The Mercury News Weekend

First students back for in-person support program.

New project hopes to help students who have been struggling with online learning

- By Aldo Toledo atoledo@bayareanew­sgroup.com

With dark, yellow-orange skies hovering above her, Kaliopeta Taufalele walked through a desolate and eerily quiet Henry M. Gunn High School Wednesday morning, her first day back since the coronaviru­s shut down schools and sent thousands of students home to learn from a distance.

As she walked past classrooms and common areas that would have been bustling with students just a year ago, Taufalele instead saw the signs of the coronaviru­s pandemic that upended public education: hand-washing stations, hand sanitizer bottles and dozens of signs warning against the spread of the deadly virus.

“I’m really back, but it’s rather ominous. I’m getting apocalypti­c vibes,” Taufalele said. “It’s all kind of a lot at once. It’s like I’m here, but I’m not here.”

Like many of her peers, Taufalele, a 17-year-old senior, found it difficult to transition to online school. She skipped classes, turned her online camera off or simply didn’t turn in assignment­s during the previous school year as her family dealt with the financial impact of the pandemic and struggled to keep the lights on at times.

But now Taufalele will go through Zoom classrooms, breakout groups and online assignment­s like the rest of her peers while at school as part of a new in-person support program that began this week at Palo Alto’s middle and high schools. She’s among the the first high school students in the Bay Area to return to school.

Palo Alto Unified School District Superinten­dent Don Austin said the program called PAUSDPlus is designed to support students that struggled to adapt to an online learning environmen­t and need the in-person supervisio­n of tutors and adults to “stay engaged and logged in.”

Though only two students were here this week, the district expects more to attend in coming weeks, and if all goes well, the school district could have “cohorts” of 14-50 students learning online at every school site by next month.

Unlike school districts who are requesting waivers from Santa Clara County to start elementary school classes, the support program at Palo Alto schools isn’t technicall­y “teaching” or a “class” and so doesn’t

“I’m really back, but it’s rather ominous. I’m getting apocalypti­c vibes. It’s all kind of a lot at once. It’s like I’m here, but I’m not here.” — Kaliopeta Taufalele, Henry M. Gunn High senior

violate current rules guiding school reopenings. Schools that opt to make such programs need only abide by social distancing and other rules for extracurri­cular activities.

“The parents who have students who are struggling the most can start to expect to have some in-person help that has been void for a long time,’ Austin said. “Whether it’s students who have historical­ly struggled in our system or have special needs, we are going to start serving them differentl­y as we gear up for an eventual reopening.”

For Assistant Superinten­dent Yolanda Conaway, the aim of the new program is to get students into an environmen­t with reliable internet, space to do work and all the supplies they need. Since March, Conaway has seen how students struggle to adapt to online learning: distractio­ns are everywhere, and there’s almost no accountabi­lity. But the biggest issues are about equity and the socioecono­mic divide within the district, Conaway said.

“You’re seeing four to five kids working in one house all trying to use the internet and get work done,” Conaway said. “I don’t care whether you’re well-resourced or not. No one can support that many devices working at once on a home internet connection.”

The goal is to make school a hub for such students, Conaway said, and maybe catch some before they fall behind too much. Conaway said the district is relying on volunteers to supervise students, a job that Joey Ordoñez, who usually runs the high school testing center, took up without a sweat.

While teachers instruct through Zoom, volunteers like Ordoñez can be there to make sure students are paying attention.

Sitting at a desk about 10 feet from Taufalele, he said he volunteere­d because he wanted to go back to teaching fundamenta­ls.

To him, that means building relationsh­ips with students.

“Whether it’s students who have historical­ly struggled in our system or have special needs, we are going to start serving them differentl­y as we gear up for an eventual reopening.” — Palo Alto Unified School District Superinten­dent Don Austin

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 ?? PHOTOS BY DAI SUGANO – STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Henry M. Gunn High School tutoring supervisor Joey Ordoñez helps senior Kaliopeta Taufalele, 17, as she studies for an online class as part of a supervised, in-person support program Wednesday in Palo Alto.
PHOTOS BY DAI SUGANO – STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Henry M. Gunn High School tutoring supervisor Joey Ordoñez helps senior Kaliopeta Taufalele, 17, as she studies for an online class as part of a supervised, in-person support program Wednesday in Palo Alto.
 ??  ?? Junior Oswaldo Lucas Pinon studies for an online class as part of the in-person support program.
Junior Oswaldo Lucas Pinon studies for an online class as part of the in-person support program.

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