In early March, Ezra Harvey sat in his sunny classroom at Roland Park Elementary/ Middle School surrounded by his kindergarten comrades in their matching navy tops and khaki bottoms. But just a few weeks later, Ezra walked down the halls of his neighborhood school—past teachers and colorful artwork—for the last time.
Today, Ezra attends school in his garage. It’s a cold November day, and the now first-grader, dressed in skull jammies (he wears pajamas every day, his sister confides), is doing his morning lesson with his mom, Katie Gill-Harvey, inside the toasty (thanks to a fancy space heater) structure behind his Roland Park house and next to the half-pipe his sister built with his dad. His mom once used this space for her online crayon business, A Childhood Store, and there are still splatters of colorful wax remnant on the floor. Now, the shelves are stacked with books and games and big binders full of finished assignments, and a whiteboard covered in a math lesson sits in the corner. There’s a number line taped to the floor that Ezra will use later to jump back and forth for subtraction and addition problems. It's still school, but different.
Ten months after the pandemic first closed school doors, families have all experienced some sort of destabilizing disruption—from going all virtual to venturing nervously back to school, masks firmly in place, to some mix of the two. This fall, 35 of the nation’s 50 largest school districts opted to educate students remotely, according to Education Next, a peer-reviewed journal, and that included Ezra’s school district—Baltimore City.
Denne historien er fra January 2021-utgaven av Baltimore magazine.
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Denne historien er fra January 2021-utgaven av Baltimore magazine.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
Man With a Plan
The eternal optimism of Thibault Manekin.
SHOWER POWER
Locals let rain gardens soak up the storm.
THE SOFA QUEEN
Stuffed & Tufted’s Samantha Kuczynski relishes being the new face of upholstery.
The Starting Gate
At long last, plans are underway for a new “Home of the Preakness.”
CLEANING UP CITY HALL
Baltimore is the second most corrupt federal jurisdiction in the country. Can a city with our history be reformed?
THE HOMECOMING
For one family, it was time to start living in their house, not just existing there.
SUGAR RUSH
Baltimore gets a fresh batch of home-grown bakeries——and the line forms here.
GAMECHANGER SANDRA GIBSON
Executive Director, SNF Parkway Theatre & Maryland Film Festival
FROM THE GROUND UP
A new build gives a couple a house that finally feels like them.
AFTER GLOW
KEY HIGHWAY