Carroll ISD Rejects Option for Home Schoolers to Participate in Sports and Other UIL Events

Carroll Independent School District, the majority of which lies in Southlake in North Texas, declined to welcome home-educated students to participate in University Interscholastic League (UIL) events.

The board vote on Monday, December 13, was 4-3, with the three newest members expressing more support for welcoming home schoolers and voting against the motion.

Assistant superintendent Gordon Butler presented four options to the board: 1) full implementation next academic year; 2) open some extracurriculars in spring 2022; 3) open middle school participation in 2022-23 as a pilot program; 4) do not participate.

In the regular legislative session, House Bill 547 passed with sponsors and votes from members of both parties. It allows home school students to participate in UIL activities, but the school district must first opt-in.

So far, 21 school districts across the state have opted in. They include small districts like Fate and Meridian to large districts like Weatherford and Abilene. However, Carroll ISD, which promotes itself as a leading school district that “fosters excellence,” will not join this group.

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Southlake resident Elizabeth Huffman educates her three children at home and spoke at the meeting in favor of allowing home school participation. She was frustrated by the outcome.

“It is an uphill battle we have to fight. I thought through COVID maybe we had overcome some of these stereotypes, but apparently not. Carroll chose not to be forward thinking and set the standard of excellence,” Huffman told The Texan.

“The objections [at the meeting] seemed to be about academic rigor not the legislative right to participate,” she said. “Personally, I have three students who can read and write Latin, and my freshman has a 94 average in her dual credit Spanish class at Dallas Baptist University.”

According to the bill’s provisions, before being allowed to participate in UIL events, a home school student would have to score at or above grade level on a nationally-normed achievement test every two years, Texas Home School Coalition (THSC) president Tim Lambert said in an interview with The Texan.

In order for a public school student to participate in UIL events, he or she must show advancement one of two ways, either through successful completion of course work or by passing the Texas STAAR tests. 

Carroll ISD school board member Todd Carlton stated that “the ongoing academic rigors [of Carroll] are as high as any in the nation.”

“It is difficult to tell the rigor of home schools,” he said, adding that Carroll students earn the privilege of UIL participation by “enduring the academic rigors.”

“What about C-students who barely passed but can throw the ball?” Huffman mused about the implication by Carlton that all Carroll students are thriving academically.

CISD board member Hannah Smith also pushed back, asking Carlton what the consequences of his concerns were. “So what? You believe it is unfair? The legislature already balanced those concerns,” she said.

Nationally, home-schooled students score 15 to 30 percentile points above the average public school student, according to the National Home Education Research Institute.

Colleges, like Amherst, often welcome home-schooled students as “innovative thinkers with a lot to bring to the table,” NBC News reported.

Mary Ochranek has lived in Southlake for 21 years. Her 19-year-old daughter, who was homeschooled, now attends TCU with a full tuition scholarship.

“She entered TCU with 42 credits and now has two majors, music and psychology. And through her experiences she has found many students at college who aren’t ready to be there,” she told The Texan

School districts were not given much guidance by UIL about what to require of home school students so they must develop their own policies, Butler said during his presentation to the school board.

He said that the “no pass, no play” requirement would apply to home school students as it does to public school students, adding that the home school families he met with were very collegial and willing to adjust to meet the standard. However, the coaches were more reticent, especially about missteps on required paperwork.

Huffman said they are willing to submit to an academic evaluation by a private tutor or show their syllabus and quarterly reports for the work completed in their home education setting.

Another concern raised by Carroll ISD school board member Michelle Moore was that allowing even a pilot program for UIL involvement would “open the door” and “could have unintended consequences.”

Board president Eric Lannen raised similar concerns about large numbers in the future and possible funding issues.

Recently elected board member Andrew Yeager pointed out that home school families already pay property taxes in Carroll ISD. “It’s not like they receive a rebate for homeschooling,” he said.

So far, 33 states have adopted similar measures about home school participation in UIL, Lambert said, and none have reported these problems. “This fear is just not founded on a basis in fact,” he added.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, about three percent of families home schooled their children before COVID-19, but that has grown to over 12 percent now.

