The Talon v. 14 issue 1 Nation Ford High

Page 1

Volume 14 Number 1

November 2020

The Talon Nation Ford High School

1400 A.O. Jones Blvd.

Fort Mill, SC 29715

Quarantined by Layla Haliq

Carrie Starcher (‘21) had shown symptoms for COVID- 19 and suddenly had to move her workload to online – which proved to be more difficult than she thought. Going to school during a global pandemic seems bad enough, but having to quarantine while school on Pageto 6 another level. is in session Continued takes the situation “The hardest thing about not being in school is not being able to speak and ask my teachers questions about assignments directly,” Starcher said. Currently, 87 students at Nation Ford are in quarcontinued below

Opinion:

District Should Not Hold 5-day Per Week Classes

Students Struggle With Stigma, Isolation - continued from above -

antine. While having to juggle the stress of possibly having COVID19 and the work of high school, miscommunication is bound to happen. Not only is an unexpected quarantine hard on the student but also on the teacher. Both parties struggling so that the student doesn’t fall behind can cause frustration. Luckily, with everything already online now, it’s easy to get to classes and assignments. The hard part is keeping work from every class in order. “When I’m in class I can hear the instructions for the assignment and ask questions if necessary, but most of the time I don’t have to because we cover everything in the lesson. Not being there leaves a lot of blanks,” Starcher said. One of Starcher’s classes needed software downloaded that was only accessible at school, which left her with more work when she got back on top of the other work assigned. In fact, Starcher’s grades went down after she went into quarantine, and she has been trying to

get them back up as best she can. While being at school most of the time it might seem logical that she contracted the virus at school, but surprisingly, Starcher said she got it working at Walmart. She was apprehensive about coming back to school due to the stigma. “I don’t want people to be scared to approach me because I had to isolate myself,” she admitted. With the way that the media portrays the virus it’s easy to become wary of someone who had COVID-19. Some students worry that others knowing when they were in quarantine due to being exposed to the virus makes them outcasts. Peers know why students are out for 14 days and may not want to get close in fear of spreading the virus even more. Whether test results came back negative or not doesn’t matter when a student or teacher has been exposed. Quarantine isn’t an easy feat to take on unexpectedly during school. Starcher would have much rather have been able to stay at school than missing 14 days of work.


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The Talon v. 14 issue 1 Nation Ford High by Beth Swann - Issuu