The Catalyst, Volume 7, Issue 6: March 2021

Page 1

OPINION | Page 9

the

ARTS & LIFE | Page 13

SPORTS | Page 14-15

CATALYST

FOMO: FEAR OF MISSING OUT ON-CAMPUS

SOMEPLACE TO GO: FILOLI HOUSE & GARDEN

GAMES ARE BACK IN PLAY

T H E S T U D E N T N E WS PA P E R O F N OT R E DA M E H I G H S C H O O L

Volume 7, Issue 6

www.TheNDBCatalyst.com

Campus finally reopens

March 2021

NDB gathers online in solidarity with AAPI community

SCREENSHOT FROM EVENT LIVESTREAM

Various administrators, teachers, staff members and students participate in the lunchtime discussion panel. by Paige Clarke News Editor

A masked-sophomore English class discuss William Shakespeare’s “Hamlet” from six feet apart. by Peyton Daley Managing Editor After nearly a full year of online distance learning, NDB students returned to campus for in-person classes with the hybrid model starting on March 1. Freshmen and seniors were on-campus for the week of March 1, and sophomores and juniors came back the following week. All students who chose to participate in the hybrid option returned to campus together during the week of March 15 in their respective cohorts. Getting back on campus has been a priority for NDB since the beginning of the school year as it has been proven important for students to have the experience of being in the classroom and among their peers and teachers for their academics and mental health. “While most older students can effectively learn online, being physically present in the classroom with teachers helps keep students engaged,” stated Chief Financial Officer Carolina Whitty, who worked with the school’s COVID-19 Operations team to create and implement the NDB’s reopening plan. “In addition, students get much more than academics at school; they learn and practice social and emotional skills, obtain mental health support and other services that cannot be as easily replicated online. I believe that distance learning is no match for the valuable experiences that students derive from an in-person education.” Before the start of winter break, students expected to return to campus in early January and start hybrid learning at the beginning of the spring semester. However, the return had to be pushed back, and it has taken until March due to county restrictions that stalled NDB from imple-

A COVID associate offers hand sanitizer to students as they re-enter the school building after lunch.

In response to heightened anti-Asian violence in the Bay Area and around the country, the NDB Administration released a letter on Friday, March 19 to the community, expressing their support for the Asian, Asian American, and Pacific Islander community, how these recent events do not align with NDB’s hallmarks, and opening communication and resources for AAP students and other community members experiencing racism. “Our Notre Dame Hallmarks call each of us to respond in both words and deeds,” states Interim Head of See AAPI | Page 3

Community celebrates Women’s History Month Month with activities

No longer allowed in the dining room for lunch, students gather outdoors to eat and socialize with their classmates. PHOTOS BY THE CATALYST EDITORIAL STAFF

menting the reopening plans. “The biggest challenge has been the constant changes to the school reopening guidelines by the State of California and the County of San Mateo. Just when you have set your plan in place to reopen, they sometimes move the goal post, and it has been frustrating and challenging,” Whitty added. Although students are now back at NDB, school is still far from normal. Students come to campus with staggered arrival times between 8:15 and 8:45 a.m., and then go outside between blocks while teachers sanitize the classrooms. Windows have to be left open and air purifiers are on in every classroom, leaving

students bundled up inside the cold classrooms. Regardless, students are embracing the opportunity to be back in the classroom and back interacting with their peers and teachers in-person. “My favorite part about being on-campus was probably being able to see people around and chat,” said freshman Niharika Nair. “I was able to meet more people than I had online.” In order to keep the community safe, students and faculty are tested for COVID-19 weekly. The typical Wednesday testing for

Women’s History Month was celebrated for the entire month of March on a national scale, but was also honored here within the NDB community. Every day of the month, the NDB administration sent school-wide emails featuring various women who have greatly impacted our world throughout history. Those featured included poet Maya Angelou, Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm and Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

See REOPENING | Page 5

See WHM | Page 10

SCREENSHOT FROM EVENT LIVESTREAM

Supervisor Rose Jacobs Gibson made a virtual visit as NDB’s WHM speaker. by Amelia Kyle Editor in Chief


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