Huffman, who was part of focus groups about home school participation in Carroll ISD, said six families attended the meetings she participated in and that would represent 23 children. She speculated that not every student will choose the same activity to participate in so it may add one student per UIL event.

Huffman said her son would like to try out for baseball and her youngest daughter enjoys softball. But other families might choose fine arts or debate.

Her children have played Dragon sports as children and would like to continue as they grow older. “We cheer for the Dragons, support the Carroll Education Foundation, and of course pay our tax dollars, which we are happy to do. But I don’t feel like they are supporting us.” 

“If you look at the history of the UIL, it was started in 1913 as a debating society and was open to all white students in Texas to give them an opportunity to become better citizens,” Lambert explained. It wasn’t integrated until the late 1960s.

Lambert believes the UIL should return to its purpose of being a program for all Texas students to help make them well-rounded citizens.

“Most of the comments [at the board meeting] had nothing to do with UIL or its purpose. I heard so much ignorance and little desire to learn more about home schooling,” Ochranek said. “I really wish the discussion had been about implementation and inclusion.”

At South Dakota hockey game, teachers competed to grab cash : NPR

$1 bills
$1 bills

Schoolteachers grabbed at dollar bills in a “dash for cash” during intermission at a hockey game in South Dakota, sparking controversy for turning teachers’ need to pay for classroom supplies into a public spectacle.

“As a teacher, I find this humiliating,” a commenter wrote after video of the event was posted to Twitter. “Scrambling against others on the ground for a few $1 bills? How about honoring teachers with genuine donations rather than turning us into silly entertainment for fans?”

The Sioux Falls Stampede hockey team had urged fans not to miss Saturday’s contest, which it promoted as its inaugural “Dash for Cash.” With fans cheering them on, 10 teachers from local schools gathered around a large piece of carpet at center ice, where $5,000 in $1 bills had just been dumped out.

The event highlighted South Dakota’s low teacher pay

The educators wore hockey helmets, but they made little contact with each other as they dropped to their knees to scoop up money and stuff it into their shirts and pockets.

Video of the event went viral over the weekend after reporter Annie Todd of the Sioux Falls Argus Leader posted it on Twitter.

The hockey team did not immediately respond to a request for comment from NPR.

South Dakota ranks toward the bottom in terms of spending on education. The average salary for teachers in the state is $48,984 — 50th in the U.S. (in a list that includes Washington, D.C.) — according to the National Education Association union, which says the state spends $10,805 per student — 38th in the nation.

One critic of the dash for cash promotion called it “dystopian,” noting that while schools and teachers struggle, the U.S. House of Representatives just approved a new U.S. military bill worth $768 billion. The defense authorization bill includes money for two more destroyers than the Biden administration requested.

The teachers went for the money, not at each other

The Stampede, a junior league team whose players are 16-20 years old, said all the money the teachers could grab would be used for their own classrooms or school programs.

As for the teachers who took part in the promotion, it might not come as a surprise that they gamely tolerated the hoopla, while focusing on what they can do for their students. When the dash ended, they smiled and waved to the crowd, their shirts bulging with cash.

“I think it’s really cool when the community offers an opportunity like this” to pay for things that usually come out of a teacher’s own pocket, said Alexandria Kuyper, who teaches fifth-graders, in an interview with the Argus Leader.

Kuyper came away with $592, one of the highest totals, according to the newspaper. The smallest hauls were just under $380. Money for the contest was donated by home lender CU Mortgage Direct.

The sponsor said it saw the dash as a way to help educators, noting the additional stresses brought on by the pandemic.

“The teachers in this area, and any teacher, they deserve whatever the heck they get,” Ryan Knudson, CU Mortgage Direct’s director of business development and marketing, told the Argus Leader.

The Stampede also put $5,000 up for grabs at Sunday’s home game, pitting two fans against one another in a shootout on the ice.

South Dakota is looking to boost teacher pay

Last week, Gov. Kristi Noem proposed a 6{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} increase in state aid for public education, a move that the state’s teachers union welcomed.

