Listen: W.Va. Speech Pathologist Shares Her Experience Reaching Students In Time Of Coronavirus

Christine Nichols is a speech pathologist at Winfield Elementary School in Putnam County. In this audio postcard she talks about the challenges of trying to do speech therapy remotely with young kids who may not have access to the internet – even if they have caregivers who can help them. 

When Gov. Jim Justice issued a stay at home order in late March, teachers across the state rushed to set up ways to continue teaching, despite students being unable to come to the classroom.

Nichols was one of those educators.

“We made packets for all of our kids,” she said. “And we were under the gun a little bit because we only had a day to do it, and then we weren’t allowed to be back in the schools at all.”

In addition to making paper packets, Nichols and her colleagues were given other options to keep working with students, including talking by video chat and over the phone. But video chat only works if both parties have reliable internet, which can be a challenge in parts of West Virginia. The video platforms also need to comply with federal health privacy laws.

It also soon became apparent that not all students would be able to approach remote learning in the same ways.

“Some parents don’t have access to the internet, so that would make teletherapy impossible,” she said. “Some of our kids are staying with relatives that we didn’t know that they were with, or foster families — that made it difficult.”

As a speech pathologist, Nichols works with students to help them learn to better communicate. She said she often relies on visually assessing clients in order to help them, and that’s hard to do over the phone.

“Like if a child has trouble saying the ‘S’ sound, that could sound like the ‘F’ sound over the phone,” she said. “If I can’t see what that kid’s doing with their mouth, then I can’t give the feedback to say, ‘Oh, you need to put your teeth together.'”

Nichols said she also knows some parents are juggling working from home and teaching multiple kids.

“So, it’s a little bit unrealistic for me to say, ‘OK, you need to sit down with your one child for 30 minutes twice a week and do this,'” she said. “I want to be compassionate with our parents, and I want to make sure I’m not giving them something that [they] can’t handle, but I’m also trying to stay within the [Individualized Education Program] guidelines.” (IEPs are developed for each student receiving special education.)

 

She said, overall, some learning is still happening. Educators, parents and students are adapting as best they can, but the coronavirus pandemic unleashed a set of circumstances few could have imagined.

“We’re just now starting to get a handle on this and we will make it work,” she said, “but it’s just going to look really different than anything we’ve ever done.”

August 6, 1864: Sisters of the Visitation of Holy Mary Arrive in Parkersburg

  On August 6, 1864, a colony of eight Catholic nuns wound up their long treacherous wartime trek from Washington, D.C., to Parkersburg. The Sisters of the Visitation of Holy Mary established a teaching order in Parkersburg and, in 1867, founded a school for poor children. In 1900, they took possession of a new home and school located on the outskirts of Parkersburg. They named the large red-and-brick monastery DeSales Heights, in honor of St. Francis DeSales. Their former school building became home to St. Joseph’s Hospital.

For the next 75 years, the sisters ran a boarding school for young women at DeSales Heights. In its heyday, it was considered one of the finest Catholic schools for young women in the country. And in the 1970s, the sisters introduced West Virginia’s first Montessori courses. Declining enrollment eventually took its toll, and the massive school building became too costly to maintain. In 1992, DeSales Heights closed its doors, ending a nearly 130-year run in one form or another. The building was put up for sale. After vandalism and a fire, the DeSales Heights building was demolished in 2002.

Six W.Va. Stories to Watch in 2017

Front Porch hosts Scott Finn, Laurie Lin, and Rick Wilson tell us which stories they’ll be following in 2017:

1. The fate of the Affordable Care Act. “Are they gonna throw 225,000 West Virginians under the bus? I hope they don’t just get rid of something without replacing it,” Wilson said.

2. Charter schools. West Virginia is one of only a handful of states not to allow privately-run charter schools, but Lin says that’s likely to change this year. “It’s been tried many, many times. The teacher unions have been so adamantly against it, it hasn’t gotten done. I think this could be the year,” she said.

3. The backlash against “fake news.” Finn said, “Now you’re seeing a really interesting trend where the Washington Post is hiring new reporters…the New York Times is expanding. Every time Trump tweets attacking a media outlet, the media outlet has a whole bunch of new subscribers.”

“I think its been a real awakening for folks – the need for fact-based journalism,” he said.

4. New awareness of white, working class voters. West Virginia is largely white and working class, Lin noted. “That can’t be a bad thing, to have the nation and media focused on people like West Virginians,” Lin said, as well as the Democratic party, which Lin said had largely written this group off.

5. Economic alternatives in the coalfields, Wilson said, with projects by groups like the Coalfields Development Corporation – especially in agriculture and tourism.

6. The end of the War on Coal rhetoric. With a new Trump administration, Finn predicted a decline in this sort of talk. “It allows people to start having better conversations about how we have to diversify,” he said.

“The Front Porch” is a place where we tackle the tough issues facing West Virginia and Appalachia with some of the region’s most interesting thinkers.

WVPB Executive Director Scott Finn serves as host and provocateur, joined by Laurie Lin, a conservative lawyer and columnist, and Rick Wilson, a liberal columnist and avid goat herder who works for the American Friends Service Committee.

