Among Us

Days 121 & 122 of AY20-21: two virtual days

I said I was going to write a blog post for every day this year. I am modifying that a bit. I’m going to combine days 121 and 122 of the pandacademic year, the two remote days that were tacked onto the tail end of cycle 8. I’m doing so in part because the remote days have been low touch, low turnout, and low engagement; and in part because I am really behind on blog posts for the year (I am writing this on day 135 of the pandacademic year!).

We scheduled in 14 remote days this year so that we could be together as many days as possible both in-person and in total. These 14 remote days allowed us to have at least a nine day observation period between cycles for those meeting in-person, which greatly limited the risk of a single person putting multiple cells at risk of Covid-19. We have been fortunate that our community has taken the pandemic seriously by masking up and not congregating indoors with others from outside their household or dedicated pod, quarantining if they were not able to adhere to our community practices, and that our community largely supports Covid-19 vaccines. In fact, at least one Learner and one guardian got their first shot over the weekend before day 121, while the other was told he was too young (it was a Moderna batch).

We have had mixed results in terms of Learners showing up for online meetings during the pandemic. We were pretty thrilled to get ten Learners to show up for the morning meeting on Monday. For the morning meeting the game shifting asked only that people sit, stand, or dance during the meeting. Although most Learners had their video cameras turned off, one of the younger Learners broke into dance which made us all smile (even those off camera.

Remote again. Woo hoo.

Remote again. Woo hoo.

Most of the folks on the morning call shared how they could be the type of friend they wish they had: listen to people, be there in the hard times, by not interrupting people, be more available, do my stretches (no clue what that means), being honest, challenging people without hurting them, being there for others, be nice.

I then told everyone that one of the shadowers from the prior week would be enrolling for cycle 9. This was a cause for celebration and relief. Each additional person in a Self-Directed Education community adds far more to the community than plus one. This is because each person brings their own unique interests, skills, thoughts, and life experiences that everyone else can benefit from. So going from 10 Learners to 11 would not increase one time connection opportunities between Learners by 9% (1/11), but it would increase it by 11 times (10! vs 11!). I will probably write a future blog post to explain that more clearly. Nonetheless, it is substantial. The reason it is a relief is because we were not at our best the prior week, and we really came up short in welcoming in the new Learners. So to know that one of the shadowers was confident enough of his place in the community was a really big deal.

Speaking of the difficult week, I had planned calls with the four Learners I called out on Friday. On Monday, I had a really great call with the first of the four Learners. We talked about how the Learners stuck to themselves and did not go out of their way to interact with the shadowers, particularly on Thursday. This Learner said, “I was kind of [stuck] in the middle of leaving my comfort zone or staying in my comfort zone.” It was a helpful conversation as it allowed me to better understand the motivation of the Learner, and it helped the Learner better empathize with the experiences of a shadower.

Unfortunately, as is now the norm for our remote days, none of the Learners came to the four offerings that were set up for the day. But that’s okay, we are just holding space for the Learners if they need it, and we found plenty of time to be with each other.

The next day nine Learners showed up for the morning meeting, one less than Monday but still a strong enough showing that it made those who show up appreciate their community. For the morning prompt we each shared a way nature has affected our daily life lately: allergies, wifi doesn’t work in nature, joy from watching two birds build a nest outside their window, feeling crappy outside because of allergies, it is so hot I can’t wear my hoodie, enjoying walks in the neighborhood and noticing how protective deer are of their fawns, I biked this morning and waived hi to so many people because it was so beautiful out, allergies are causing a really dry cough, allergies and stuff, allergies, the sun is helping me produce vitamin D, allergies. Are the allergies really that bad, or are the Learners just too comfortable indoors?

On Tuesday we told the Learners what the cell composition were going to be for cycle 9, and no one seemed to take offense, which was nice. Unfortunately, at least two Learners were planning to be entirely remote, and that stinks, but we cannot wait until they can show up in person again (probably next fall).

