Tuesday, January 5, 2021

Opportunity to Change Learning Model for Elementary School Students Closes January 8, 2021


Saint Paul Public Schools recently announced that elementary school students will be returning to full-time, in-person learning in February.

 

As we transition to in-person learning, families have an opportunity to choose their preferred learning model -- to continue with distance learning through the Virtual Learning School or move to full-time, in-person learning.

 

Pre-K through 5th grade students, including students who receive special education services in those grades, who wish to stay in distance learning for the remainder of the school year are asked to enroll in the Virtual Learning School by Friday, January 8, if they haven’t done so already. More information, including Frequently Asked Questions, is available on the Virtual Learning School website.

 

All students not enrolled in the Virtual Learning School will be scheduled for full-time, in-person instruction.

 

If your preferred learning model has changed due to last week’s announcement, please contact the Student Placement Center at 651-632-3760.

Monday, January 4, 2021

How COVID-19 has affected my Family and Broken my Education


 "I want to go to college; I've asked some of my teachers for letters of recommendation, but COVID-19 has limited my participation and my duties fall to my family first, I don't know when I'll be able to focus back on school." 

 (Photo: Paw's Grandfather and Grandmother posted with permission.)

by Paw W. (Grade 12) Editorial Opinion 

Coronavirus (COVID-19), is an illness caused by a virus that can spread from person to person. The virus that causes COVID-19 is a new coronavirus that spread throughout the world. Too many in my culture are getting COVID-19 and the schools and state are not doing enough to give us the information we need about Coronavirus; it is a worldwide disease so everyone is having a little hard time. 

Photo: Paw's Grandfather and Grandmother posted with permission.


Everything changes and it changes every bit of someone’s life. As for me my life changed a lot, not just the ways things change around me, it's my whole life that's changing right now. For example my sleeping schedule because usually I go to bed around 9 or 10,  but nowadays it’s not unusual for me to go to bed in the early morning hours of 1 or 2AM. COVID-19 stops me from playing soccer and having games, and playing futsal in the winter. I was supposed to have a game but with the death rate increased they stopped our first game of the winter season. With everything close it's hard to hang out with friends and family, it’s hard to go to other places. I also lost concentration in everything. The pandemic affects me from doing a good job in school and focusing in school because I used to do my work but now I just look at my work, wondering if I will ever have time to look at it. I missed the opportunity to learn in person, which I like better and I know for fact that it benefits me more than the silly schedule at my school and all of the different online classes.


The Reality of COVID-19 in my Home

 It affects my family and me because everyone in my family has COVID-19 or the symptoms. 


Because my grandparents got COVID-19, our other relatives don’t come visit us because they are scared they will catch the virus. Early this year we found out that my grandpa had cancer and it was mouth cancer, the doctors asked him if he wanted to stay in the hospital but he didn't want to stay in the hospital so he stayed home. That wasn’t very easy though, he can't sleep at night. I have to take him to the hospital every week. I have to stay up with him till 3 or 4 and sometimes he doesn’t even get to sleep. That’s why I don’t go to Schoology a lot. He’s getting weak everyday so he always needs someone to be by his side. He keeps losing weight and his mouth is getting worse. Going to the bathroom is hard, eating is hard because he has cancer in his mouth and can't eat normal food anymore so we have to find food that's not hard for him to eat. 


Forced to live as an Adult during this Pandemic

I’m the only one who can drive, so whenever he runs out of food, I’m always the one that has to take my mom or sometimes my grandma around the store. It's also hard for my parents because they are the only people who pay for everything for the family and everything for the house and because of COVID-19 they don’t get to work full time and lost so many hours at their jobs. They don’t have the money to pay the house bill but luckily we live in Public Housing so we have to pay less for the house bill. Buying what we want at this time is hard because we have no money. As for my aunt she is having a new child so I have to help babysit the older children and her husband has to go to work everyday, sometimes even has to go out of state. As for my grandma she always has problems with her legs. 


SOS, please...

I'm the only one who's not sick or hurt so I have to do basically everything. 


