By Anusha Sambangi
STAFF WRITER
The return of student-scheduled H-Blocks has resulted in many positive responses from students. However, this year’s COVID restrictions have left some students unable to fulfill their needs during the period.
Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, meeting with multiple teachers during one H-Block has become much more difficult for students. Now, teachers should contact a student’s H-Block teacher before the students are able to get a pass to leave their classroom. This is only encouraged if movement between rooms is necessary. These new rules were implemented to make contact tracing in the school easier.
A common problem among AHS students is the inability to access the teacher they need during H-Block. Usually, this is due to their classes being full, which has a direct impact on students’ academic performance. Moving between H-Block classes is possible, but there is a certain procedure that needs to be followed.
Annie Song, AHS junior, said “[she] liked that [prior to the pandemic] we could go around to the teacher we needed to ask questions to.” Now, Song says that some of her friends have not been allowed to move as easily between rooms. Like many other students, she has to book her H-Block’s earlier since rooms fill up very fast. While these changes haven’t affected Song academically, she looks forward to returning to previous H-Block freedoms.
“I just wanna get all my homework done so I can go home and relax,” said freshman Kara Stefani. When asked about the effects of these new restrictions on H-Block, Stefani said her “grades and academic environment have been affected.” Stefani enjoys having time allotted in her day to do her schoolwork, but also often has problems finding space in the rooms of the teacher she needs.
Sophomore Jingyi Kang has been having similar problems. Kang needed to prepare for a math test recently, but her teacher’s class was already full. Due to the difficulty of moving between classes, Kang was unable to meet with her teacher. “I [was not] fully prepared,” Kang explained.
Many teachers are aware of this problem with students. Social Studies teacher Michelle Chachus said, “It’s a lot more challenging for students to move between H-Blocks. If a student need[ed] to meet with two teachers, it used to be really easy to go from one H-Block and then get a pass to go to another H-Block.”
If a student were to need help from a teacher they are not in an H-Block with, AHS Physical Science teacher Ralph Bledsoe recommends that students inform him about room changes ahead of time, so that he can write a pass for them or assign them to his class. “I can sign them up for any H-Block no matter how many students I have,” Bledsoe said. Many times, students don’t realize they need help until the H-Block has already begun.
These restrictions aren’t permanent, however. Assistant Principal Kwesi Moody said we have had a small change in this year’s H-Block “due to some of the COVID restrictions.” With the holiday season coming up, Moody and Principal Brown have become even more strict about enforcing COVID restrictions. In the future, Moody said, H-Block “will be less restricted but will have structure.”





