The Highlander - Issue 4 - April 2021

Page 38

Virtual students deserve to participate in extracurricular activities

A

ANDREW CHRISTOFFERSON REPORTER

fter school, in-person and virtual students alike meet up for their extracurricular activities. Despite not returning to school, virtual students are able to play sports, participate in clubs and join student organizations. Many reasons could play into a student’s decision to choose an extracurricular activity over attending in-person learning. But these factors are ultimately the student’s choice, and students who choose to stay home should still have the opportunity to participate in inperson sports or clubs. “There are a myriad of reasons why students are choosing to stay home for school that have nothing to do with their participation in sports,” varsity baseball head coach John Dowling said. Just because someone is comfortable with going outside and playing sports, it does not mean they are comfortable sitting

36 | OPINIONS | APRIL 2021

in classrooms for up to seven hours a day. Sports and other activities are presumably safer since the number of participants in a specific activity is less than the number of people roaming the halls.

OUTDOOR SPORTS ARE, WITHOUT QUESTION, MUCH SAFER THAN BEING IN SCHOOL.” - JOHN DOWLING SOCIAL STUDIES TEACHER & BASEBALL COACH Wrestling, for example, seems unsafe since wrestlers are constantly in contact with others, yet the wrestling team was able to restrict the number of interactions to just two people, with strict contact tracing and

pre-practice requirements that ensured the safety of the wrestlers. The regulations for attending in-person school are not as strict, which has caused some concerns. “[My] biggest [concern is] the uncertainty,” junior Atticus Gore said. “I have yet to get COVID or be exposed, and I have safety concerns [with] returning to school.” The school building is an enclosed environment with minimal movement, but sports and other extracurriculars often meet outside. With sports, students are constantly moving around and spaced apart, and most fall and spring sports train outside, which is much safer than staying inside. “Outdoor sports are, without question, much safer than being in school,” Dowling said. “Outdoors, we have virtually unlimited space to utilize for social distancing and are never really in a confined space where the air is not circulating.” Even with all the safety concerns and uncertainty surrounding in-person school, for most students, safety was not necessarily the most important factor to consider. Many students decided to return to school because they do not enjoy learning in a virtual setting. Others returned to just get out of the house. And some were coerced by parents to return. “I returned to school because I focus so much better when what I’m learning is physically in front of me,” junior Kylee Majkowski said. For those who continued with online learning, most have adapted to the virtual classroom setting and would not like to return to in-person school for the time being. “I have gotten into a really good routine with my school day,” Gore said. “I know how to get my work done, be productive, learn the content and get good grades.” Students who are acclimated to the online learning environment deserve to have the same opportunities as in-person students. It’s unfair to consider placing requirements that restrict a student’s ability to participate in anything they want to and are comfortable with doing.


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Articles inside

Athletes opt for virtual learning

3min
page 46

Spring sports preview

1min
page 45

McFootball makes strides

5min
pages 42-43

Golf season wraps up

2min
page 44

McLean is doing well with concurrent learning

3min
page 40

Crossfire: In-person extracurriculars for virtual students?

5min
pages 38-39

Field hockey sticks together

2min
page 41

Extend grading leniency

4min
page 37

Editorial: Freedom of Speech

4min
page 36

Justin Bieber’s Justice review

3min
page 35

Eden Center bubble tea reviews

1min
page 34

TheatreMcLean records play

4min
page 32

Learning in the modular

25min
pages 24-31

Marina Qu named Virginia Journalist of the Year

3min
page 22

Brittany Peng wins peace award

7min
pages 20-21

10 Qs w/ Wendy Pearson

2min
page 19

Profile of a classroom monitor

2min
page 18

Civic engagement bill passes

3min
page 9

Chloe Lahr’s clothing business

4min
pages 14-15

Anti-Asian racism on the rise

6min
pages 12-13

Highlanders stay virtual

3min
page 10

COVID-19 mitigation at school

3min
page 8

Students get vaccines

3min
page 6

Sexism at McLean

7min
pages 16-17

AP exams coming soon

3min
page 11
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