The Epitaph
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INDIGENOUS VOICES In-Depth, page 8-9
Homestead High School 21370 Homestead Rd, Cupertino, CA 95014
Vol. 59, Issue 1
Friday, October 1, 2021
New year, new bell schedule Switching skinny day prompts stress for staff, students By Madhavi Karthik, Erin Loh and Ritaja Subrahmanya with additional reporting by Seoyoung Hwang and Hope Saena Following the district’s initial implementation of the new bell schedule, which designates Wednesdays as the skinny day, featuring 45 minutes of all seven class periods, students and staff have complained that they have too little time to be productive and feel overwhelmed with workloads, according to a survey of 329 students conducted by The Epitaph. In previous years, Mondays were “skinny” with the rest of the school week having block periods. Principal Greg Giglio said the district moved the skinny day to Wednesday to ease a potential transition into remote learning, since Wednesdays could be made asynchronous without affecting the rest of the schedule. Additionally, Giglio said with all five schools following the same schedule this year, sites are more able to coordinate the sharing of staff members. Giglio said the district presented the schedule change to the Fremont Education Association, a union aimed at representing FUHSD certificated employees, for approval. History teacher Andrea Yee said the union voted to decide whether they would ap-
Photo by Madhavi Karthik
SKINNY SCHEDULE STRESS: More than half of the students report
preferring having block days on Mondays opposed to Wednesdays.
prove the switch. Yee said she was in the minority that voted against the Wednesday skinny schedule. Biology teacher Dara Alleyne-Levy said both she and her students have had difficulty adjusting to skinny Wednesdays. “Before, we had the energy from the weekend to push through Monday,” Levy said. “Now we have that craziness on Wednesday, but I’m already tired. By Friday, I’m just exhausted.” Coming out of remote learn-
ing, Giglio said the district was pressed for time when deciding on the schedule change. Normally, the district would allocate months to collect input from students and hold a staff vote before finalizing a change in schedule. But with the emergency pandemic circumstances, the district only had time to get FEA’s approval before moving forward with their decision. English teacher and FEA member James Ratti said he vot-
District implements COVID-19 procedures
Cases prompt contact tracing, isolation protocols
By Aiko Charon, Bobby Gorelick, Keshav Kumar and Jack Xu
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Math curriculum updated Department alters Algebra 1 By Olivia Shen
the school, according to COVID-19 casFUHSD. es at HHS have Once a student prompted the adis confirmed to have ministration to COVID-19, places they enact the county visited on campus will response protobe disinfected and adcol for positive ministration will notify cases, which inall close contacts of the volves isolating student. the case, tracing According to close contacts and FUHSD, a close contact disinfecting facilis any person who was ities. As of Sept. Photo by Bobby Gorelick within six feet of the 24, HHS reported RAPID ANTIGEN TESTING: Students can get a positive testing student having six stuquick COVID-19 test on Tuesdays. for at least 15 minutes at dents test positive determined on a case-by-case and no staff cases, principal basis and is discussed between any point in the 48 hours prior Greg Giglio said. the positive testing student to the confirmation of the case. Students who test positive and the HHS COVID-19 desig- For each positive case, there are must quarantine at home for a nee Brian Dong. Similarly, if a a total of 150-200 close contacts, minimum of 10 days and must go student feels unwell at school, Giglio said in the Sept. 3 Prin24 hours without experiencing they will be sent home and cipal’s Message video. a fever, according to FUHSD. recommended to take a free The exact length of isolation is rapid antigen test provided by See COVID PROCEDURES, Page 3
WHAT’S ONLINE?
ed for skinny Wednesdays since complaints since changing the he found them useful last year. schedule again would have neg“I did like space in the middle ative consequences on students of the week,” Ratti said. “I was and staff who have already made able to provide flexibility for stu- plans according to the time they dents to get caught up and talk have off of school. with me.” Yee said a four-day week Unlike Ratti, who said he uses would be ideal, with no school on the day to allow students to do in- either Friday or Wednesday. dependent work, the AP govern“I think it would help with evment and economics teachers use eryone’s mental health,” Yee said, the day to give quizzes. Having “students and staff alike.” all students take the quiz on the AP environmental science same day helps prevent cheating, teacher Jessica Wakefield said AP government and economics she voted for skinny Wednesdays teacher Christy Heaton said. because she expected them to act Junior Anya Agarwal said the similarly to last year’s asynchroinefficiency of the Wednesday nous Wednesdays. schedule has caused her to be “I regret my choice and I less productive. think I was an uninformed vot“I felt like [with the old sched- er,” Wakefield said in an email. “I ule] Mondays went by fast,” Agar- wish there was a way to go back wal said. “You get to familiarize to the asynchronous Wednesday yourself with all of your classes.” that we had last year.” Similarly, Levy said she is reluctant DO YOU PREFER HAVING THE NON-BLOCK DAY to schedule tests on ON MONDAY OR WEDNESDAY? M o n d a y - Tu e s d a y block days because she wants to give stuRemoving skinny dents a day to ask final Wednesday will benefit Monday Wednesday 55.5% 44.5% HHS community. questions. Giglio said the disRead on page 5 trict is not changing Based on a survey of 330 people the schedule, despite
In an effort to make learning more student friendly, Algebra 1 teacher Rohan Prakash started integrating a new form of instruction in the Algebra 1 curriculum this school year. In January of this year, a small group of FUHSD teachers began a discussion regarding altering the curriculum, FUHSD coordinator for academic interventions Josh Maisel said. Currently, the change will be in effect across HHS and FHS as six teachers implement the new form of instruction in classrooms. District math lead Jessica Uy said the new curriculum will provide students with a more meaningful and authentic learning experience. While the material itself has not changed, the way that the content is taught has been modified. “It’s a different approach
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where students are driving the investigations and their questions, observations and patterns are guiding the lesson,” Uy said in a phone interview. “Teachers use the evidence of what they see in their students’ learning to guide their next steps.” Maisel said this alteration will also help teachers gage a more comprehensive understanding of students’ proficiency in topics. “This form of culture responsive teaching is really about helping students who haven’t been successful in school to learn the skills that they need to be independent in their learning,” Maisel said. “This approach is designed for teachers to see that happening and to have strategies for intervening and supporting the students through their struggles.”
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