Site icon Jyl Barlow

Q1, Virtually (in)Complete

I’d like to announce the nearly successful completion of our first virtual learning marking period. Nearly? Yes. Starting with the first fairly critical piece of missed information – in that the end of the first five-ish weeks did NOT, in fact, mark the release of Interim grades. For those of you who haven’t had kids in school in some time – Interims are the mid-quarter-check-in grades. These allow parents the chance to start riding their children earlier than in previous lifetimes when parents did not see grades until the actual marking period ended. Interims, I thought, are just dumb. With the unlimited ways for parents to connect to their kids’ grades and teachers – if you don’t know what’s going on at every second of the day you, well, you probably have a better life with more things to fulfill yourself it than I do. I do start every school year repeating to myself This year, I won’t stalk Powerschool but that typically goes out the window six minutes into the first day.

Except this is the year. This year, I have mostly kept that promise. Sort of. I actually forgot to make it to myself ~ along with forgetting that school started, though my child is sitting in his faux classroom a room away three days each week. It’s a combination of my quarantine-obtained attitude of not sweating the small stuff and being mentally overwhelmed with all the Mom stuff (oh, and job stuff and the other kid went to college in a pandemic stuff and my MIL is a whack-a-doodle stuff and Rich is turning fifty stuff and, and, and…). It’s fine that my kid’s education has dropped a bit of the radar, right? Awkwardly, it did not register to any member of the McGillicutty household that what is typical an Interim Report Cards reporting day, would actually be a real report card reporting day. I mean, I’m not taking high school math or anything (also, I’m not 100% sure if my child is or not), but it does make sense that if we are doing two semesters this year rather than four quarters – yeah, 1/4 of a semester would theoretically be a report card. Maybe that’s common core. I don’t know.

Zack, who has never gotten a grade lower than an A on any of his report cards, also missed that memo. He rounded the turn with a couple low B’s at the same time we all realized – oh, nelly, this actually counts. Whoops. Zack loved his streak of A’s. LOVED IT. We loved that he loved it and that it was important to him and that he took pride in it. Did I mentioned the failure of any of us to take that first six weeks as anything more than a settling in period may have helped him tank it (in his eyes)? Double Whoops. I suppose any other year we would have been laying down a plethora of gauntlets and consequences following hours of discussion. This year? Shrug. It sucks. But it’s also a whonky way to start your high school life – stuck at home, staring at teachers you’ve never heard of on perhaps the smallest laptop monitor that public school money could buy. Add to that parents who forget you are trying to listen to lectures while they yell messages of love across the house in addition dogs yelling messages of love to the incoming Amazon trucks.

Yeah. Well, we’re still working out the kinks.

But I’ve started with the end. Let’s go back to the beginning.

Or at least a quick summary for all of you wondering if anybody out there is handling virtual school worse than you are.

I suppose by the mid-point we’ll have this all figured out. Right? Please? Of course, as I’m writing this I’m realizing that I already have lost track of how many weeks have passed since those Fake Interims/Real Report Cards came out. Which means I have no idea how deep into the next quarter we are or when, for that matter, the halfway point of the semester is. I do know that we are up to daily conversations about grades – trying not to show any panic while trying to get the kids to maybe get it in gear before that next round comes. It is tricky – balancing the wow, this is just a really weird way to be in school sympathy with the wow, this actually still counts and you’ve got to get invested speeches. Just today, after stripping Zack of all distractions (second laptop, phone), suggesting to him that perhaps only having his school laptop in front of him would help him stay focused, I walked by to see him playing his Nintendo under his desk. GAH!!! We were on a break! he said, circa Ross & Rachel, season three.

Yeah, seen that episode, buddy.

It doesn’t end well for you.

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