Story
The Social Symptom
Gil Speer has taught business at Zionsville Community High School for over 17 years. Every semester, he has his students give presentations to teach their peers about things like personal finance, accounting and business management.
Before COVID-19, this was not a problem. Now, however, he has had multiple students ask if they can present to him one-on-one or who refuse to do the assignment completely. Some students would rather take a zero, or a lesser grade on the assignment, than speak in front of their peers.
“Students are a lot less outgoing,” said Speer. “Since COVID, they're more timid, they're more reclusive.”
Against his wishes, Speer has accommodated these new students’ requests.
“They did a fantastic job one-on-one,” he said, “but they didn’t have the courage to present in front of others.”
Across Indiana, learning loss has impacted education at every level, but even with things back to “normal,” teachers, students, parents and administrators say social deficiencies caused by COVID-19 are just as damaging and are not going away any time soon.
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Although immeasurable, COVID-19 has caused a noticeable loss of social skills, especially amongst children. The United Nation's Children's Fund (UNICEF) has even created a resource to help parents aid their children who have suffered developmentally.
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The World Health Organization (WHO) also found the lockdown has caused a lack of socialization and social participation amongst the youth.
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From at least March until August 2020, students from all school districts in the state stayed home and attended classes online.
“Without direct instruction and regular face-to-face contact with students, the final few months of the 2019-2020 school year was almost a complete loss,” said Christina Faulkner, a high school teacher and publications advisor at New Albany High School.
Faulkner’s school, like many others, held classes over Zoom. Faulkner said that engaging students during these times was “nearly impossible. Even ‘good’ kids or ‘polite’ kids were hard to engage”.
Faulkner’s school district did not require students to have their cameras on during these Zoom classes. She said this made it even harder to see if students were engaged. Along with this, Faulkner missed seeing her students and interacting with them. She said she was lucky however, because she had one class who enjoyed interacting with their peers and teachers.
“I remember one time I logged on and all of my newspaper kids had their cameras on --they had gotten together and convinced each other to do it because they knew I was missing seeing kids. It was truly a bright moment during a pretty sad time in my teaching career,” said Faulkner.
Faulkner said that the students' extended time on social media during the pandemic has shortened their attention spans and makes it harder for teachers to entertain students with activities that were once seen as “engaging”.
“So many of them were unsupervised during COVID and basically got to do what they wanted whenever they wanted so structure and a traditional school day is difficult for them to endure,” said Faulkner. “Additionally, many of us (teachers) lowered our standards and expectations for the quality of student work these last few years so asking them to turn in quality work and adhere to stricter due dates has proven to be a challenge.”
Speer has had similar issues with getting his students to adhere to deadlines.
"I'm kind of concerned about this generation, or that this group of students and what they experienced and being afraid to fail in meeting deadlines," said Speer.
Not all skills can be measured with a standardized test. One of the skills student’s need that has been weakened is communication.
“Since I teach classes where students are expected to work together and communicate effectively, I see students struggle with talking to their peers face-to-face,” said Faulkner—similar to Speer who found his students struggling to socialize and speak to one another.
“Because of that lack of social skills and abilities, how to treat others with respect and kindness and things that we preach all the time, you almost have to teach it over again,” said Speer. “And you have to say, ‘this is an expectation in our classroom’, you know? And sometimes it gets across to them and sometimes they learn it the hard way.”
Speer added that this lack of maturity is especially difficult for students taking AP classes, because they are academically intelligent enough to succeed in the classes, but are not responsible enough to handle the social aspects of being in those types of classes.
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Dominic Marchese, a senior at ZCHS, and a student of Speer’s, was only a second-semester freshman when COVID-19 hit. He shared that he felt he’d missed many of the typical high school experiences a kid, and that everyone’s social life has been impacted.
“I've seen a lot with the underclassmen this year. Like, they really don't have the socializing skills that a lot of us had coming in freshman year,” said Marchese. “I feel really grateful for at least having that semester of freshman year, because a lot of these freshmen and sophomores, you know, they're just very socially awkward and don't really communicate well.”
Marchese said he admits his social skills were affected.