The money should go directly to teachers and staff, Noem said, citing the challenges they face and the need to compete in a tight hiring market. But the South Dakota Education Association also notes that if state lawmakers approve the increase in their upcoming session, it will still be up to school districts to choose where and how to use the additional funds.

South Dakota’s public school system receives nearly 14{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of its revenue from the federal government — one of the highest percentages in the country, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Cudahy School Board OKs closure of one of its elementary schools

A proposal to close Cudahy Middle School and send seventh and eighth grade students to Cudahy High School failed by a 4-3 vote at the Cudahy School Board's Dec. 13 meeting.

The Cudahy School Board has voted to close one of its elementary schools and send those students to another elementary school while three other merger proposals have failed.

At its Dec. 13 meeting, the board voted unanimously to close Park View Elementary at the end of the 2021-22 school year and send Park View students and staff to General Mitchell Elementary and reduce overall staffing within the district. 

A proposal that would have closed Kosciuszko Elementary at the end of the 2021-22 school year and sent students and staff from that school to J.E. Jones Elementary and Lincoln Elementary, as well as to reduce staff, failed by a 4-3 margin. Board members Linda Kutka, Dennis Carney, Joan Haske and Michael Johnson voted against the proposal while board members Laurie Ozbolt, Chris Galewski and Rhonda Riccio voted for it.

Pandemic and racism in eductation lead more Black families to homeschooling : NPR

Yalonda Chandler homeschools her children, Madison and Matthew. She co-founded Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham, in Alabama, and has seen the organization grow since the pandemic began.

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Yalonda Chandler homeschools her children, Madison and Matthew. She co-founded Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham, in Alabama, and has seen the organization grow since the pandemic began.

Kyra Miles/WBHM

It’s a common perception that white, evangelical families are the most likely to homeschool their children. But a growing number of Black families have started teaching their kids at home — especially during the pandemic. The Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey found that in April 2020, 3{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of Black households homeschooled their children, and by October 2020 it was up to 16{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf}.

Those numbers may not be completely accurate, the Bureau noted, because a lot of children were learning at home in 2020. So part way through the survey period, the homeschooling question was expdanded to clarify that homeschoolers did not include children enrolled in public or private school. Even so, the numbers signal a significant increase.

Joyce Burges, founder of National Black Home Educators, said that since 2020, thousands of families have joined her organization.

“I think you’re going to see more and more parents, Black parents, homeschooling their children like never before,” Burges said.

“COVID was the catalyst”

Didakeje Griffin in Birmingham, Ala., is one of them. When she and her husband realized their kids wouldn’t be going back to public school in March 2020, they knew they had to make a change.

“It was like a light bulb moment,” Griffin said. “Ultimately, what I realized is that the pandemic just gave us an opportunity to do what we needed to do anyway, which is homeschooling.”

The mother of two said she’d always coached her kids at home to keep them on track. But three things made her decide to officially start homeschooling. First, she wanted her children to be safe from bullies. She also wanted them to understand their cultural history. The third factor was freedom.

“I want to have time to cultivate my children’s African-American, their Nigerian history and culture in them first, before anybody tries to tell them who they are,” Griffin said. COVID was the catalyst, “but it has not been the reason that we kept going.”

The Griffins celebrate Juneteenth more than July Fourth. They have discussions about the Black Lives Matter movement and talk about critical race theory with their children, ages 11 and 8. Griffin sees homeschooling as a way to protect her children.

“I don’t want my kids to be subjected to racism in certain ways so early,” she said.

Homeschooling as activism

In Black households, homeschooling can be its own unique form of activism and resistance.

“The history that’s taught is that we’ve tried through Brown v. Board of Ed to get access to schools, and schools are integrated,” said Cheryl Fields-Smith, a professor at the University of Georgia who studies Black homeschooling and its cultural significance.

“And that’s true,” she added. “But we’ve also always been self-taught.”

Fields-Smith said homeschooling is a way to combat educational racism, which comes in many forms.

“We all know that there are structures and policies and practices within our traditional schools that can be damaging to students of color, Black students in particular,” she said.

School discipline is one of them. Data from a 2014 study by the U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights showed that Black students were suspended at three times the rate of white students, and were more likely to be reprimanded. A 2015 study from the Association for Psychological Science found that Black students are more likely to be labeled “troublemakers” by teachers.

