School Year 2020-21

School starts next week. We’ll be starting with “online” school which is planned to last about 6 weeks.  Then some kids apparently will be invited to attend in a physical school at least part of the time.

The role of the parents in these difficult times is to support kids and teachers in whatever way they can.  Last year the whole experience was difficult, and exasperating. But Robert thinks he did a good job at not going ballistic after it was clear that Rory was not able to keep up with the workload or even manage the expectations of the many many disparate and complex (and, he would say underbaked free) online learning platforms that were thrown into use.

Robert does  get frustrated. One major problem is that in the case of middle school, each child has 7 teachers.  Each of those teachers is asked to use an online learning platform to push out lesson content.  There is, of course, because of the way we are all (including the teachers most of all) trying our best to deal with all of this in a sane manner lots of confusion.  And learning how to do this stuff is like drinking from a firehose.

What is the problem, you ask?

Here’s one way Robert can start to explain it.

See the below screen, which is from the Google Classroom platform.  It is, of course, a page where the student can have a portal into each of his classes.  Each teacher creates “button” which the student can click to go further into that teacher’s materials, assignments, expectations, links to other platforms, chats, and other communications.

The image below shows three teachers, in the next couple days the other four teachers will add their “buttons.”

Screenshot_2020-08-21 ClassesThis portal page shows, in a very very small very tippy tippy top of the iceberg kind of way, how things devolve into confusion very quickly. You see, each teacher use his or her own different format to for his/her button.  One says “7 Science P2 DeMont”  the other says “Arroyo Per 3”  the last says “Per 4 Tervet Math 7”. Each one different and requiring time to figure out what each button is telling the user.  “7”.  What does that mean?  Oh, I guess it means 7th period.  Oh, no, it means grade 7 in this case.  It also says P2, which we guess means second period.  And DeMont, which we would guess is the teacher’s name.  Moving on, we see “Arroyo Per 3”.  Is there a class named “Arroyo?  There is no reference to grade level. Or the class subject.  The final one lists the period first, then the teacher’s name.  Then the subject and the grade level.  One supposes.

Now, of course, after looking at this portal page for about a minute, one can figure it out.  It is a trivial example, standing alone. But one must remember that this is the very very very top of the iceberg.  After entering into each teacher’s online “class” there are hundreds and hundreds of presentational and organizational choices each teacher needs to make in a huge multi-faceted decision tree.  And each one of them does everything a different way.  So, it is hundreds of decisions multiplied by 7, the number of teachers that each student has.  It takes hours and hours to work through the pages, locations of information, expectations, assignments, deadlines, etc. And it all changes week to week. And try to remember how each teacher does it his/her particular way.

Robert would say that this is the biggest difficulty.  The schools and teachers, totally understandably, have a very hard time grasping that, in the parlance of software platforms, this is a “few-to-many” environment.  Not “one-to-many” (as is elementary school) and not “many to many.”  The teachers and school need to pay way more attention to uniformity, standardization, continuity, and the fact that each kid is navigating a huge set of information.  Every time a child is asked to reference a separate document, or even make a click, uses up his or her energy and tolerance. Problems with presentation and volume multiply exponentially.

Last Days of Summer

Surfing safari to Laguna/Dana Point.

Sorry no vids of Rory.  He’s too pro to be nearshore.

Thanks Phillips!

 

NEJM: Covid Reading

  1. Reopening Primary Schools during the Pandemic  Muge Cevik, M.D., Marc Lipsitch, D.Phil, Meira Levinson, D.Phil.

    Paragraphs of note.

    For the past 6 months, policymakers and the U.S. public have weighed economic against public health considerations in debating what limits to set on individual and collective behaviors in attempting to control the Covid-19 pandemic. As fall approaches, attention has turned to a third pillar of a pandemic-resilient society: schools.1 Under ordinary circumstances, about 40 million children would be entering prekindergarten through 8th-grade classrooms this year, including nearly 27 million students in grades pre-K through 5.2,3 Until these children physically return to school full time, many will lose out on essential educational, social, and developmental benefits; neither the economy nor the health care system will be able to return to full strength given parents’ caretaking responsibilities4; and profound racial and socioeconomic injustices will be further exacerbated.5 We believe that safely reopening schools full-time for all elementary school children should therefore be a top national priority.

    . . . .

    Children miss out on essential academic and social–emotional learning, formative relationships with peers and adults, opportunities for play, and other developmental necessities when they are kept at home. Children living in poverty, children of color, English language learners, children with diagnosed disabilities, and young children face especially severe losses.

    . . .

    From a clinical standpoint, most children 1 to 18 years old experience mild or no illness from Covid-19 and are much less likely than adults to face severe consequences from the infection.18 Although a small number of children worldwide have been hospitalized with multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) after SARS-CoV-2 infection, so far this appears to be a rare syndrome (affecting a reported 2 per 100,000 people under 21 years of age between March 1 and May 10, 202019), and with early recognition and treatment, clinical outcomes in the short term have been good.19-21 In contrast, adults, especially those who are over 60 or have underlying health conditions, are at higher risk for severe illness, hospitalization, and poor outcomes.18

    . . .

    But educators and other school personnel cannot necessarily dictate the place or terms of their employment, even (perhaps especially) when the social compact has broken down. It is tragic that the United States has chosen a path necessitating a trade-off between risks to educators and harms to students, given other countries’ success in reducing transmission and opening schools with routine control measures in place. This dilemma represents a social and policy failure, not a medical or scientific necessity.

    Nonetheless, we would argue that primary schools are essential — more like grocery stores, doctors’ offices, and food manufacturers than like retail establishments, movie theaters, and bars. Like all essential workers, teachers and other school personnel deserve substantial protections, as well as hazard pay. Remote working accommodations should be made if possible for staff members who are over 60 or have underlying health conditions.5,18 Adults who work in school buildings (or drive school buses) should be provided with PPE, and both students and staff should participate in routine pooled testing.30

 

 

Oregon 2020

The Pierces went to Oregon!

Klamath Falls – Bend/Sisters – Maupin – Hood River – Sweet Home – Medford

Rock Climbing – River Rafting – Five Minutes of Fishing – Twenty Hours of Spongebob

Huntington Lake

The Pierces camped at Huntington Lake last week.  Huntington Lake is in the Sierra Nevada mountains east of Fresno.  It is quite a drive from Marin.  It took us about 7.5 hours with the kids and stops.

Huntington Lake is one of only a few well-known lakes for sailing in California.  It is well known for its very consistent wind.  There were plenty of sailboats on the lake when we visited.  Lots of Lidos, which seems to be the primary fleet.  As well as lasers, and some moths. We took the El Toro, and daddy and Rory sailed some.

And VERY FEW POWER BOATS!  And no ski boats. Just a few pontoons and little fishing skiffs. The powerboat crowd goes to lower, warmer, and bigger Shaver Lake nearby. Great!

We camped at a state campground. There are a few on the side of the lake.  But  we are getting pretty tired of car camping and its accompanying noise and inconvenience. We would like to visit the lake again, perhaps for a weeklong visit during which we rent a cabin. It feels like a good place to be with a group of sailors/kids for an extended stay. The fishing looks great, and there are tiny fishing boat rentals.  Kids can sail there on their own, it seems.  Some of the coves are protected from the wind.

When we visited, we were told that a group from the Richmond Yacht Club had come through the previous week for sailing. The Fresno Yacht Club hosts the High Sierra Regatta there.

 

 

Screenshot_2020-07-15 Google Maps