On this day the Facilitators again provided a variety of offerings that the Learners did not take advantage of, but Facilitator Ariel and I showed up for an Among Us offering that was hosted by one of the Learners. It was really fun and even though I was tired and anxious to get work done I’m glad I made time to connect with the Learner (and kill and be killed by him).

On Tuesday I also met with the other three Learners to discuss the challenges we had the earlier week. The Learners shared some good ideas on how they can better support others, but I was interested in the general belief that if they can find nothing in common with someone then maybe they have nothing to talk about. I interrogated that idea a bit, helping the Learners to recognize that there is a world of possible shared interests that cannot possibly be explored during an initial introduction. I also questioned whether it made sense to spend less effort to welcome in those who seem the most different (e.g., less shared interests), and how that could play out in terms of supporting those who are already in the minority in society. For example, if we have no Black, trans, or undocumented immigrant Learners, would it not be more difficult to build quick rapport with them, but would that not also be all the more reason to try to make them feel welcome? After all, American society does not have a great record of welcoming in and supporting historically marginalized people, and we certainly have no interest of replicating the harshness of American society at Abrome.

Facilitator Ariel also talked to the Learners about last week. One of the Learners told him that he had a fear of letting people in because of his earlier life experiences. Facilitator Ariel shared that he had the same fears, and expounded upon that to talk about his fears as a Black man in the south. He explained how it had been a hard two days since the Daunte Wright killing (by police in Minnesota), and they cried with each other. Later, Facilitator Ariel told the Learner that we Facilitators believe in them, and our collective ability to grow. They then talked about what they could do in the future to better welcome people in.

Day 112 of AY20-21: listening to Learners

Tuesday, March 30th would be day 7 of cycle 8 for the Flying Squad, and day 112 of the pandacademic year. It would also be the first day we had two more Learners return from quarantine, which promised to make our day even better! As of day 112, we only had one Learner still out for quarantine and he was expected to return on Wednesday.

As they Learners began to show up they got right into hanging out with each other and connecting in ways that are difficult to do online. The Learners and Facilitator Ariel were busy practicing snapping their fingers, and teaching one another how to snap fingers, as I reminded folks that we needed to drink water.

At 10:00 a.m., we circled up for our morning meeting. Each meeting the Facilitators come with prompts, and sometimes we strike out with the prompts. On this day, Facilitator Ariel asked, what’s something non-food related that brought you joy this cycle? And how can we share that joy with others? Sometimes we ask these questions to spur great conversation, to provide us an opportunity to set intentions or to reflect, or as a way to center the needs of others. Sometimes they are just playful. The Learners were not really having the prompts on this day though, as the responses were pretty curt: sleep, filling trash bags, drinking water, drinking water, staying home (!), watching a guy play a ukulele and guitar, and laying in a hammock. The ways in which they could share that joy with others was even more curt, as three Learners said they couldn’t think of a way to share. We ended the meeting hoping that the day would be a bit more creative.

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In attempt to avoid coming across food trucks early in the day, which tend to derail the intentions of some Learners, we decided to go in the opposite direction for a change. Walking south instead of east we found a trail that would have potentially taken us all the way to the Barton Creek Greenbelt (maybe not). We ended up taking a small detour down a poison ivy lined animal path that came out in a dry river bed. We could not pass up the opportunity to play on the rocks and then get a killer picture that would become our next album cover. When we were finished we walked down a back road away from Barton Springs Pool, up a hill, and onto a disc golf course.

One of the Learners was really struggling on the walk, not because of the walking but because of allergies. His eyes were puffed up and he kept rubbing his eyes. We contacted his family, and they decided that they would come pick him up. In addition to that Learner, Facilitator Ariel and another Learner were really struggling with the high pollen count in the air that morning. But before he went home we got to play some soccer! I had picked up a soccer ball the night before, and plan to bring the ball with me on a regular basis moving forward. The Learner who planned to go home found time to introduce me to the intense sport of animal style soccer before he left. All the Learners eventually joined in on kicking the soccer ball around, except for one, but he found time to throw the football around.