Driving is like my everyday job. I wake up at 7am and drive around until noon, then I have to babysit until the sun goes down then watch my grandparents at night. My grandma helps me watch my grandpa but sometimes she’s sick herself. I have to look after her as wellI don't really get enough sleep. With everything that is happening right now I feel like I have two houses because I have to sleep at my grandparents house but go home in the morning around 7am. Even though school is very important to me, I have to focus on my family first.


Monday, December 7, 2020

Ignite, Chunk, Chew, and Review the View from a Black Girl that wants to Graduate from High School in SPPS during COVID-19 and Distance Learning


All I’ve been hearing is that 2020 is a “crazy year.” It is crazy because who would have thought that we would go home for spring break, and never go back? ~ Aaliyah P. 


(Photo: Aaliyah P and her mother Shari)


By Aaliyah P. - Student Editorial Board

(Aaliyah is a Humboldt High School 12th grader that wants her voice to be heard in regards to Distance Learning and the struggles and challenges that all families face during the ratchet COVID-19 pandemic.) 


2020 has been such a ‘crazy year’ and the reason why I add quotation marks is that to me life is life. This is all so crazy because I did not expect to spend my senior year in my room with my bonnet on and stuffed animals. I have been feeling strained, stressed, and unheard because I have not been feeling stimulation; ignite, chunk, chew, and review means nothing when you're a high school senior forced to live as an adult because of my family's economic well-being depends on my minimum wage job. The state politicians have forgotten about us, more so, economically challenged neighborhoods and high school scholars. 


I know I am a hard-working scholar, and I need to get all A’s in my senior year to get into college (I want to attend Hamline University with my best friend), but then I get very distracted and feel interruptions; like life.


To be totally honest with you, I never admired Humboldt High School. 


I never even wanted to go here, so distance learning isn’t all that terrible.  Me not being able to go to school my senior year does bother me, and I dislike it because I don’t have my teachers in the same class as me showing me how to do the assignments or telling me to get off my phone. Another reason why I dislike distance learning is that my parents also work from home, and everybody is on the WiFi all at once so sometimes we have to disconnect from the wifi so I can’t finish my assignments.


On the other hand, I like distance learning because I can get rest and sleep in longer, I can wear all my pajamas all day, and don’t have to worry about walking in the cold. Distance learning showed me my real friends because when I saw people I used to be friends with they wouldn’t speak to me, and distance learning made a lot of stress off my shoulders go away that’s another reason why distance learning isn’t all that horrible and more relaxing. I don’t feel as annoyed as I did when I was in Humboldt. 


Humboldt gave me a lot of solitude, and I do not use that word lightly. In school, I was pressured to do things I was not ready for, so I acted out. I felt like I had to be mean, unapproachable to most; I wanted to be horrid, snooty, rudy, “censored,” thot, bop, etc. In school,  people called me a “good girl.” I liked boys, of course,  I’m a girl, yes I’ve thought about “sex,” yes I thought about having it, but NO STOP, I am the “good girl”  because right now, I’m focusing on entering a  university campus when I graduate in 2021 and being barefoot and pregnant would just make me another Black-girl statistic. I’m not having it! 


I dislike the fact that COVID-19 is the reason why I cannot walk the stage or have my high school prom - yeah the music might be lame, but I want to live, breathe our non-dream prom. The fact I can’t make my unseen dream come true sets me back into deep thought about Humboldt and how this year would be if we all were in school. 


Sometimes, Humboldt made me feel like I’m in this bubble but nobody could demolish it. I’ve always kept my head up high walking around that school, I never let my crown down for anybody. I’m not going to lie, my crown fell a couple times but I held on strong. My high school days now are like a non-stop roller coaster. I will have days when it is just too much; the fake friends, suspects (not my friends), and a small few like my family and closest friends that I have to rely on to make it. 


