On May 13, 2020

Reclaiming education through community partnerships

By Zayda Kellogg

I am a junior at Peoples Academy High School in Morrisville, Vermont.

Throughout the pandemic, and the consequential shutdowns, there is often talk of wanting to go “back to normal,” to fall back into the past, the thought of which provides us comfort and a sense of security, to forget Covid-19 ever happened. Though there is no doubt this pandemic must be fought, I beg that we do not return to “business as usual.” To go back to normal, to abandon what this virus has revealed, will be to fail. We must transform, coming back stronger than before in every possible way.

I personally have found the school shutdowns to be extremely enlightening. High school has not treated me kindly, and I believe I speak for many students in saying so. Despite having been labeled a “smart kid” from a young age, I feel no more compatible with the traditional high school path than those who learn at a slower pace. We are all frustrated. Many of us are left behind, or cast aside for wanting to move faster. Students often feel abandoned due to the limits set by the education system, limits which tell us how and what to learn. I by no means intend to speak against the notion of our standard subjects, or say that there is nothing worthwhile happening in our schools. However, I do wish to make the case that we can do much better because we all have different interests and different minds.

Quarantine and remote learning has taught me that I learn better with less guidance, that I thrive when given my own schedule and the ability to move at my pace. It has shown me a world which I do not want to leave, in which I have control. My own interests — architectural engineering, calligraphy, and economics — are niche and, thus, understandably I have less access to them. But high school has actively hindered my ability to explore anything about which I am passionate.

In my sophomore year, for a science project, I was asked to interview some professional architects and architecture students. Through this project I was told not how to access this subject and enrich myself, but instead that I “didn’t need to worry about it until college.” But I have lived my entire high school career aching for a subject which I have not yet touched, planning my college experiences around a major which I have never explored academically. I must go on the sole basis of this feeling in my bones that it is right for me, supplemented only by some books I have skimmed between classes. Our entire grade was asked to take career aptitude tests, only for the results to sit in a portfolio.

In a small school, only certain subjects can be accessed, and so students must carve their own path on the sidelines. All my interests, everything which sparks interest in my mind and my heart, are things which I must find on my own. Students are being asked to trust-fall into the world blindfolded.

That is why I joined the Peoples Academy Community Asset Mapping Team through the Vermont Community Learning Network. We were a small group of students taking the first steps toward a broader education system, one which will not be overwhelmed by the diverse interests of students. This, we believed, can be done if we only look beyond the walls of our school. When we reach out of our campus and into the community, not only can we accommodate students with unique career goals or different learning goals, but we can give students access to genuine experiences and connections which can be enhanced by a classroom. We need to connect young people with those who share common interests, and bring them to adults in their community who can guide them. The broader we allow students to reach, the easier it is to prepare them for the workforce, for their communities, and for the word. For the moment, these broader connections must be exclusively digital, but they may later lead to face-to-face relationships.

Remote learning presents us with a new opportunity to work with countless students like myself who feel out of place or forgotten in the public schooling system, and even for adults hoping for new experiences. Those like myself who are now facing more free time and fewer interactions than ever before, who find themselves bored and even lonely, are craving new experiences which a community-based digital learning project can provide during and beyond the Covid-19 pandemic. Not only will this impact young lives, but it will improve the emotional, mental, and intellectual health of all through friendship, connection, and meaningful learning.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

The dictates of conscience in Vermont

December 18, 2024
Dear Editor,                                                                                                      Does Vermont still believe in the separation of church and state? The newly elected legislature must address this question. In June 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court’s Carson v. Makin decision required that states providing tuition reimbursement to independent and charter schools must extend those same programs to religious schools as well as nonreligious…

Vermont Packinghouse animal cruelty investigation

December 18, 2024
Dear Editor, According to a Dec. 9 article in VTDigger, a local slaughterhouse, Vermont Packinghouse, is under investigation again for cruelty to animals. Allegedly, workers failed to intervene when a truck driver unloading pigs kicked animals in the head and neck and shoved them off the back of the trailer. The pigs suffered heat stroke…

Prioritizing the magic in education

December 18, 2024
By John Freitag Editor’s note: This commentary is by John Freitag. He was facilities manager for the Strafford School District for 34 years and in 1994 was named “outstanding support staff” in Vermont. He served three years as PTA president at the Newton School and has closely watched and covered school and school funding issues…

‘Tis the season…

December 18, 2024
Santa with his endless lists, and many others are busy this time of year getting ready for the upcoming holiday season. Likewise, Vermont legislators are also busy prepping for the new session, which begins Jan. 8. Newly elected representatives and senators attended a three-day orientation session last month at the State House and all new…