The coronavirus pandemic has reshaped the lives of school-aged children across the country. Some are keeping a record of what it was like to live through it.
In the early days of school shutdowns, a number of teachers asked their students to start daily journals鈥攚riting down the specifics of their days at home and their feelings about this new reality.
澳门跑狗论坛 Video asked two groups of students who had been given this assignment鈥攁 5th grade class in Springboro, Ohio, and a 7th grade class in Summerville, S.C.鈥攖o record themselves reading some of their entries.
The journals highlight the strangeness of the past few months.
Life in quarantine isn鈥檛 all bad: Students write about getting to sleep in, or rollerblading around the neighborhood on beautiful sunny days. But there are also missed milestones and celebrations, and extra precautions taken as family members have to continue working.
鈥淚 really miss being in school. Which is weird to hear a kid say, who鈥檚 in school,鈥 Kaylie Tonzola, a 7th grader in Summerville, S.C., wrote in one entry.
Emily Richley, the 5th grade teacher in Ohio, started the project in her class as a way to document a historic moment. But it鈥檚 turned into a way for students to process their emotions, too.
鈥淚 think that keeping this community and family feeling of a classroom is important, because they are scared,鈥 Richley told 澳门跑狗论坛 last month.
The journals are also a way to stay connected to students, and make sure they鈥檙e safe and healthy, said Pren Woods, the 7th grade teacher in South Carolina.
鈥淲hen a kid says, 鈥楳y mom doesn鈥檛 have a job and there are four of us, and she鈥檚 alone and I鈥檓 worried.鈥 That鈥檚 somebody I want to pick up the phone and call, and somebody鈥檚 mom I want to email,鈥 he said.