The County Chronicle

The online newspaper of Loudoun County High School

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Theater department transforms online challenges into unique opportunity

Liberty Harrison | staff writer

As distance learning continues, all LCHS classes have been affected, but many elective courses have faced unique challenges because of the content of their courses’. One such elective is Drama class, which has dealt not only with the problem of transitioning to online classes but also the retirement of the LCHS theater art teacher of 42 years.

These pictures feature a sculpture entitled “regret” made by Sophia Hylton for a technical theater project. Even as learning has had to be transferred to a virtual setting students have been able to work physically with props and materials they have access to at home.

Drama students and William Staggs, the new drama department teacher, agree that technology can lead to difficulties during class.

“There are many differences because of online learning,” said sophomore and Drama II student Kathryn Blackwood. “Our warmups feel a little more awkward happening in front of our families, and the physical space that we’re working in is different.”

“We definitely aren’t able to be as physical as last year, and it’s kind of awkward doing a two-person scene when you’re the only one in the room and looking at a camera,” said junior Sophia Hylton, Technical Theater II student, and assistant director and stage manager for the first play of the year.

Online learning may also affect new theater students more significantly than experienced ones.

“Since I’ve been doing drama for so long it’s muscle memory to me, but I can imagine being a new student in the department and feeling absolutely lost,” Hylton said.  “There’s definitely a lot to learn, and in this case the best way to learn it is in person. You can mimic what you see and listen to directions, but without being there you miss a lot of the process that goes into learning how to act.”

Not only does the virtual setting put up barriers for interactions, but it also can malfunction, disrupting communication.

“When Schoology or Google isn’t cooperating, we have to get creative,” said Staggs. “On the flip side, theatre is an active class and, as such, the virtual environment makes that somewhat difficult.”

The way students take part in class has also been affected by the online setting.

Staggs admits that the county’s prohibition on requiring that students use their camera can cause some problems. “It does, particularly in theatre,” he said, noting that most students in his classes keep their cameras on and engage. “I think they participate ‘differently.’ The virtual environment calls for different types of participation.”

Hylton misses using the tools available at school, as well as the ability to build physical sets. However, even with new problems created in an online environment, students agree that they are still enjoying drama class, and even enjoy some of the challenges online learning presents.

“I’ve enjoyed how creative we have had to be to get the message across, like using props around the house and pushing your limits physically to catch audience attention,” Hylton said. “As for tech, I’ve learned so much about the world of online tools to help tech theater people like me.” “I’m glad I got to see this part of theater from a different perspective.”

Although prevented from doing certain activities, everyday theater classes have found ways around the challenges presented by online learning.

“In a normal drama class we all get on Google Meet and turn our cameras on since acting is physical and vocal,” Blackwood said. “We do a warmup question to get creativity flowing and also an actor’s warm up, which involves physical movement, vocal warmup, and mental preparedness. Then we go into whatever activity we are currently doing.”

“In theater we really jumped right into things again right away, with a few little projects like a group commercial and some two person scenes with a vague prompt, similar to what you would see during an in-person theater class,” Hylton said.

Drama class has already covered several topics through online learning, including general improvisation activities, Shakespearean monologues, and open-ended dialogues, while technical theater has worked on safety protocols, elements of design, and sculpture creation.

Both Drama and Technical Theater classes have incorporated a variety of online resources to aid in transferring in-person classroom activities to a virtual setting.

“Right before this interview I had to design a small stage environment on some modeling software that will be presented in class,” Hylton said. “…We’re about to turn some of our virtual designs into augmented reality so that we can project them on things like a hologram when we can finally get into hybrid learning again.”

Drama class has found ways to create a virtual theatrical production, an original mashup of Edgar Allan Poe’s works, allowing students the opportunity to practice their skills.

“We started off with an idea,” Hylton said. “Since all of our officers really love Edgar Allan Poe, we have been wanting to do something with his works for a very long time.

The drama officers then brought this idea to Staggs, who found a script for the play, entitled “Midnight Dreary,” written by one of his theater associates. Since then auditions, callbacks, and the creation of a cast list have been finished.

After confirming the cast list contained several drama officers, students who assist in the running of the drama department, the director and assistant director decided to modify the script, by adding several other of Poe’s works to produce a unique play.

“Staggs and I decided to make this an opportunity for us to all work together to create a story,” Hylton said.

Given the original creation and adapted content, the play will have a multifaceted atmosphere.

“It will be a little scary– Poe’s work is scary!– but it will be fun,” Staggs said.

The play will be created by different actors, filming separate parts of the play which will then be edited together. This method of production will maintain county safety protocols while allowing for multiple people to participate together in the production.

“We have no choice but to record the performance and post it online, but if the county agrees we might be able to have in-person rehearsals with some of our smaller groups,” Hylton said.