Only a few teachers have made distance learning bearable. Now, distance learning has us bored, idle and doesn’t connect with our reality of being at home and I really think nobody cares. My little brother is struggling with everything - he’s a social butterfly (just like me) who’s been grounded, ignored, and abandoned by a system that is not run by people that look like us. Again, the evolution of Jim Crow sits at our doorsteps. Distance learning has also made it bad for the kids who have problems at home, and school was their escape; breakfast, lunch, and snacks. So kids start to smoke, drink and do pills and very other hard drugs. All of this going on while my Grandpa just had a heart attack and other family members are passing away and we cannot go to the funerals.     

               

My peers don’t like to overthink.  Distance learning and the lack of support has sent many of my friends to use drugs to get away from their suicidal thoughts. Girls try to find love at school and some girls try to find that love with boys or the same gender. Sometimes us kids, teenagers, and young adults feel like we don’t have love and feel judged by their parents. We try to escape our problems by drinking and smoking, some of us don’t just smoke and drink to escape our problems, sometimes we do it to have fun. No, I’m not saying smoking and drinking should be the only way to have fun, but that’s what kids do nowadays. Distance learning made me closer to my best friend. When I met her I met her before Humboldt and way before distance learning she made this distance learning and COVID-19 easier to get by she made me happy and motivated to do better in life she is my other half my rock, I’ll get more about her and her family in my next story. 


I wouldn’t want to be in school right now anyway with COVID-19. I would rather be home in my room with my family and my stuffed animal.

      

In closing, Humboldt high school wasn’t all that terrible, the school taught me the good, the bad, and the crazy side of life.  I have relationship problems that I did not have to put myself through, but I learned.  I learned about violence - and no Humboldt High School wasn’t the only school to show me and teach me about life, I had learned a lot about life at Creative Arts Secondary School. I met some strong educated people and my principal and teachers were on my case. 


What I do know is at the end of the day I can succeed in life and not slack.  Humboldt also showed me how to be a leader and not to be a follower, and to take my own path I have met some strong hard-working students who motivated me. My best friend is a hard-working girl who is very bright and smart. She can pass a test when she does a test, she motivates me to keep going.   Yes, me...and she can get distracted with the fun wildlife but we keep in mind we have to graduate and accomplish our goals. I know how to stay on track but I can get distracted but that will not stop me from graduating from high school -  distance learning 2.0 or not.  I want to make my strong Mother, Father, brothers, and other family members happy for me, but sometimes I don’t feel Humboldt is always in my corner. 




Sunday, December 6, 2020

Humboldt High School Athletics - December 2020

"After a tough work out the boys and gals like to break a mental sweat too. Thank you to those teachers who have sent work for the kids to do. It has brightened their day and I hope yours as well. Thank you and always #GOHAWKS!" A message and photo provided by coach Novacheck, Humboldt High School Wrestling (Winter 2020)

By John Pucci - Humboldt Athletics 

Most coaches would be satisfied with 2 athletes making it to the state tournament, with two others almost qualifying, but not Coach Novacheck.

Last year’s wrestling team was one of the most successful groups Humboldt has had in recent years, with graduated Senior Ryan Prisch making the state tournament. He was not alone however, with star Sophomore Kyaw Htway also qualifying. In addition, Junior Crown Htoo was the most improved wrestler in the team, which Coach Novacheck credits assistant coach and Humboldt alumni Scottie Bonds for. Crown missed qualification for the state tournament by mere points. Finally, one of the unsung heroes of last year’s team was 8th grade phenom, Po Si Si. Po Si Si is the younger brother of Kyaw Htway, and clearly wrestling dominance runs in the family. 

Instead of being satisfied with a great 2019-2020 season, Coach Novacheck is hungry for more. He believes that this year’s team may be even stronger than the last, and Crown, Kyaw and Po Si have returned to the team in match ready form. In addition, Seniors Pa Ha and Hsa Loo have both been identified by Coach Novacheck as athletes to watch for this upcoming season. While the pandemic has once again forced coaches to move to digital platforms and caused quite a bit of disappointment across the state, nothing can damper the excitement of Coach Novacheck and his athletes. 