These statistics can make parents and caretakers of Black children distrust the education system. In the last couple years a number of states have moved to add more Black history into their lesson plans. Still, earlier this year, Alabama and a handful of other states banned critical race theory in K-12 classrooms, even though it’s an academic theory of structural racism that is largely taught at the university level.

“This idea of white supremacy and the inferiority of Black people lingers today,” Fields-Smith said. “We are overcoming racism through homeschooling. I don’t think white people can say that.”

A growing community

Some families are also creating community through homeschooling.

In Alabama, Alfrea Moore said homeschooling her children for the last three years has given them the freedom to ask questions and learn without a strict curriculum. It’s also allowed them to connect with their culture.

“The thing about homeschooling in the South as a Black family that I’m finding is that there are a lot more of us than we actually know of,” Moore said.

“When we moved to get my kids to interact with other kids, there are networks of homeschoolers and Black homeschoolers in not just this part of Alabama where we live, but all over.”

Carleigh and Alexander Duckworth get some play time as part of their homeschooling day. Their mother, Jennifer Duckworth, is a co-founder of Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham.

Kyra Miles/WBHM


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Carleigh and Alexander Duckworth get some play time as part of their homeschooling day. Their mother, Jennifer Duckworth, is a co-founder of Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham.

Kyra Miles/WBHM

Jennifer Duckworth and Yalonda Chandler co-founded the Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham three years ago so more homeschooling families of color could find and support each other.

Duckworth said she started homeschooling because she was concerned that if her son were in public school, he would start to withdraw.

“My son, being a young Black boy with positive self-esteem about himself, can sometimes be threatening, for lack of a better word, to some teachers,” Duckworth said. “They’ll create an identity for the Black and brown children that they don’t even realize they’re doing.”

Duckworth said the Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham has created a community where children don’t feel different because of their race.

Her 10-year-old son, Alexander, agrees. “It just feels great to be around kids like me so you don’t always have to be alone, like the odd person out,” he said.

Duckworth has been homeschooling her three children for several years. They participate in a lot of the Black homeschooling group’s activities, like the debate club and field trips.

Last month the group held its first homeschooling summit. The founders said in just three years, the Black Homeschoolers of Birmingham has grown from two families to 70.

“Black families, they understand now that they don’t have to be trapped in a system that overpolices them, that marginalizes them, that makes their children feel criminalized for just being who they are,” said Chandler.

For a long time, the U.S. had barriers that made it hard for Black people to get an education, so learning and knowledge were always shared within the community.

“The African-American and African culture, we are the culture that has been homeschooling our children since the beginning,” Duckworth said. “And so I feel like it’s just in our DNA.”

Education Beyond Zoom | Twin Cities Business

When the pandemic hit in 2020, production work in the taconite mines in northeastern Minnesota slowed way down. Yet mining companies still needed to provide health and safety training to their employees. With lockdowns in place, how were they going to do that? 

Since the 1970s, this training had been provided by the miner safety and health training program through Minnesota State’s five northeastern Minnesota colleges. The federal Mining Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) mandates that all such training must be done in person. That requirement was rescinded temporarily in the spring of 2020, and courses shifted to 100 percent online. As Hibbing Community College safety and health instructor Eric Lund notes, “We’re still in that status as we speak.” 

During the pandemic, about 4,200 students have been trained. Minnesota State’s training program also has extended its reach, providing its health and safety courses to students in other states—and in Iceland and New Zealand. The program has had international trainees before, but they had to fly in for a couple of days of face-to-face sessions. Now, Lund says, “they can do that training virtually from their home countries.” 

Online education wasn’t invented in response to the pandemic. Minnesota’s colleges and universities had been offering virtual courses and degrees for several years before the coronavirus reared its ugly, spiky head. But in March 2020, Minnesota’s colleges and universities were forced to move their courses online. Nearly two years after the onset of the pandemic, schools, employers, and students have learned a lot about digital education.