After the Learner who was suffering from allergies left, I became a one-person audience for a Learner who wanted to share everything he knew about the video game Among Us. He told me about the new map that was coming out, what changes to the game would come with the new map, the different ways that characters could die in the movie, and then he got frustrated as I asked questions that were perhaps too obvious to him. I’m not particularly moved by video games, but I felt it was important on this day to entertain the conversation for the Learner.

Having taken the new route away from the drop off point allowed us as a group to avoid ruminating on food, which was a welcome break for the Facilitators. I also got to talk quite a bit with one of the Learners who had just come off of quarantine. I probably spoke with her more that afternoon than I had in the previous month combined. Her lunch got crushed in her bag earlier in the day so she decided that she would try out one of the food trucks that some of the other Learners could not stop talking about. But she was the only one willing to make the walk to the food trucks that afternoon, so it was just us walking, which allowed me to give her my full attention. It’s really easy for us as Facilitators (or educators or parents or even just as friends) to get so wrapped up in all the work we need to do that we forget to make time to just listen to people. And oftentimes the people who need to be listened to the most are the ones with the least power in our society. This includes kids.

While it was a fun day, for the old men of the squad, it was not the easiest day. My calf began cramping (drink water!!) and Facilitator Ariel’s knee started bothering him. We both made it through the day, though, and we finished up with a more engaging afternoon roundup. We reflected on our day via the rose-bud-thorn prompt, and then discussed ways in which we could improve upon the thorns in the future. After the Learners left, I jumped on our daily Facilitator roundup call with Facilitators Lauren and Ariel, and we identified what went well, what challenges we had and what areas for improvement there were, and action items for each of us. Facilitator Lauren said she had a really good day that included hiking, waterfalls, and ducks. Then we all said good bye to each other for the night, and I made my way to the lake for my monthly jump in the lake.

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Day 85 of AY20-21: gearing up to be in-person again

Quickly moving toward risk stage level four

Quickly moving toward risk stage level four

On Tuesday, February 9th, I woke up and looked at the latest Covid-19 indicators for Austin and saw that we were perhaps only a couple of days away from breaking into risk stage level four territory, at least according to daily hospital admissions. While most people focus on the downward trend I hope that they still recognize that we are in a worse place in Central Texas than we were at any other point in the pandemic other than at the heights of this wave and the summer wave, and that just because numbers are improving does not mean that community spread is not still taking place, nor that any single person who gets infected can seed a future superspreader event or even host the next mutation of the virus. That’s why we handed out N95s to our community, and that’s why even if we were to go to stage level four we would still be outdoors in small cells, mask up near each other, and have one cell of higher risk Learners remain remote.

Kinda big news

Kinda big news

Facilitator Lauren opened the morning meeting by reviewing the community awareness board and then asking for announcements. A Learner jumped in and said that the city had just moved to pandemic risk stage level four, which means we can be together in-person again! People acknowledged that they saw the post she shared in Discord. I was shocked, as I did not think the city would move to stage level four quite yet, especially considering we do not know if Super Bowl parties may have served as superspreader events here in Central Texas. Nonetheless, it was pretty exciting news and I immediately began to draft an email to families to let them know that we would be in-person the next day!!

Back in the meeting, Facilitator Lauren’s prompt asked us what is something that we are excited about as we go back to in-person, and what is something that we will miss being remote, or are nervous about. The answers about what we were excited about were joyful: being with you, drawing, painting; seeing all of you and being in a cell with Facilitator Antonio; spontaneous conversations; bike rides and painting with Facilitator Lauren; playing outside; hanging [out]; getting back into a cycle or routine again; seeing friends; being Cuddle Buddies Ivan and Ingrid; hang out with each other again. One person passed since they will be remote even in stage level four. And the young Learner who said he was excited to paint with Facilitator Lauren assured Facilitator Ariel that he was still his homie. Cute because he’s an eight-year-old. There were fewer responses about what we will miss about being remote or are nervous about: the cold; no more coffee and read or free write offerings; no access to video games; playing Minecraft; being able to work on my [digital] art all the time; being at home; missing offerings; no more Among Us. Of course gaming will still be an option, just not the preferred option for most when we are able to be with each other outdoors.