The virtual play is already underway, with auditions completed and students having received their roles, but a date for the release of the production has not yet been set.

Blackwood, who auditioned for the play earlier this month, confirmed she was chosen to participate.

Although technological issues have already been dealt with in rehearsals and new issues may arise with this novel method of production, the play’s participants are confident that they will be able to work around them.

“I don’t think there should be too many issues since we have some pretty smart people in the tech crew,” Blackwood said.

“We have been using Google Meets for the rehearsals so far, and there’s always an issue with lag or delay, and of course bad wifi,” Hylton said. “Cameras freeze, audio cuts out, whatever you think could go wrong already has. We’ve all been really patient during this time, and decided to take things slowly.”

The theater department will be charging money to watch the production, using a digital payment method.

This picture, taken by A. J. Jelonek, former LCHS student, shows the LCHS auditorium’s empty seating. Because of social distancing protocols, in person viewings of plays aren’t possible at this time. The theater department has found a way around this by working to create a recording of a play, viewable online.

“We haven’t decided what the fee will be, but it will be minimal,” Staggs said.

As the year has progressed, much of the theater department have looked at this adapted form of class as a learning experience.

“This has possibly only taught us something more about acting though, because now we have experience working around situations and finding creative solutions,” Blackwood said.

Although many miss in-person classes, and do feel some anxiety about the uncertain duration of the distance learning environment, mostly they have continued to enjoy the online theater department experience.

“I believe it will get boring and repetitive, but theater students tend to be really good at staying engaged and working hard,” Hylton said. “After all, we have a passion for it and work together to come up with new ideas and ways to stay interested. Although we all are itching to go back, I believe that together as a group we can last in this kind of learning for at least a little while. As long as we have the promise of going back, we can keep our hopes up.”

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Students intrude on Google Meets, disrupt classes with vulgarities

Liberty Harrison | staff writer

As online school progresses new problems arise, and with them new solutions.

One of these problems, experienced with the use of Google Meets, is live class bombings, hackings, or interruptions, which primarily took place during the first weeks of the school year. This phenomenon happens either when a student gets into a class they aren’t a member of or decides to disrupt their own class. These disruptions include a wide variety of activities, some of which include presenting images or videos against school policies and without teacher permission, playing audio, often at high volume, that go against school policy and without teacher permission, and the students themselves using vulgarities, or slurs against minorities.

Unfortunately, this phenomenon has happened multiple times at LCHS, with many students experiencing these interruptions.

Sophomore Carlos Escobar experienced an incident he estimates to have lasted between one and two minutes. “There was a random person that came into the classroom saying something around the lines of ‘what’s up guys’,” he said. “However, a few seconds later music was being blasted through the speakers making it impossible to hear anything.”

Sophomore Laysha Ricci experienced a different type of interruption.

The interruption took place during the middle of class. “The teacher had stopped talking,” Ricci said. “One guy turned on their mic. He just started to make random noises which in the moment were funny, but soon became annoying.” Ricci’s teacher asked the student to stop talking, but someone else joined in instead, according to Ricci.

The “Broken Window Syndrome” is applicable to this situation – one student in class creating a disruption can trigger another student to join in.

Some students may also be inspired by internet celebrities to engage in ‘bombing’ Google Meets.

Google Meet screen

A hypothetical example shows that teachers can now allow or deny entry by uninvited Google accounts into a class session. As users of Google Meets’ beta version, Loudoun County Public Schools helps provide feedback and experience improvements, such as the improved controls, in the meeting tool over time. has improved user controls in their beta version.o

“In reality, this is more of a laughing joke, due to the fact that big internet stars have done this before, where the students give out the code for these meets and then you see the event unfold,” Escobar said.

According to the New York Times, videos and live streams of harassment in Zoom meetings, a platform similar to Google Meets, are appearing in rising numbers on sites like YouTube and Twitch. One popular YouTuber streamed himself bombing these meets for 6 hours, and a video about crashing college classes gained over 4.2 million views.

Another facet of this problem is that students from all over the county can get into LCHS Google Meets.

“These two guys didn’t go to LCHS, I actually knew them because I used to go to their school,” Ricci said.

However, the LCHS administration has protocols in place to deal with this situation.

“We have been in touch with administrators from across the county to communicate a disruption from students outside of our school,” said Katie Post, assistant principal. “We can easily find what school they attend and then we send videos to the administration so they can take the appropriate steps. Other schools have done the same for us as well if an LCHS student has caused a disruption in their classes.”

Ricci’s experience at the start of the year also shows that the learning curve for teachers caused by the use of new technology and programs can exacerbate the issue.

“The teacher soon became annoyed and tried to block them,” Ricci said. “In his attempts to do so, he blocked an actual student who didn’t do anything, by accident.”

Other teachers take a different approach to solving the issue, especially for shorter interruptions.