Institutions of higher learning have made changes to what educators call “modalities”—the different ways education is delivered. They’re redesigning classrooms in ways that accommodate both online and in-person learning. They’re tapping new digital tools that go beyond Zoom. They’re creating more courses that are completely digital, or a blend of virtual and in person. 

That’s because students, faculty, and the schools themselves have gotten used to online education and experienced its advantages and flexibility. Even after many students—mostly undergraduates—have returned to campus, it’s unlikely that higher education will return to a pre-pandemic normal. 

Staying flexible

Like other colleges and universities, Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota shifted to completely online learning formats beginning in March 2020. Saint Mary’s traditional undergraduate campus was mostly back to class and the face-to-face format by the fall of 2021, says Andrea Carroll-Glover, vice provost for online strategy and programs. The university still offers fully online courses “to provide that flexibility to our students, and to ensure that our traditional undergraduate students are able to graduate with the technology skills that employers are looking for.” 

On the bachelor completion and graduate side, the university is continuing to explore new opportunities online. Beyond fully online programs, Saint Mary’s also is offering more hybrid undergraduate programs, which combine online and in-person time. “It has really changed quite a bit in terms of how we think about our portfolio, how we think about delivery modalities, and how we’re able to serve our students in living our mission by leveraging flexible learning models with opportunities for practical application,” Carroll-Glover says. 

Online education programs rely on platforms called learning management systems (LMS). In the fall of 2020, Saint Mary’s shifted to an LMS called Canvas. “This elevated the student experience,” Carroll-Glover says. Thanks to Canvas, the online teaching and learning experience became “mobile friendly, much more intuitive, and enhanced the faculty’s teaching experience,” she adds. For instance, faculty can use new mobile features to see when students are posting assignments or discussions. 

Building on Canvas, Saint Mary’s integrated an online recording and streaming platform called Panopto to ensure it had strong video capabilities. The university also incorporated a tool into its Canvas LMS called Ally, which helps instructors provide alternative formats to make their courses more accessible for people with disabilities. For instance, Ally can help teachers accommodate students with color blindness through the use of more visible text colors and image captioning. 

Carroll-Glover says that Saint Mary’s strong online experience has attracted many transfer students from other colleges. It also has allowed the university to extend its geographical market: More of Saint Mary’s new students live and study outside of Minnesota, some as far away as California. 

At Minnesota State University, Mankato, classrooms equipped with monitors, microphones, and speakers allow students to participate both in person and remotely.
At Minnesota State University, Mankato, classrooms equipped with monitors, microphones, and speakers allow students to participate both in person and remotely.

Upgrading virtual business courses 

Graduate-level business education programs also have adjusted their modalities for MS and MBA students. Again, many of these programs have been offered online for some time, but university business schools are incorporating what they’ve learned during the pandemic into new approaches to delivering education. 

Case in point: Deploying Zoom, the platform that became the short-hand term for pandemic communication. “We all had to learn how to use [Zoom’s] breakout rooms and the annotation tools,” says Patricia Hedberg, associate dean of the University of St. Thomas’ Opus College of Business. “We expanded our understanding of the technology and are using it deeper than we had before.” 

Hedberg says that St. Thomas invested a great deal in remote learning during the pandemic, and university faculty learned how to effectively present instruction online. “We’re seeing that pay off now—that we can offer that flexibility,” she says. 

“We want that online experience to be similar to the learning experience you’d get in person,” Hedberg says. The St. Thomas online instructional group combines pedagogy with technology, and it works with faculty to “have the right tools to accomplish the same learning outcome [virtually] and a similar type of engagement with students.” 

For instance, the group added more screens in university classrooms to allow online and in-person students to be together and interact. For such mixed classrooms, St. Thomas has added several tech enhancements. These include using a stylus “to scribble on the screen,” which shows up on the PowerPoints projected both online and in person. 

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Cover of Twin Cities Business magazine's December 2021/January 2022 issue

For faculty, Hedberg says, this means more choices. “You have more opportunities to think about what you want the outcome to be for students,” she says. “What’s the best way to share information? What’s the best way to have some kind of interaction and discussion about the information?” In other words, St. Thomas believes that online education tools and platforms can actually enhance education. Opus is now looking at technologies that would allow its students to do projects with businesses across the world.