If not Covid-19, inclement weather …

If not Covid-19, inclement weather …

After the meeting I sent off the email to families saying we’d be in-person. Then I checked the weather for the next day. Oops. The weather was taking a turn for the worse and it seemed unlikely that we would be able to actually meet. When there is lightning we stay indoors. I immediately sent a follow up email saying that our meeting was dependent upon weather conditions, and that it did not look promising. What a downer.

High fives

High fives

Immediately following the morning meeting (that ran a few minutes over because of the excitement surrounding being able to be together again) I had two consecutive one-to-one check-ins with adolescent Learners, while Facilitator Lauren had a check-in with a young Learner. In my check-ins we focused on being back together again, and both Learners said they were happy that this remote period was coming to an end. One of them even said they were hyped. After the check-ins I moved right into the 7-minute workout with the usual crew, crushed it, and then we gave each other high fives before going our separate ways.

Coffee and read

Coffee and read

Except I joined Facilitator Ariel for coffee and read, which has been a super relaxing and enjoyable offering that I wish some Learners would show up for. While I am not anti-gaming, I do wish that Learners would spend more of their time reading. To be fair, I did not read when I was growing up since I developed an aversion to it because of mandated reading in school, and maybe that is what is happening for the Abrome Learners who were formerly schooled. Nonetheless, the Facilitators have no problem modeling how enjoyable and enriching self-chosen reading is, and hopefully the previously schooled Learners will catch the bug.

Among Us

Among Us

At 12:00 p.m. a Learner hosted his Among Us offering. He lobbied for folks to show up for the offering at the morning meeting, and on this day none of the Facilitators could join because we all had conflicts, so we were worried that none would show. Surprisingly, two Learners did show. At the same time Facilitators Ariel and Lauren both had one-to-one check-ins with adolescent Learners. The former check-in blew past the allotted time for the check-in. Different Learners need different levels of attention during the check-ins. Some check-ins only last five minutes, and some need to be cut off.

A great spot for a meet up during the pandemic

A great spot for a meet up during the pandemic

Facilitator Ariel then went to a park in central Austin to meet up with a recently enrolled Learner who has not found much benefit to the remote experience during stage level five. Like last week, Facilitator Ariel was able to connect more with the Learner in a short time in a park than in all the meetings that the Learner may have been able to attend in-person, if he would have attended in-person. The Learner said they were excited to be in person soon, and Facilitator Ariel agreed.

At the same time Facilitator Lauren was leading a yoga offering that would have the same number of Learners attending as my free write offering the following hour—zero. We cannot wait to be back in-person! I then had another one-to-one check-in with an adolescent Learner as did Facilitator Lauren. Afterward Facilitator Lauren had a support call with one of the guardians of a Learner to discuss some of their struggles with their non-Abrome child who was enrolled in a local progressive, conventional school. When talking to families about the struggles their other kids are having with school we do our best not to slam on the school and their schoolish ways, although it is hard, but Facilitator Lauren did the best she could.

The afternoon roundup was started at 3:30 p.m. by Facilitator Ariel. He reviewed the practices, opened up for announcements, and then we each shared one way we can carry over practices we've had during this remote experience back into the outdoors: setting alarms to keep myself on-time; practicing saying “let's focus” when conversation goes astray; actively listening; actively listening; commit to actively listening; actively listening; not talking over other people; meaningfully participate in meetings. All great practices and it is clear that actively listening is striking a chord. Unfortunately, only nine people showed up for the afternoon roundup. Did I mention we cannot wait to be in-person again?

Packing in the hopes of going outdoors

Packing in the hopes of going outdoors

After the after action review by the Facilitators I got ready for my Agile Learning Centers book group discussion of Progressive Dystopia, the book that I was reading during the coffee and chat. The book has quite harshly exposed the shortcomings of so-called progressive attempts to humanize and turn an oppressive system into one of liberation, particularly for Black students. Many folks argue that we must work within the established systems if we want to free children, and I’ve long argued that power won’t allow that to happen. Progressive Dystopia shows how right I was, and how futile attempted liberation through oppressive systems is.

