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Monday, April 19, 2021

For some middle and high school students, the first day back to in-person classes brings mixed emotions - KUOW News and Information

It was a big day today for thousands of middle and high school students in Seattle and around our region. They went back to in-person learning for the first time in more than a year.

KUOW’s education reporter Ann Dornfeld told Kim Malcolm what she's been seeing and hearing.

This interview has been edited for clarity.

Kim Malcolm: You were out there this morning watching this first day unfold. Where did you go, and what was the mood like?

Ann Dornfeld: I visited South Shore PK-8 School in Rainier Beach. It felt upbeat on the staff side, but much more tentative on the student side. There wasn't the typical jubilation, yelling, and laughing that you'd expect to see in a group of middle schoolers who are all being reunited for the first time in a while. It reminded me more of a bunch of kids who are all going to a brand new school for the first time, and they're really not sure what is ahead of them.

One of the kids I spoke to today was Norah Kim, a seventh-grader. She was chatting with some friends outside. They were talking really quietly, and they all looked a little bit tense. I asked Norah if she'd been seeing her friends socially this past year when school has been closed. She said no, this is the first time in more than a year.

You can imagine that it's really overwhelming for kids to be living such sheltered existences, so many of them, and then all of a sudden to be around a bunch of other humans:

“I’m excited, but it's so nervous. The whole pandemic, and just being with people. But, I'm excited to see them.”

So many emotions there, and feelings. You say the staff was doing their best to put on a brave face for the kids, though.

Yes. They were going around introducing themselves to students, even though they've been working with these same kids all year online. Now, they were all masked up for the first time. The staff were trying to recognize the students just by their hair and eyeballs.

Tia Yarborough is an assistant principal at South Shore. She oversees the middle school. She was welcoming students back outside the building today. She said they wanted it to feel kind of cheerful because there are mixed feelings. They've had balloons and music. She told me the staff is placing an emphasis on tuning into kids social and emotional needs, in these first days back particularly:

“We're just letting them know that there's a lot of emotions, and it's okay to hold both. A lot of students are excited, some are a bit anxious. Some wanted to return, some didn't. We want to encourage staff to be present with their emotions, to hold community circles, to talk with students, and create that space. We've got lessons planned that help with supporting that effort, too. The opportunity is to create that space for students to emote and to be transparent, and to be really honest about where they are on that spectrum. Sometimes that changes from day to day.”

In Seattle, this in-person learning experience is pretty far from a typical school day, yes?

Absolutely. For middle and high school students it’s four hours a day or so, two days a week, with kids learning in A-B groups. They do in-person versions of their morning classes, three subjects each day, then switch the following day to the other three subjects. Morning is remote. Afternoons are in-person two days a week.

The in-person classes aren't really what you’d think of normally. It's not a teacher lecturing the class and introducing new material and concepts. That's all supposed to take place in the morning remotely so that it includes all the students who are 100% remote still. That is a lot of students.

Afternoon in-person work is supposed to just help students with the morning material. Some parents and staff I've spoken to have said this is basically just a study hall. It's a waste of time. The district says that's not true, that it's an opportunity to do more individualized work, for kids to get one-on-one attention and to work together in-person in groups.

Some students want to be in school in Seattle attending in-person, but they're having trouble getting there. What's going on with the transportation?

The district still does not have transportation, even for all the students it's legally required by federal law to transport. That includes students facing homelessness, and students in special education services. They also don't have the transportation to get all the other kids to school. That's because their transportation contractor, First Student, laid-off drivers last fall, and has not been able to hire enough back. There's also a bus shortage I understand.

So, there are kids who are stuck at home who are dying to be at school. I just read a text yesterday a teacher sent me from one of her students. The student was talking about how she was going to cry her eyes out if she couldn't get a bus to school. It's heartbreaking to think of all those kids who want to be at school and cannot be.

Of course, many are quite happy at home, but for the many who feel like they're just missing out and are dying for that in-person experience, it's really, really hard.

Listen to the interview by clicking the play button above.

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For some middle and high school students, the first day back to in-person classes brings mixed emotions - KUOW News and Information
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