“Not to call me and my friend out. But like, neither of us are too good with talking to girls and stuff,” said Marchese. “And I'd say that has that missing social aspect. It definitely had a big impact on like, you know, guys and girls talking and stuff. And like, I'd say, all of us never really got that.”
Missing out on typical high school milestones and memories have led to students trying to make up for lost time.
“I feel like this year, I've heard a lot of people and even myself say that, like, you know, I'll make it my mission to go to all these football games, all these basketball games,” said Marchese, “because, you know, we weren't really able to go to that kind of stuff.”
Marchese’s mother, Renee Marchese agreed.
“He didn't have interaction with girls for like, two years during that, you know, from freshman through sophomore, where you learn cues, you know, like emotional cues or, like, are you flirting with me?”
She shared that although her children were able to maintain and develop or catch up on their social skills, not all their peers were so lucky.
“I think that I have seen a lot of regression in many kids in that. They're real quick to argue. They don't understand how to communicate with each other.”
These effects are trickling their way into the higher education systems as well.
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Dr. Jeffrey J. Malanson is Special Assistant to the Chancellor for Strategic Initiatives and Associate Professor of History at Purdue University Fort Wayne. He has been developing COVID protocols since the beginning of the pandemic for the university. Currently, the university only asks students to self-report symptoms if they are sick.
“My sense is that even that will probably go away at the end of this semester, because it's, you know, at a certain level, we just kind of need to treat this and integrate this as a normal part of life,” said Molanson. “COVID isn't going away anymore, you know, at this point, and so, we probably need to get past treating it as a separate thing.”
Molanson has also noticed that students have been more involved as a result of things going “back to normal”.
“But we've certainly experienced that life on campus has been much more vibrant than it was even the in some of the years before COVID,” said Molanson. “I think because people are excited to be kind of back to normal.”
Molanson said they have surveyed students who have returned to campus, and a majority have reported their favorite thing is being back with other students. This joy for social interaction doesn’t seem to be translating into the classroom, however.
“But it is really interesting that students seem in a lot of classes, students seem much less willing or eager to like participate in class discussions, they seem when we actually are trying to do academic work in classes, they seem a bit more closed off,” said Molanson.
Molanson sees this as a lasting issue.
“I do think actually, it's, we're permanently changed,” said Molanson. “And I think the big change is going to be that even kids as young as two and three years old, were impacted, oftentimes, in negative ways by losing out on even just being at daycare and interacting with other kids in that space.”
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Only 10% of parents with children six years or younger used daycares in the spring of 2020.
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Dr. Isabel Nuñez is the Dean of the School of Education and a professor of educational studies at Purdue University Fort Wayne said that student teachers were forced to teach students online, and although they better learned how to use technology, they missed out on the typical classroom experience.
Nuñez doesn’t think missed content will be the biggest issue going forward.
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“I don't think it's the content, right? I don't think it's that they're not going to know this or that fact about, you know, American history or world history, or they're not going to have this, you know, formula in math, you know, memorize that. Like, I think all of that will be fine,” said Nuñez. “I think the harder thing is those, those interpersonal skills and those relationships, right?"
Hailey Pardue, a senior at Purdue University with plans to become a K-12 teacher next year, shared how hard it has been trying to learn how to teach in the COVID years.
“I think that the pandemic has made it harder for future teachers because we were not able to have as much experience in the classroom as other teachers have had,” said Pardue.
The few chances Pardue has had at working with children has confirmed these social issues.
“I think the biggest impact that covid had on schools was the social-emotional aspect. In the school I volunteer at now we call the second and third graders the ‘COVID kids’ because they act very differently," said Pardue. “Many of these kids lack many social and emotional regulation that a typical eight year old should have.”
While teachers and administrators work to get students caught up from their learning loss, re-teaching these social skills to the “COVID kids” will be just as important.
“It’s our job to get things ramped back up again,” said Speer.
Although classes are back in person, this lack of engagement and human connection has created effects that go beyond the Zoom room.
“As for long term, I would say COVID stunted students' growth - emotionally, socially and academically. Each grade level of students missed certain milestones in school, and we are seeing those effects now and will see them for the next 10 years,” said Faulkner.