After the book group was over I began to pack for our first day of in-person since December, weather permitting!

Day 69 of AY20-21: gathering for Among Us

Tuesday was day 69 of the pandacademic year and I wanted to get the day started off in a fun way by asking a different type of prompt for the morning meeting. I asked each Learner to share their gnarliest injury ever. After two of us had gone, one of the newer Learners asked why I asked that question, of all questions. He said it was a peculiar question to ask, and then another Learner jumped in and said the same. I then realized that it was a question that could lead to some responses that could be discomforting for others, and that I launched into such a question without asking for the consent of everyone who was in the meeting with me. I acknowledged that and switched the question up to a much easier survey on what everyone’s favorite season was. Six chose winter, five chose summer, three chose fall, and only two chose spring. We then set our intentions and identified the practice that each of us would focus on for the day.

Next I dropped into a young Learner’s Roblox offering and chatted to him really briefly, and then popped into our daily 7-minute workout with our usual crew of four. We are all noticing marked improvement in our ability to get through the workout, and we are all getting stronger. We hope that some of the Learners will join us soon.

Coffee and read

Coffee and read

Then I dropped in for the coffee and read offering that was hosted by Facilitator Ariel. He was reading Raising Free People by Akilah S. Richards and I was reading Progressive Dystopia by Savannah Shang. Each book touches upon issues of race and liberation in the context of education, the former from an unschooling perspective and the latter from a carceral conventional schooling perspective. Both books are fabulous reads and I highly recommend them.

We each read for about an hour and then went straight into the Among Us offering that was organized by one of the newer Learners. He was getting quite frustrated that not many were showing up for his offerings the prior week, so this week he only scheduled the offering on Tuesday and Thursday. It seems that strategy worked as eight Learners including himself showed up, as did two Facilitators. Unfortunately the Learner who organized the offering was seven minutes late to the offering, so by the time the game got started we only had 50 minutes of dedicated time to play. It was the first time playing for a couple of Learners, so it was chaotic at times, but everyone seemed to have a blast.

Among Us in action

Among Us in action

After the Among Us offering I had my first opportunity of the day to relax. I spent the next hour making myself a lunch consisting of kimchi and rice, and then did some cleaning. When I was finished I jumped back online in preparation for free write. I was going to check in on Facilitator Lauren’s nature journaling offering but I saw that the young Learner who joined us for the first time this cycle on Friday was on Discord, so I tried to connect with her. Our conversation was not super deep, we just sent goofy gifs back and forth to each other, but it was nice to have an opportunity to interact one-on-one with her. She had also joined the meetings that morning, and on Monday, and I was feeling really great about having her present on a more regular basis.

The other Facilitators continue to connect with Learners as well. Each of us are having a one-on-one check-in with about a third of the Learners, so that each Learner has at least one individualized check-in each week. Facilitator Lauren had two check-ins that day with an 18-year-old girl and a 16-year-old boy. In fact, all but one Learner has been able to drop in for their check-ins. The only one who has not checked-in is a new Learner who had a really bad experience with online schooling at their local public school this past spring and fall. Because of that terrible experience it seems that he is not super eager to engage at Abrome while we are remote, so we are likely going to be left waiting until we are back in-person so that we can build trust with the Learner. Nonetheless, Facilitator Ariel texted him to remind him of the offerings and gaming opportunities that were available to him the next day.

Afternoon roundup

Afternoon roundup

The day went by really quickly. Lauren opened the afternoon roundup by asking them how they were feeling and what they did that day. Many of the responses were lukewarm and low energy: good, okay, good day, tired but happy, good, tired and overwhelmed, tired, tired, okay, alright, happy, sad, tired, snazzy, chill. One of the Learners was struggling with the meeting a bit, and an adolescent Learner who has really been developing her leadership skills stepped in to help guide him through the meeting. It was a great example of how when Learners feel that this is their community that they can step in and protect and build the culture without direction from adults. It was also a great way to end the day.