Subscribe to “The Front Porch” podcast on iTunes or however you listen to podcasts.

An edited version of “The Front Porch” airs Fridays at 4:50 p.m. on West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s radio network, and the full version is available above.

Share your opinions with us about these issues, and let us know what you’d like us to discuss in the future. Send a tweet to @radiofinn or @wvpublicnews, or e-mail Scott at sfinn @ wvpublic.org

The Front Porch is underwritten by The Charleston Gazette Mail, providing both sides of the story on its two editorial pages. Check it out: http://www.wvgazettemail.com/

Senator Capito on What Trump Means for Miners, Health Insurance, Broadband, and More

This week on the Front Porch, U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito gives her take on what the new Trump administration means for West Virginia.

We discuss recent resurgence of black lung among coal miners, what comes after the promised repeal of the Affordable Care Act, what can be done to build rural broadband networks, and more.

“The Front Porch” is a place where we tackle the tough issues facing West Virginia and Appalachia with some of the region’s most interesting thinkers.

WVPB Executive Director Scott Finn serves as host and provocateur, joined by Laurie Lin, a conservative lawyer and columnist, and Rick Wilson, a liberal columnist and avid goat herder who works for the American Friends Service Committee.

Subscribe to “The Front Porch” podcast on iTunes or however you listen to podcasts.

An edited version of “The Front Porch” airs Fridays at 4:50 p.m. on West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s radio network, and the full version is available above.

Share your opinions with us about these issues, and let us know what you’d like us to discuss in the future. Send a tweet to @radiofinn or @wvpublicnews, or e-mail Scott at sfinn @ wvpublic.org

The Front Porch is underwritten by The Charleston Gazette Mail, providing both sides of the story on its two editorial pages. Check it out: http://www.wvgazettemail.com/

Growing up Arab American in West Virginia with Sharif Youssef

This week Scott, Laurie, and Rick are joined by guest Sharif Youssef. Youssef is the child of an Egyptian immigrant who grew up in the town of West Liberty, West Virginia, who now works as a producer on the popular podcast “99% Invisible” in the San Francisco Bay area.

Youssef’s recent Facebook post on the election of Donald Trump has gained popularity and been shared across the internet. In it, he describes the discrimination he faced both as a person of Middle Eastern descent growing up in Appalachia and as an Appalachian in more liberal and often more elite Ivy League and coastal communities. The post attempts to explain to Trump’s opponents why areas like West Virginia voted for him, and to his supporters why his election has so many people afraid of what comes next.

His post can be found at https://www.facebook.com/egyptianman/posts/10211152474391534

Content Warning: Both the post and the podcast contain language some audiences my find objectionable

“The Front Porch” is a place where we tackle the tough issues facing West Virginia and Appalachia with some of the region’s most interesting thinkers.

WVPB Executive Director Scott Finn serves as host and provocateur, joined by Laurie Lin, a conservative lawyer and columnist, and Rick Wilson, a liberal columnist and avid goat herder who works for the American Friends Service Committee .

Subscribe to “The Front Porch” podcast on iTunes or however you listen to podcasts.

An edited version of “The Front Porch” airs Fridays at 4:50 p.m. on West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s radio network, and the full version is available above.

Share your opinions with us about these issues, and let us know what you’d like us to discuss in the future. Send a tweet to @radiofinn or @wvpublicnews, or e-mail Scott at sfinn @ wvpublic.org

The Front Porch is underwritten by The Charleston Gazette Mail, providing both sides of the story on its two editorial pages. Check it out: http://www.wvgazettemail.com/

Can Trump, Justice Keep Their Promises to West Virginia?

Jim Justice and Donald Trump both won big in West Virginia, and now it’s time to get down to the real challenge of governing.

With Congress on his side, will Trump be able to repeal Obamacare? And what will that mean to the approximately 200,000 West Virginians who receive insurance through the program? 

Even with both houses of Congress on his side, will Donald Trump’s plans to return American manufacturing to its former glory really work?

How will Governor-elect Justice deal with a legislature controlled by the GOP?

Scott Finn, Rick Wilson, and Laurie Lin debate these questions and more on this post-election edition of the Front Porch.

Also on the podcast: the politics of division, the ethics of the Electoral College, and a Buddhist parable from Rick.

The Front Porch” is a place where we tackle the tough issues facing West Virginia and Appalachia with some of the region’s most interesting thinkers.

WVPB Executive Director Scott Finn serves as host and provocateur, joined by Laurie Lin, a conservative lawyer and columnist, and Rick Wilson, a liberal columnist and avid goat herder who works for the American Friends Service Committee .

Subscribe to “The Front Porch” podcast on iTunes or however you listen to podcasts.

An edited version of “The Front Porch” airs Fridays at 4:50 p.m. on West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s radio network, and the full version is available above.

Share your opinions with us about these issues, and let us know what you’d like us to discuss in the future. Send a tweet to @radiofinn or @wvpublicnews, or e-mail Scott at sfinn @ wvpublic.org

The Front Porch is underwritten by The Charleston Gazette Mail, providing both sides of the story on its two editorial pages. Check it out: http://www.wvgazettemail.com/

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