Phil Miller, assistant dean of MBA and MS programs at the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management, notes that Carlson had been building its online capacity before the pandemic hit. “Our capabilities and our facilities have evolved to meet that changing landscape,” he says. During the pandemic, Carlson School Dean Sri Zaheer “made a commitment to make sure that students could participate whatever way they chose, as could faculty.” In the summer of 2020, Carlson made “a massive push” to make sure every classroom had a rear-mounted HD camera and ceiling mics. “At a minimum, every class can stream,” Miller says. 

 When it comes to how a hybrid course runs, Miller says “there’s a whole stack of tools that are embedded in Canvas,” an LMS that Carlson began using about five years ago. Now instructors are adding more technology to that toolbox. 

Miller, for instance, teaches a problem-solving class at the MBA level that includes collaborative projects. To enable the professor and students to interact virtually, he began using a platform called FeedbackFruits, which allows participants to “cross-comment” on projects online. “It very easily allows me to structure that whole engagement so that you can post your deliverable and I can comment,” Miller says. Tools like FeedbackFruits have become an important part of delivering virtual education, he says.

The lessons of the pandemic also have influenced the way the Carlson School offers its non-degree leadership programs for business executives. Nora Anderson, executive director for executive education, introduced completely online leadership courses with the arrival of the coronavirus.

Carlson has created a new kind of online program. Instead of participants meeting on Zoom for four days straight, it extended the program across six months with regular two-hour online sessions. “We had leaders from Europe, Asia, and the U.S. all going through this learning experience together,” she adds. The Carlson School is now launching a second cohort of this program. 

“I’d venture to say that we would not have designed the program this way before the pandemic,” Anderson says. 

‘Hyflex’ higher education

This past summer, the Carlson School introduced what Miller characterizes as “the next evolution,” called hybrid flexible, or “hyflex.” Eight Carlson classrooms were fitted with “a higher degree of technology and integration,” including tracking cameras and large, prominent monitors. The result, Miller says, is “an immersive room that allows virtual and in-person participants to fully integrate in a class [at the same time]. We see a lot of our working professional programs evolving in that direction.” 

Minnesota State senior vice chancellor Ron Anderson believes that hyflex has the potential to significantly impact the way his system delivers education. He distinguishes hyflex from hybrid, where a class meets in person once or twice a week, then online at other times.

Anderson also says that students will “move seamlessly between delivery modes depending on their needs.” Minnesota State is “seeing a lot of interest in this increasing flexibility for scheduling and juggling other commitments.”

“I would estimate about half of our non-credit offerings this current semester are being offered in an online modality,” he says. There are limitations—some courses still need to be hands on, such as those in which students handle industrial equipment. But even some of those courses “are now being coupled with some components being delivered online or via Zoom.” 

Larry Lundblad, Minnesota State’s executive director of workforce and economic development, notes that “what we were doing on campus was paralleled by business and industry. They were getting used to Zoom and other distance formats. Everyone had to learn at once.”

With the persistent labor shortage and companies needing every hour of labor they can get from their current workforce, “many employers are reluctant to let employees participate in training,” Lundblad says. “These alternative ways of delivery are meeting a need where workers can stay in place for at least a portion of the training.”

Like nearly all educators, Lundblad doesn’t see a full return to the old normal. “This is a permanent shift,” he says. “The employers, the students, and the instructors are all saying that the flexibility can be a good thing. Now the emphasis is on, ‘How can we make this work better?’ ’’ 

Mining safety instructor Lund has seen a “generation gap” in terms of preferences for online and in-person instruction. Younger workers, he says, are quite comfortable with digital learning. And like many higher-education faculty members, he believes that the demand for online courses will continue to be strong, particularly because companies and students have gotten accustomed to it. It’s not yet known whether MSHA will allow some form of virtual learning to continue. “If they do,” Lund says, “it’s probably here to stay.” 