Day 64 of AY20-21: being remote together and separate, online and off

Morning meeting time

Morning meeting time

We headed into Tuesday hoping to build on the positive first day of our pandemic-induced, fully remote experience for cycle five (assuming Central Texas doesn’t miraculously begin to take the pandemic seriously in the next couple of days). Facilitator Ariel led the morning meeting. Because we had a larger group he needed to balance the need to make space for people to share while protecting people’s time by not having the meeting stretch into the day too much. He started by asking everyone in the meeting to share an offering they were looking forward to over the course of the week. Half of the responses were diverse, and half were not. The diverse responses included free write, Roblox, nature journaling, yoga, bike project, bike project, a check-in with a Facilitator, and Minecraft. And six people said they were looking forward to playing Among Us, again. Facilitator Ariel then asked if anyone learned anything new yesterday. While there were some interesting responses such as there are 1 quadrillion ants roaming the earth (disputed) and dynamic IP isn’t good for whitelists, most of the learnings revolved around Among Us: Abrome Learners are too ‘big-brained’ to lose, being honest can help you win the game, Marlowe bullies me (said in jest), [Learner] is sneaky. While the goal was to keep the meeting short it started to stretch out as a couple of Learners kept jumping in to ask each other questions, set up meetings with Facilitators, or to try to organize gatherings on Discord. Before things got too out of control Facilitator Ariel adjourned the meeting and encouraged folks to communicate with each other on Discord.

After the morning meeting I had offered to tinker around with the Rubik’s cube with Learners who found it fun while we were in person, but with us being remote it just did not move anyone to want to participate. So after waiting around for five minutes I decided to do some easy administrative tasks and prepared for the 7-minute workout. I was pleased to see three folks show up for the workout, and it looks like we will have the same folks showing up each day, with hopefully some Learners dropping in from time to time. We are just holding space for the Learners and inviting them in if they choose.

Coffee and read

Coffee and read

Facilitator Ariel followed up the 7-minute workout with a coffee and read offering, where we all grabbed some coffee and sat down to read. Much like my free write offerings the turnout for these offerings are not expected to be very large, and the only people who joined were me and Abrome’s oldest Learner. After getting a tour of all the bikes that Facilitator Ariel has in his apartment (among three people) while we brewed our coffee, we settled down to read. I was reading Curious by Ian Leslie for my Education Conversations book group conversation later in the week, the 18-year-old Abrome Learner was reading These Truths by Jill Lapore, and Facilitator Ariel was reading the Coyote's Guide to Connecting with Nature. The hour flew by but each of us came away quite pleased with the offering. Even though we were not directly interacting during the offering it was nice to feel as though we were in the same room, drinking our coffee, reading good books.

At noon I decided to join the Among Us offering that was so popular the day before. I joined the Learner who was hosting the offering as well as two other adolescent learners. They had to wait for me to figure out how to download the app on my tablet which had previously only been used to fly the drone, and they waited quite some time before I realized the tablet was so old that it was not able to download the app without a system update. Frustrated they asked if I could just put it on my phone, which I did. We then got to playing. While the Learners all find Among Us to be a fun game I was quite confused. I did not get the point of the game and ended up just running around trying to avoid getting killed. I realized that I could call a meeting so that we could vote to decide who the imposter was and that that was my best hope of winning any rounds. Yet I did not. I’ll give it another go in the future.

The American woodcock

The American woodcock

Facilitator Lauren held a nature journaling offering at 1:00 p.m., and an older Learner decided to join her for it. Facilitator Lauren went on a hike just before the offering and saw an American woodcock among some prickly pear cacti, and decided to sketch the bird and share her observations in her journal.

Facilitator Lauren also had two one-on-one check-ins with Learners on Tuesday. Because we are entirely remote one of the Facilitators requests at least one check-in with each Learner each week just to touch base. Some Learners are often around and communicate, while some are only around for the morning and afternoon roundups. We also have two Learners who simply do not like being remote and do not regularly show up for meetings, either. So these one-on-one check-ins are really valuable for many of the Learners, and most certainly for the community, as we try to bridge this remote period during the uncontrolled community spread of Covid-19 in Central Texas.

