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NOLA Social Worker Finds Herself Supporting Students All Day, Every Day During COVID-19

Shawnell Ware (right) in August 2019 with donations her students collected for children in Haiti. Ware was planning to travel to Haiti in March but canceled her trip because of the pandemic and shipped the items. (Courtesy Shawnell Ware)

This is one of eight profiles in Displaced: The Faces of American Education, a package from 蜜桃影视 following the stories of the diverse characters who are a part of the American education system, and how the COVID-19 crisis has upended their lives in a few short weeks. Meet the others, from around the country, here.

For Shawnell Ware, a social worker at McDonogh 35 High School in New Orleans, the work day used to be from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Now, with school shut down and her city hit hard by the coronavirus, she鈥檚 available to her students, their families and her colleagues anytime, day or night.

On a typical school day before the pandemic, she checked in with students as they arrived at school, monitored attendance, observed classrooms, met with students individually, visited families at home and helped coordinate mental health care and other services for students.

Now Ware, 51, does all that virtually, in addition to checking in with parents regarding their own mental health, working with teachers to modify assignments for students overwhelmed by online schooling, and tuning in to Zoom classes with students and meetings with her colleagues throughout the day.

鈥淚 feel like I’m working 24 hours around the clock. Literally, I receive phone calls at 5 o’clock, 6 o’clock, 10 o’clock [at night]. I even had a student [who was experiencing] anxiety one morning call at 5 a.m.,鈥 she said.

She answers every call. 鈥淭hat’s what we have to do to make sure that our students are cared for emotionally, socially and academically 鈥 to provide that support,鈥 said Ware, who was just named 鈥淪upport of the Year鈥 at McDonogh 35 by her principal, Lee Green.

Shawnell Ware in her office at McDonogh 35. (Courtesy Shawnell Ware)

The first challenge when the school moved online was getting McDonogh鈥檚 roughly 400 students connected with internet service and devices. Next, Ware had to get used to seeing her students through a screen and communicating via text message, which many of her high schoolers prefer to phone or video calls.

鈥淚 miss being face to face because I like to do physical assessments where I can lay eyes on my students 鈥 I’m now reading body language via Zoom calls. That’s been a challenge for me,鈥 she said. Still, she鈥檚 watching students carefully to make sure they鈥檙e OK and looking for 鈥渁ny signs and symptoms of depression, if they look in distress, if they’re looking distraught.鈥

Ware鈥檚 school is part of the charter network, and her students are 99 percent black and 85 percent economically disadvantaged.

Ware said she also noticed that many parents were struggling, especially when the shutdown first started, so she talked to them about their own mental health and coached them through setting up routines to help their families adjust to online learning and manage the stress of the pandemic.

The coronavirus has infected in the New Orleans metro region, and it hasn鈥檛 spared the McDonogh 35 community. When the pandemic began, Ware was overwhelmed by the losses, which included some of her close friends and 74-year-old , a legendary football coach and beloved physical education teacher at McDonogh 35.

The school had a socially distanced procession in McDonogh 35鈥檚 hallways for Reese聽and has set up a memorial in his parking spot. The staff is also planning to remember him again when regular school resumes, possibly naming an athletic facility after him.

鈥淭hat was a trying time for us. [Reese] was a very big giant 鈥 we called him a gentle giant in our lives,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat was a challenge, and that was a challenge for me as well, with trying to care mentally for everyone else and still having to deal with my own feelings.鈥

Ware also reached out individually to all of the students who were in Reese鈥檚 classes and their families. For many, the coach鈥檚 death triggered memories of others who have died or increased anxiety about relatives who are sick or hospitalized with COVID-19.

Persisting through tough times is 鈥渏ust part of the ball game鈥 of being a social worker, Ware said. One of the systems she set up to help her community is an emoji code, whereby anyone can text her a heart and the color indicates what they need that day.

A slide Ware shared with students and staff during a 鈥淪ocial Work Corner鈥 Zoom call. (Courtesy Shawnell Ware)

鈥淚 find my kids communicate better via text, which is crazy and kind of different for me to talk about therapeutic things in a text message, but they seem to be expressing their feelings more via text than actually face to face with the Zoom,鈥 Ware said.

Even with all that she does for her community, Ware takes time to care for herself, too.

鈥淭hrough this pandemic, I found myself eating and ordering a lot of , so I had to do some self-care things as far as just increasing exercising for myself,鈥 she said. (Her favorite popcorn flavor is cashew caramel crisp, and she鈥檚 sent some to her colleagues in care packages as well.)

Ware and her husband, Lawrence Lee Jr,. at a Mardi Gras event this year. Lee is a member of the Zulu Social Aid and Pleasure Club and was elected Zulu Mayor 2020, with Ware as his first lady. Ware and Lee lost five friends who were Zulu members the same week Coach Wayne Reese died. (Courtesy Shawnell Ware)

Ware, who lives with her husband, also reads, journals, meditates, takes breaks from the news and social media and avoids looking at screens in the hour before bedtime 鈥 and recommends that her colleagues do the same.

The school year ended for Ware鈥檚 students May 15, but that doesn鈥檛 mean the social worker is on vacation.

鈥淢y cellphone number doesn’t change. In our Zoom calls I let my students know if they need me, don’t hesitate to reach out, call, text, email, so they still will have access to me,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he number won’t change and I’ll respond, whether they are in school or out of school.鈥

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