University of Iowa professor creates flu-education game after death of her son

JJ Neiman-Brown, of Iowa City, died on Feb. 2, 2020, in his sleep. He was almost 3 years old. Doctors after his death determined he was positive for influenza A. His mom, a University of Iowa biology professor, is behind a new educational game teaching kids about how flu spreads and how vaccines work. (Maurine Neiman)

IOWA CITY — On a Sunday in early February 2020 — a day before the country would declare COVID-19 a public health emergency and just weeks before it would join much of the world in moving toward widespread lockdown — 2-year-old JJ Neiman-Brown started acting more tired and worn out than usual.

The Iowa City toddler with a broad smile and curly brown hair — and love for animals, dancing, baking, berries, and music, especially Prince — told his mom his mouth hurt. By 4:30 p.m., JJ had a temperature of 101.5, which his parents treated with Tylenol.

“It was nothing serious or scary,” his mom, University of Iowa biology professor Maurine Neiman, told The Gazette.

JJ had been sick before, and he perked up on the medication. His temperature returned to normal, and he fell asleep that evening in his mom’s arms as they watched Moana. His parents put him to bed but kept an eye on him via the baby monitor. He appeared to be sleeping peacefully.

“I actually went to check on him because he was so quiet,” Neiman said.

And she discovered he wasn’t breathing. They called 911, and JJ was rushed to the emergency room, where doctors were unable to save him. After JJ’s death, officials determined he was positive for influenza A, H1N1 — even though he’d gotten his flu vaccine months earlier.

An autopsy revealed JJ had several invisible vulnerabilities — like asymptomatic and undiagnosed asthma, putting him at higher risk for flu complications.

“As a parent, we sort of have a sense of control,” Neiman said. “I really was paying attention to when flu outbreaks were emerging, when the best time to vaccinate would be — in terms of maximizing protection.

“Of course, it turns out that when only half the community is vaccinated, it doesn’t really matter,” she said. “We’re far below where we need to be with influenza for herd immunity.”

‘Flu’s Clues’

For JJ, nothing more could have been done. Neiman and her husband took all the precautions. They vaccinated him. Watched his symptoms. Gave him rest and nourishment and cuddles.

“I certainly don’t believe that everything happens for a reason,” Neiman told The Gazette. “This is just horrible.”

But it did happen. And with the 2020-21 flu vaccination rate among children 6 months to 17 years at 59 percent — a 5 percentage point drop from the year prior — Neiman said more can be done for many kids.

“It’s making meaning out of something that feels really senseless,” she said.

So nearly a year ago — in collaboration with the national nonprofit Families Fighting Flu and with support from local entities like Integrated DNA Technologies — Neiman and her students began creating an online interactive kids game tasking players to identify and tamp down flu outbreaks globally.

Flu’s Clues game screenshot

“Flu’s Clues” — in a “Where in the World is Carmen San Diego” mission-centered style — takes kids into laboratories and communities from California to Nigeria to Taiwan and the United Kingdom to track influenza spread and create effective vaccines to halt it.

“Congratulations,” one of the game’s researchers tells players after they complete their mission. “Because we made an effective vaccine, we were able to save the lives of 1.8 million people. We were able to decrease hospitalizations by 8 million people.”

The game, which officially launched last month, is meant to be educational and accessible in the midst of a non-flu-related pandemic that’s heightened children’s awareness of viruses, how they spread, and how vaccines can help prevent them.

It incorporates facts — like how to identify symptoms and determine differences between the flu and other viruses. It imparts information on how vaccines are made — through “actors” clad in lab coats and glasses.

“These are all my students,” Neiman said. “These are undergraduates and graduate students, for the most part, donating their time. And it’s substantial.

“I think some of them are fantastic actors.”

Acknowledging COVID has pushed the discussion of viruses into the homes of many children, Neiman said the flu — statistically speaking — is more of a threat to them.

“We don’t want to scare kids, but influenza is more dangerous to them than COVID, from the perspective of yearly mortality,” she said. “And the influenza season this year looks like it might be bad.”

The game is debuting in time for National Influenza Vaccination week, a U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention initiative.

“We were really interested in thinking about something that would help teach young kids about the importance of infectious disease, vaccination, and then we wanted to do something that was connected to JJ,” Neiman said.

Vanessa Miller covers higher education for The Gazette.

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