At 2:00 p.m. I hosted a free write offering and was thrilled that two Learners showed up. The 13-year-old Learner who often shows up for free write during remote periods attended, as did the 18-year-old who was making the most of the offerings that day. The 13-year-old Learner chose to work on a new book that she had hoped to get published, the 18-year-old Learner did some stream of consciousness writing in her journal, and I worked on a blog post about how the problem is not so much remote schooling as it is the pandemic. After the free write was over I looked at the clock and saw that I had just enough time to rush off to a nearby park for my monthly jump in the water as part of my polar bear plunge commitment to the 13-year-old Learner. It was 70 degrees and based on weather forecasts this was as good as it was going to get. It was a cold dip in the water, but I am quite grateful to be in Austin during the winter as opposed to most other parts of the country. February is going to be rough though. I then rushed back to Abrome for the afternoon roundup.

Facilitator Lauren was leading the afternoon roundup and with one fewer attendee than the morning she decided to offer up three prompts. She asked the Learners what offerings they participated in, what the best thing they ate was, and what the best part of their day was. Because many of the Learners did not show up for any offerings they did not have an answer for the first question. But for those who did, the favorite was Among Us, with coffee and read coming in second. Nature journaling, free write, and the 7-minute workout all got a single vote, as well. As for food it ran from the healthy to the unhealthy: leek soup, bananas, dates, eggs, broth, chicken with rice, grilled cheese with turkey, peanut butter and jelly sandwich, chocolate chips, ice cream, apple cinnamon Cheerios, Dino Nuggets, and Monster. The favorite part of the everyone’s day unsurprisingly included gaming for many: playing Rogue Lineage, playing Minecraft, playing Fall Guys, hanging with friends online, and playing with friends online. But there was also non-gaming favorites, as well: nature journaling, shaving all the hair off of their head, writing the first part of their new book, journaling, one-on-one with Facilitator Lauren, breathing, doing art, and visiting the greenbelt with a guardian.

Day 63 of AY20-21: our first day of 2021

Monday was our first day of the week, our first day of the fifth cycle of the pandacademic year, and it was the first day of 2021. It was also our first day being entirely remote as the county moved to risk stage level five on December 23rd. So we came together excited to be together again, but disappointed that we do not get to come together in person given the state of the pandemic.

With 15 total participants (although some joined late and some dropped off early) it was going to be a challenge to keep the morning meeting short, so I reminded folks to please stay muted if they were not speaking and to hold off on side conversations. Of course when folks haven’t seen each other for two weeks (or months if they were in different cells) sometimes the urge to just speak to others can take over. So I tried to gently remind them to use chat or Discord or wait until the end of the meeting for those conversations. As a last resort I would make use of the mute option.

Also, with so many participants we could not spend as much time checking in with each person, so they each briefly mentioned how they were feeling or how their holiday break went: good, good, fine, good, okay, breathed, rough, pretty alright, kinda interesting, good, doing well. One Learner just fell to the side and off screen which I took as either being exhausted or not wanting to share.

We quickly moved into the Set-the-Week meeting. Set-the-Week is how we collectively decide how we are going to structure the week, but it is something that we have not been doing this year as we’ve been outside and offerings outside tend to be much more spontaneous than they are when we are indoors (non-pandemic times) or fully remote. The Set-the-Week during this remote period allows us to schedule offerings and one-on-one check-ins around the meetings everyone in the community is expected to participate in (morning meeting, afternoon roundup, Set-the-Week, and the weekly Check-in and Change-up).

Set-the-Week

Set-the-Week

Offerings are simply invites for others to participate. No one is required to attend an offering and sometimes no one shows up to an offering. That is feedback that can help the host to decide to keep it open for people to drop in on in the future, to change up the schedule to make it easier for people to come, or to remove the offering altogether. Each Facilitator put up a variety of offerings throughout the week that would allow for the Learners to drop in and participate in something the Facilitator was interested in doing. My offerings for the week include a daily 7-minute workout, a daily free write, and a 2021 visioning / resolution workshop on Monday.