“She just addressed that we need to be more courteous and have more respect for the classroom environment,” Escobar said on how his teacher responded to the situation.

These Google Meet interruptions can last any amount of time, but sometimes the effect of the disruption can last longer than the actual event.

“The class was disturbed for probably, I think, maybe fifteen minutes because they just added comments and made noises,” Ricci said. “I feel like this just affected how the whole rest of class went since the kid who got kicked out was very confused and the teacher wasn’t very happy about the outbursts.”

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Administration expresses leniency during quarter one due to distance learning

Michaela Scott, Editor-in-Chief

“There is a lot that happens with facial expressions,” said Assistant Principal Katie Post. “Reading the room becomes a whole lot harder when you can’t see people, because faces say so much.” The administration at County has been continuously working this past quarter in hopes of bringing LCHS students a school year that isn’t too altered because of the global pandemic; however, several issues involving the process, like tardies, connectivity, and assignment errors have been brought into question.

The most commonly occurring problem facing distance learners and educators is wavering connectivity. Connection errors are an inevitable part of any virtual platform, but administrators are working with the school board and are gradually figuring out ways to have Phoenix and Schoology working more efficiently for the school users all across the county.

Assistant principal Mark Patterson acknowledged that programs will inevitably have issues, so there is some leniency compared to issues such as tardies during a normal school year. “I’ve had several issues logging into Schoology, sometimes I am late because the platform crashes, but the staff is most accommodating and very understanding of technology errors,” said junior Nina Segura.

Administration officials are encouraging the staff and students to balance some of the confusion. Difficulties, especially relating to attendance, has become a more serious concern because it is state mandated. School administration has slightly eased back on tardy regulations and are addressing them with respect to distance learning disturbances, and accepting student emails explaining the lateness.

“Students may not always make it to class on time, and if it happens we are going to treat it lightly,” said Patterson. “We must hear from a parent sometime that day to confirm the absence, but we’re not trying to come after you.”

Another concern that has been increasingly mentioned with students during the past few months is the rising confusion of where assignments are placed on virtual platforms, like Schoology. Many students are unaware of where tasks are placed in the online classroom because they don’t know all the features of the website, leading to missed assignments and forgotten due dates. High school students are expected to adapt to the new learning environment, and understand exactly how a program works, but school officials aren’t providing students with that specific information.

Schoology error message

The image shows the infamous error message on distance learning platform, Schoology, which has been a primary issue for LCPS. Many students and teachers log on to DL at the same times; therefore, it isn’t uncommon for technology to crash or be unable to load.

“Although every teacher and student is learning as we go through, several tutorials and connectED links were released through email to County families prior to the beginning of the school year,” said Principal Michelle Luttrell. “But, a training session will most likely not cover everything you’re going to need to know about an online learning website.”

LCHS administration emphasizes the importance of patience and limiting frustration because of the online inconveniences, but many students like sophomore Sofie Steel started off the year already distraught. “My parents forwarded me a training clip sent by the admin and I thought it would take the first day jitters off my plate, but the video just left me with more anxiety and more questions about Schoology,” said Steel. “Honestly, it wasn’t the most beneficial tool.”

A final complication students have expressed throughout the time of this experience involves use of cameras. Whether it’s teachers politely asking students to participate for regular classroom function, or in order to ensure integrity on exams, cameras can be beneficial, yet the public schools administration has no final authorization on this requirement; furthermore, teachers feel like the camera option is leading to reduced schoolroom engagement because of minimal participation, and silence during lessons.

“Even though teachers feel like they’re speaking to icons, rather than people, it’s still a division level issue due to the vision council, not our school admin,” Luttrell said on October 2. “Cameras have been a persistent topic of discussion recently, but our school has no permission to enforce that kids put on their cameras because there are many good reasons why someone doesn’t have it on.”

Additionally, the school administration wants to express that the learning setting is certainly altered, “There is not a way to perfect the virtual environment, so we have to learn to adjust,” said Luttrell. Teachers are stepping up to create lessons and study tools in ways they’ve never completed before, making it a different place for everyone together.

“Teachers, administrators, and students are all in a weird situation,” said Post. “Comprehending and learning is just slower when it involves a screen, and that is the barrier we’re facing. It’s difficult, but we’re all showing up everyday to support you.”

Despite the connectivity errors that occur, LCHS administrators have been quickly addressing the disruptions and the majority of the complications that have taken place throughout the span of the first quarter. Although some tools which produce an ideal form of learning are missing, the school community as a whole is positively contributing to the overall outcome and greater good of the 20-21 school year.

“It’s hard being in school alone, it’s hard not seeing your faces, we miss your faces, and we miss you,” Luttrell said. “It is easy to feel self-defeated, but we’re all in this together, giving each other grace, and we are all making the best of it.”

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