The wrestling team started digital practice last week, which included a home workout led by their coaching staff, as well as a tactical wrestling session, reviewing techniques and strategies the team looks to implement this season. As a Humboldt community, let’s praise Coach Novacheck and his staff for prioritizing student safety and wellness while still engaging and improving his student athlete’s ability and well-being at the same time. Great work coach!

Boys Basketball

The boys basketball team has begun their digital training sessions as well, led by Coach Garcia and Winters. They plan to implement a new offensive system this season, and have been using film analysis and breakdown to teach it to their athletes. 

Girls Basketball

The girls basketball team is excited to build on last year’s successful season, and challenge for the city title. The team will be led by seniors Makayla Mapp & Ilianese Delarosa, as well as junior Lili Hobday. 

Boys Swimming

The boys swimming team will operate as a cooperative with Washington and OWL this season, similar to the girls during the fall. Watch for Junior Ywar Hay Tha to have a breakout season! 

Monday, November 16, 2020

Winter Sports Preview 2020-2021

 by John Pucci -  Humboldt Athletics 

Ryan Prisch, and coach Brad Novacheck
While all fall sports with the exception of Volleyball have ended, many athletes are gearing up for their winter season. 

     This winter, Humboldt and OWL athletes will have the option to participate in girls and boys basketball and wrestling, while the boys swim team will try to match the great season the girls had this fall. Our PI/CI adapted teams will continue to meet virtually. Many athletes are excited about the chance to participate in winter sports, and the Hawks are primed to have competitive seasons with multiple teams. 

PHOTO: Ryan Prisch, and coach Brad Novacheck (Credit: SPPS - Fair Use) 

Girls Basketball Preview

     To begin with, Head coach and Humboldt alum Tyler Chavez returns all but one starter on the girls basketball team. Point guard Ilianese DeLaRosa and shooting guard Makalya Mapp return to headline the Hawks Offense, while Underclassman Jocelyn Mann looks to be the defensive stopper for the team. The Girls earned the number two seed in a competitive section last winter and have high expectations for this upcoming season. 

Boys Basketball Preview

The Boys basketball team had the opposite happen, as almost the entire roster graduated in 2020. With that said, coach Garcia is confident in this season’s group. He returns Leading scorer Brian Williams, and combo Guard Keith Pabon to bring some leadership to the group. In addition, a surprise Senior transfer in Xavier Garcia will help sure up the Hawks line-up, as he was St. Croix Lutheran’s top man last season. Watch for the boys basketball team to put quite a few teams on upset alert this winter. 

Wrestling 

Boys wrestling looks to continue to be a constant St. Paul Powerhouse this winter. Lead by coach Brad Novacheck, the Hawks return a strong roster headlined by three ranked wrestlers in Crown Htoo, Kyaw Htway and Po Si Si. Watch for Senior Pa Ha to possibly fill the shoes of heavyweight graduate Ryan Prisch, a notable graduate for the Hawks. The Hawks wrestlers will call the Open World Learning Campus home for this winter, and have already laid out their mats. Coach Novacheck was eager to move the seemingly heavy mats and get everything set up on Friday. “Nothing sounds more fun to me than hauling mats around on a Friday morning - I could do this all day,” said coach Novacheck. 

Boys Swimming

Boys swimming looks to build off the success that the girls had this fall, with coach Caitlyn Gill leading both squads. While the boys team lacks some of the experience that the girls have, a few swimmers stood out last winter, and look to make a bigger splash this time around. Senior Eh Ler Moo was a first time swimmer last winter, but really took to the sport earning an all-conference honorable mention. He returns alongside team captain Elliot McNally, who was as smooth as could be in the water last season. Watch for these two to have a breakout season this time around. While our PI/CI athletes and coaches are sad that they cannot compete in person this winter, we as a Hawk community are very thankful and proud of coaches Vibar, Bohland and Long for keeping the teams connected digitally. 

Thanks for all that you do!

Volleyball, Volleyball - Humboldt Volleyball!

 Photos by principal Steven Aeilts  

 Senior night for volleyball 



Girls Volleyball 2020!