Two Learners proposed offerings for Monday, with one of them requesting that his offering be listed daily for the entire week. One wanted to have a Roblox offerings start at 10:30 a.m., right after the Set-the-Week, and another wanted to start an Among Us offering at 11:00 a.m. Each offering would require Learners to drop into different Discord channels.

The Roblox offering was led by an 8-year-old Learner, with two older Learners dropping in to play. There was some confusion as to whether or not they would play together, or if they were just going to play their own Roblox games while sitting on the same Discord channel, with the latter being the intention of the Learner who was leading the offering. Both of the Learners who dropped in eventually found their way over to the Among Us offering which was led by a 14-year-old Learner who was in his first day at Abrome.

Some of the Learners who dropped in for Among Us

Some of the Learners who dropped in for Among Us

Among Us is a multiplayer game and over the span of two hours a total of seven people joined the game. A much better turnout than I have ever had for one of my offerings. I was told that the game was really engaging and that it was made even more fun by a 16-year-old Learner constantly trying to throw people off by asking questions that made them question their assumptions. For example, he would deceive other players by saying, “it’s not about the past, it’s about the future!” as he led them away from the logical path they were going down. A 14-year-old Learner kept working out his logic out loud, which made the deceiver’s work all that much harder. Apparently it was a blast of a game, and I’m expected to join in on Tuesday.

7-minute workout

7-minute workout

I had my 7-minute workout scheduled for 10:45 a.m., during the time that the Roblox offering was being held. It was a more challenging workout than I remember, and I tweaked my knee, but at least I was not doing it alone. It’s a daily offering so we will give it another go on Tuesday.

I had our oldest Learner show up for my 2021 visioning / resolution workshop, and we decided the best way to spend our time was to come up with goals in different categories: academic/intellectual, professional, health, relationship, and financial. We had also considered other categories such as spiritual and environmental. We discussed what makes goals helpful, and then we listed out three goals for each category. We then went back and pulled out the one goal from each category we were most intent on accomplishing, and highlighting other goals that we wanted to focus on during the year. Then we worked on making the clears more specific and putting dates on when we would like to accomplish the goals by. We circled back around to the daily tracker that the Learner and I worked on in December. The challenge will be following through on accomplishing the goals now given that New Year’s Resolutions rarely tend to stick.

Next I had my free write offering which no one showed up to, so I wrote by myself. At the same time Facilitator Lauren had a dance party offering. Facilitator Ariel and a Learner showed up for that party, and they spent it listening and dancing to some of the Learner’s favorite music. There was dancing, but it was seated dancing. We are hoping that an 8-year-old Learner who loves to dance will show up at the next one so that she can get people out of their seats.

Later in the afternoon Facilitator Ariel had an offering for Learners to grab their dogs and join him on a walk while chatting over Discord. No one showed up to that offering either. Then, at 3 p.m., all three Facilitators came together to discuss Akilah S. Richard’s Raising Free People. It is a book that we’ve handed out to all of the Abrome families (and families who have had Learners shadow), and that the book group that I lead at the local library has recently read. While all three of us have read the book, we are doing a slower read through the book and discussing it twice a week for the three weeks of this cycle. We only gave ourselves a thirty minute block to discuss the book, but it was a lively discussion and we all felt good about the amount of time that we will allocate to it this cycle.

Afternoon roundup

Afternoon roundup

At the end of the day the Learners and Facilitators came back together again for the afternoon roundup. Each of them told the group what the best part of their day was: Among Us, Minecraft, getting new nail polish, playing two rounds of Among Us, petting her pet dog, selling something on Rogue Lineage, watching the livestream of Among Us, the goal setting workshop, not feeling gross (relative to their feeling that morning), Among Us, Among Us, and no one showing up for Roblox. That last one was not exactly the best part of the day, so I asked the Learner about it. That’s when two other Learners said they did show up for it, and they explained that it was unclear how they would all be together without playing the same game. It allowed the Learner to more clearly articulate his vision for how he would like the offering to play out next time, and he was encouraged to give it another shot sometime. We then covered the offerings that were scheduled for Tuesday, and told the Learners that we looked forward to coming back together again tomorrow.