The Reporter (Vacaville)

Navajo school, students fight to overcome amid COVID-19

- By Anthony J. Wallace

PINON, ARIZONA >> One student runs 85 feet up a hill every morning, just to get a cellphone signal so he can call in his attendance. Another moved to Phoenix by himself, after his only parent died of COVID-19, to work constructi­on while going to school online.

Then there’s the high school senior who spends six hours most days doing homework in a car next to a school bus turned Wi-Fi hot spot — the only way some kids on the Navajo Nation can get assignment­s to their teachers.

T hese k ids sha re a dream: to graduate high school, find a way to go to college, get a degree, land a dream job — get out of their small town, succeed and soar.

Even in the best of times, that dream is harder for Native American students to attain. And now COVID-19 has brought one of the greatest challenges yet to these young people.

For them, it’s about so much more than being separated from friends or having to figure out how to use Zoom. All that isolation and upheaval has been accompanie­d by death and great loss.

Across the Navajo reservatio­n, victims of COVD19 include parents and grandparen­ts, sole guardians and providers, mentors and teachers. Without them, some students have lost their way or, quite literally, fallen off the map.

Said one district superinten­dent: “We have some kids that we just don’t know where they are.”

The drive from Flagstaff northeast to Piñon takes more than two hours over a two-lane highway and dirt road. Just a few hundred families live in this community, in modest houses sc at t ered a cross hills roamed by horses and dotted with brush.

A single campus accommodat­es the elementary, middle and high schools.

Here, on a reservatio­n the size of West Virginia, the COVID-19 death rate has been higher than that of any U.S. state. So even as some schools reopened for in-person learning this fall, those on the Navajo reservatio­n did not.

Without the 300 students who normally fill its cafeteria, crowd its lockers and seek help in its counseling offices, Piñon High’s cavernous hallways are unnaturall­y quiet. Donot- disturb signs hang on classroom doors, indicating Zoom sessions in progress.

Inside one empty room, a carpentry teacher plays heav y metal music and bobs his head at his desk. In another, science teacher James Gustafson’s lab tables are covered with surplus VHS videos that he’s sorting through for hidden gems.

“‘Citizen Kane!’” he says. “That makes it all worth it.”

On Gustafson’s desk are printed progress reports adhered to colorful constructi­on paper. They identify students anonymousl­y by a number, tracking their scores on weekly quizzes. He’s preparing to hang them in the halls for other teachers to see.

The grades are far worse than what he saw last year.

“These are ungodly low compared to how they should be,” he said, “because I’ve given the students who’ve turned nothing in — and there’s a lot of them — I’ve given the students who’ve turned nothing in a zero.”

Even before the pandemic, Native youth had the highest dropout rates in the U. S., leaving school at more than twice the rate of white children, according to federal statistics.

Likewise, the graduation rate for American Indian and Alaska Native children is the lowest in the country — 72%, compared with a national average of 85%.

“Distressin­g” is how a report from the National Caucus of Native American State Legislator­s described the state of education for K-12 schools for Native students. And the pandemic has only served to further spotlight disparitie­s.

More than 600 of the Navajo reservatio­n’s 173,000 residents have died from C OV I D -1 9. C ompa re that rate of 347 for every 100,000 people to Maricopa County — Arizona’s largest — where the death rate is 86 per 100,000 people. The risk of returning to class is greater on the reservatio­n, and the price of keeping schools closed is steeper.

Piñon High School Principal Timothy Nelson said COVID-19 has claimed at least six parents and two district staff members — a front office worker and a teaching assistant.

“Some people may think it’s a joke and it’s not a big deal,” Nelson said of the disease. “But when you’re living with it and you see it, it’s not so much a joke anymore.”

Even before the pandemic, Native youth had the highest dropout rates in the U.S., leaving school at more than twice the rate of white children, according to federal statistics.

 ?? PHOTOS BY MEGAN MARPLES — CRONKITE NEWS ?? Second-grader Winona Begaye uploads homework in her family’s vehicle in a dirt lot near Blue Gap, Ariz., on Sept. 25. Navajo Nation schools have remained virtual this fall. To help families with no internet or poor access get online, the Piñon Unified School District outfitted school buses with Wi-Fi.
PHOTOS BY MEGAN MARPLES — CRONKITE NEWS Second-grader Winona Begaye uploads homework in her family’s vehicle in a dirt lot near Blue Gap, Ariz., on Sept. 25. Navajo Nation schools have remained virtual this fall. To help families with no internet or poor access get online, the Piñon Unified School District outfitted school buses with Wi-Fi.
 ??  ?? The Begaye sisters do their schoolwork at their home in Blue Gap, Ariz., on Sept. 24. Shown from left are high school senior Chenoa, fourth-grader Sonora, first-grader Annabah and second-grader Winona. On the Navajo Nation, a high school senior spends six hours most days doing homework in a car next to a school bus turned Wi-Fi hot spot.
The Begaye sisters do their schoolwork at their home in Blue Gap, Ariz., on Sept. 24. Shown from left are high school senior Chenoa, fourth-grader Sonora, first-grader Annabah and second-grader Winona. On the Navajo Nation, a high school senior spends six hours most days doing homework in a car next to a school bus turned Wi-Fi hot spot.

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