educators to parents” and “rallying for their support” for the new instructio­n method, Ball said.

Smaller schools go back to class

With smaller enrollment­s and less red tape than state-run public schools, private schools were able to open up with faceto-face learning in August if they so chose.

However, Lolesio said the school capped class enrollment to adhere to proper distancing.

“Once it was apparent that public schools were not returning to in-person (learning), our phones were ringing off the hook with parents wanting to enroll their children at Sacred Hearts,” she said, although the Lahaina school couldn’t accommodat­e all the interest due to space and health restrictio­ns.

Sacred Hearts also saw some students leave for various reasons, including parents losing their jobs.

Like other schools, Sacred Hearts spent months preparing by developing guidelines as well as putting in handwashin­g stations and replacing bathroom faucets and soap dispensers with sensor-equipped, touchless machinery.

Freshmen students have been able to do some activities offcampus, such as planting kalo with the Lahaina Restoratio­n Foundation and learning about working on the water while sailing with Trilogy Excursions.

Large gathering events have also been adjusted; while there will be no annual bazaar, the school is instead holding a Ho‘ike Luau just for school families, with half of the students performing on Friday and the other half today.

Smaller public schools were also able to bring students back to the classroom sooner than others.

While most Maui County public schools held off on inperson learning at the start of the school year, Kilohana and Maunaloa elementari­es on Molokai have opened to all students in person every day since the beginning of the school year, Ball said.

Special education and younger students also had opportunit­ies for in-person learning throughout the pandemic in hopes of maintainin­g their progress.

While his counterpar­ts at DOE schools were mainly in distance learning as the new school year arrived, Todd Craine, a special education preschool teacher at Kihei Elementary, had already been back in the classroom since the summer. Over the summer he was at Makawao Elementary to keep his special education vulnerable learners from regressing due to missed instructio­nal time.

Craine said his special education preschoole­rs do not wear masks as they either have health restrictio­ns or are not able to keep one on. However, he always wears his mask.

“I know some of our teachers have been real nervous about COVID,” he said after school on Thursday. “I’ve been pretty comfortabl­e. The work the school has done, they are doing (what) they can to make people feel comfortabl­e.”

Craine, who also does double duty teaching at the Head Start program on the Kihei campus, said he understood the need to have his students in the classroom and learning with their peers because they need the interactio­n.

Even with his mostly inclass commitment, he also had to learn how to teach virtually if needed.

“I can throw a pretty good Webex now,” he said of the online videoconfe­rencing platform.

‘Hopeful for what we might have’

The pandemic also produced a whole generation of students for whom “the new normal” now means virtual classes and alternatin­g days on campus with their peers.

Baldwin High School senior Erin Kobashigaw­a said she realized she is not a good virtual learner.

“I have a harder time focusing in (online) class and learning from videos. I’d much rather learn through face-toface instructio­n and hands-on activities like labs,” said Kobashigaw­a, who will be attending Barrett, The Honors College at Arizona State University in the fall.

The varsity cross country and track and field athlete will be majoring in forensic science.

Kobashigaw­a also lost out on a senior night for her sports as well as junior prom, which was canceled a week before it was supposed to happen in 2020.

“I try not to think about what we’ve could’ve had, instead I try to remain hopeful for what we might have, such as in-person graduation and maybe even a Project Graduation,”

she said on Tuesday.

Kobashigaw­a is glad she participat­ed in activities prior to the pandemic. She is a member of the National Honor Society and Baldwin High School’s Executive Board treasurer and is also involved in 4-H.

The hardest thing for her was not being able to see her friends and classmates as often as before. She’s now back at school but only twice a month due to Baldwin’s in-person rotation schedule.

“I miss the social interactio­n with my classmates and teachers and I feel really disconnect­ed from everyone,” she said.

Maui High School senior Alexis Joy Viloria also misses the high school experience.

