Editor鈥檚 note:聽This is part of an occasional Civil Beat series about what distance learning is like for Hawaii families during the pandemic. Want to share your story? Email slee@civilbeat.org.
Seven-year-old Xavier Malji scrunches up his face as if lost deep in thought. After a few seconds, he turns to the laptop camera and triumphantly says, 鈥淣amaste,鈥 the traditional Sanskrit greeting he鈥檚 learned through Hindi lessons at home.
For this second grader, learning his father鈥檚 native language is a new pursuit during the pandemic. He proudly shares the word during a recent Zoom chat, his mother seated beside him.
鈥淲e always wanted him to learn the language but never had the opportunity to do it, so we are taking this time as an opportunity,鈥 said Andrea Malji.
Xavier鈥檚 home school is , but his parents opted to do all-distance learning this semester out of safety precautions.
Manoa was that planned to bring all students back for in-person learning, before the spike in coronavirus cases caused all Hawaii Department of Education schools to start the first quarter beginning Aug. 17 in full distance mode. The latest plan as of Sept. 17 allows school complex areas to choose whether or not to switch to a hybrid learning schedule starting in mid-October.
The Maljis signed a contract to use Acellus Learning Accelerator, the school鈥檚 chosen distance learning platform, for the entire first semester ending in December. But Andrea quickly found the program was insufficient.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not enough for him to fill the days, and it鈥檚 not really that challenging,鈥 she said.
So the Hawaii Pacific University international relations professor designed her own curriculum for her son, one that incorporates Hindi and Gujarati lessons, art projects and geography.
For one social studies unit, she unfurled a large colorful map in the living room to point out parts of the world that once had been colonized, using different colors for certain places based on which country was the colonizer.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 have any background in childhood education, but for his age, I know the basics of what he needs,鈥 Andrea explained. 鈥淚 looked at the expectations of what they should know at that age.鈥
Both Andrea and her husband work full time but have the added flexibility to work from home. They also have the help of a babysitter.
Because Malji doesn鈥檛 have to teach Thursdays and Fridays, she鈥檚 able to spend more time helping her son on those days.
When it comes to learning Hindi, this is the first time Xavier has gotten formal instruction through workbooks and careful study of the alphabet, even though his father casually speaks it with him at home and the family watches the occasional Hindi movie together.
鈥淗e鈥檚 doing a good job,鈥 Andrea said. 鈥淚鈥檓 learning with him.鈥
Xavier also recently began participating in a weekly online hip-hop class offered through Manoa Elementary, one way he can stay connected to his school.
Although he technically is assigned to a classroom, he鈥檚 largely separated from the rest of his peers because he鈥檚 in the full-distance group. While the teacher checks in on him, his interaction with other students is so limited he doesn鈥檛 know who actually is in his class.
The lack of socialization has been hard on her son, Andrea acknowledges. She said she notices an increased anxiety in Xavier and a 鈥渃linginess鈥 that had not been there before the pandemic.
鈥淲hen he hears the wind, he gets really nervous,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 definitely that isolation component. He hasn鈥檛 been with friends.
鈥淚t鈥檚 challenging,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 still think we can鈥檛 forget the reason we鈥檙e doing this 鈥 to hopefully keep kids safe. Sometimes you have to make those sacrifices and hope kids adjust back quickly. There鈥檚 no easy, clear answer for what the right thing to do is.鈥
Read other stories in this series:
鈥 “Distance Learning Means Musical Chairs For Windward Oahu Family“
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