“Thanks to COVID, I had to figure out how to run the first official year of the journalism club I started fully online, miss out on my last year of air riflery as well as my annual travels to compete for HOSA (Health Occupation­s Students of America), my school’s health profession club,” Viloria said on Monday.

Viloria, too, misses the faceto-face learning as her more advanced classes and subjects require a lot of interactio­n between students.

Viloria, who will attend Stanford in the fall to possibly major in anthropolo­gy and minor in journalism, is continuing her distance learning and has not gone back to campus.

She said if she were to go back, it would be similar to being at home as lessons are held through Google Meet, another online platform.

Viloria’s extracurri­cular activities include National Honor Society; SaberScrib­es Journalism Club; Air Force Associatio­n CyberPatri­ot; Big Brothers Big Sisters; Maui Waena STEMworks AFTERschoo­l, where she is a mentor; and FilAm Voice, where she contribute­s as a student writer.

Overall, the hardest thing for her is staying motivated.

“As we’re learning from home, sometimes all students want to do is sleep in instead of having to wake up at 8 a.m. five days a week,” she said. “I’ve combated this by trying to look at the positive; I’m almost to the end goal, so I just have to stick it out and do my best so I can say I made it through.”

New tech here to stay

Moving forward, the main issues for schools center on internet connectivi­ty, as well as the fear over the spread of COVID-19.

“The biggest hurdle, not just for public schools but educationa­l institutio­ns in general, is reassuring the public that our campuses are safe,” Ball said. “Schools are an extremely controlled environmen­t with multiple layers of mitigation strategies in place. We want to avoid transmissi­on of the virus on our campuses just as much as our staff, students and parents do.”

Craine said that schools “may be stuck with germ protocol” for a while, especially with COVID-19 variants popping up.

“It’s just the new world we live in,” he said.

While a lasting effect of the pandemic will include things like extra handwashin­g, increased use of virtual platforms will also likely shape education in years to come. Craine said that learning the technology during the pandemic has been a plus and can be used to assist with teaching, and school administra­tors agree.

“I predict that with the new skills teachers have developed as a result of the pandemic, teaching and student learning opportunit­ies will only get better,” Dimino said.

Schools, ultimately, want to bring students back, but they will continue to rely on the technology that made distance learning possible.

“It is our goal to bring all students back for in-person learning,” Ball said. “Other than that, our schools will find new ways to harness technology to engage students, staff and stakeholde­rs like never before because of what we experience­d over the past year.”

 ?? The Maui News / MATTHEW THAYER photos ?? Maui High School math teacher Shawn Mongenyip sits in front of a large-screen monitor while remotely teaching students how to solve equations on Feb. 26. The technology that shaped education during the pandemic will likely have in impact in the classroom for years to come.
The Maui News / MATTHEW THAYER photos Maui High School math teacher Shawn Mongenyip sits in front of a large-screen monitor while remotely teaching students how to solve equations on Feb. 26. The technology that shaped education during the pandemic will likely have in impact in the classroom for years to come.
 ??  ?? Baldwin High School students walk the campus on March 11
Baldwin High School students walk the campus on March 11
 ?? SACRED HEARTS photo ?? Sacred Hearts students Devon Brown (from left), Cai Sherman, Kora Ramey, Mina Paje, Bailey Santiago and Kealaula Smythe, along with Kumu Keahu Kaauwai, practice for their Ho‘ike Luau open to school families only.
SACRED HEARTS photo Sacred Hearts students Devon Brown (from left), Cai Sherman, Kora Ramey, Mina Paje, Bailey Santiago and Kealaula Smythe, along with Kumu Keahu Kaauwai, practice for their Ho‘ike Luau open to school families only.
 ?? The Maui News MATTHEW THAYER photo ?? Baldwin High seniors are greeted by a COVID checklist when returning to the campus in March.
The Maui News MATTHEW THAYER photo Baldwin High seniors are greeted by a COVID checklist when returning to the campus in March.
 ??  ?? Kobashigaw­a
Kobashigaw­a
 ??  ?? Viloria
Viloria

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