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Hannah Korte, Emily Lawrence and Kyle Webb


Junior Year Writing, NatSci 387, Lecture 7, Group 4: 

Hannah Korte (Natural Resource Conservation), Emily Lawrence (Animal Sciences), Kyle Webb (Environmental Sciences)

FINAL PROJECT TRANSCRIPT (April 27, 2020)

Hi, I’m Hannah Korte, I’m an NRC (Natural Resource Conservation) major here at UMass and I’m Emily Lawrence, I’m an Animal Science major. I’m Kyle Webb, I’m Environmental Science.

Hannah– we’re going to be talking about our experiences during the Corona virus and how we have to stay home and everything and how it’s affecting our lives and the sources from other places. So our first question that we’re gonna be talking about is. How has this pandemic affected you personally?

Kyle– Yeah, I think it’s just been a big adjustment, really just getting out of like my routine that I was used to that really kind of threw me in a loop, especially with classes. Keep it on track.

There is one class that I’ve hardly looked at even, I’m way behind in there so now I’m kind of piling on work since the last semester. Also, my activity levels have just dropped significantly from not being able to leave the house. I also put on like 10 pounds or something, a little wild, but noticing a lot more drinking in myself and people around me. I think that it’s pretty common in most people right now because it’s kind of just like the weekend comes around and this is like one of the ways you can go.

Emily– Yeah, I’ve also lost like a lot of structure I had from having six classes at school, like I really relied on having a schedule every day to get everything done and now that I don’t really have one. It’s just very hard to complete everything I need to do because I am just lacking a lot of motivation and I’m also like putting some classes on the back burner, like I’m just putting off the work for them and hopefully I’ll get back on track.

Kyle– Yeah, that reminds me, I have no such huge decrease in the amount of information I’m actually learning in my classes. I finding myself doing like much more just to kind of complete assignments, but it’s really difficult to learn without tutors, office hours. I mean, face to face with someone and then a few. My classes don’t even have like lectures anymore so you’re just trying to learn from a PowerPoint and it’s really just a mess.

Well, I guess, paying full tuition right now for online classes and then on top of that having a lease at school and stuff. I’m still paying.

Hannah– Yeah, this is definitely been pretty hard for me. I’ve had a lot of trouble staying motivated and staying awake, my lectures, especially in the morning, I find myself kind of laying in bed somewhat listening. I’ve not taken in as much information as I would if I was actually in the class and I’ve been trying to stay as active as I can working out but it’s definitely hard on days when you have a lot of homework to do and you’re trying to do it all and you just don’t move at all. But when you’re at school, you have to walk between your classes. It’s hard, it’s like I don’t know if I’m actually getting more exercise because I’m not actually walking to classes as I would when I’m at school because our campus is huge. So it feels like three miles when you’re walking to your classes or whatever.

Kyle– Yes, So if I really even like the difference between the walk into the fridge and walking to the dining hall to get food you have to walk far at school. It is definitely a big part of it.

Hannah– Yeah and my mental health has been pretty interesting. So I suffer from depression and this actually hasn’t really been helping. I’ve been trying to stay as happy as I can, but it’s hard when I’m stuck in a room, not really doing much besides homework that kind of stresses me out. So I’ve been dealing with that a little bit, but I’ve been trying to stay positive and find free time for myself to craft or watch Netflix or go for a walk with my mom or work out even though I don’t love working out, but somehow make me feel better in the end. So I’ve been trying to stay as active as I can and just find time for myself but it definitely is hard because it feels like our professors are giving us still a lot of homework to do during this time.

Emily– Yeah, I feel like especially for some of my classes, I’m getting like twice the amount of work I usually do and I don’t know why. Just like it feels like that or you’re actually giving me more assignments. But yeah, trying to get away from it is really important just to do like go for a walk or something or just read a book but again, it does feel difficult to find the time to do that but yeah, you really have to try.

Hannah– I mean, two of my professors took away the final exams and I’m still just like there’s so much to do.

Kyle– That’s kinda nice. They just found out that there are no final exams.

Hannah– But it’s weird that we don’t have final exams. But I’m still like I’m stressed, even though.

Kyle– Yeah, its still the end of the semester.

Hannah– Still a lot.

Kyle– As far as getting distracted. It’s like a weird one too, because just everything reminds you of it. So if you’re not, you know, if you go for a walk or something, you see everywhere in masks, it’s like, oh, right back to it. Once you distract yourself or if you’re watching TV or listening to the radio or something, every ad is these uncertain times.

Emily– So it’s kind of impossible for you to get away from it.

Kyle– Yeah, it’s definitely weird.

Emily– So our next question is What are you noticing that people around you?

Hannah– so I’ve noticed that more people have been going on hikes around me in a way, and I think that’s good that people are getting outside and I’ve been trying to go on hikes, but I don’t go on hikes in like busy parks or anything. So if there’s too many cars where I’m planning on going, I find somewhere else to go for a hike, because I don’t want to be around a lot of people because of this whole thing and I don’t think that many people are doing that properly because when I do go by, there are a lot of cars in certain places and some of these trails aren’t super wide or anything and I notice that when I do go on hikes me and my mom completely get out of the way of someone and it’s weird because were crawling into the woods a little bit and then they have to go by.

So it’s just like weird that like suddenly weird when you go by people because you’re trying to get away from them in like move out of their way when you usually would just walk by them before. Also, my mom is working from home too. She works with highly functioning Asperger students and they’re older. They’re like in their twenties and stuff and she does like life skills and everything with them and she’s found it really hard to do because she has to motivate them to, like, clean their room, she had to watch them exercise, she has to watch them cook and talks to them about what they’re going to cook for dinner and she finds it really hard to, like, motivate them to do these things, too, when it’s just over a computer in their home and their parents are listening and  it’s weird for her. She’s not really enjoying it because she just sits at the dining room table in an uncomfortable chair and has to do this for eight hours a day or longer.

Kyle– So, yeah, my girlfriend works with kids with autism as well. It’s like a lot of the same stuff that you do it online trying to keep these kids focused like through the video is pretty much impossible like the day she had a parent come in and start yelling at the teachers over the zoo meeting because I couldn’t keep the kids focused. It’s like we’re not there to do anything.

Hannah– Yeah, it’s definitely a really weird time for everyone to have to be working from home and doing classes from home and everything.

Emily–  Yeah, my mom teaches a CNA program too. So she had to move all of her material to google classroom when she’d never used it before and she doesn’t really use technology a lot really for her teaching. So I basically had to help her like everyday to just figure out how to post her assignments, like find videos for her to teach her class to like I take blood pressure and stuff like that and just like create quizzes and just she basically has to rewrite her whole curriculum and it’s it’s a lot of work and I’ve been just trying to balance that with her and it’s hard seeing her struggle with that. So, yeah, my dad’s also going to work a few days a week now and I don’t know, I just it’s a big change.

Kyle– Yeah, that’s what I’m saying it’s kind of weird. I’m noticing everyone around me is kind of working more hours right now. Do it online when they’re taking cuts and stuff like that. It is interesting to see how the change translates to like a few extra hours a day of work. Yeah I relate to like trying to help your parents with technology like half the time I wake up early. It’s just like I have a zoom meeting, I have a zoom meeting get me in.

Hannah- Yeah, my mom needed some help in the beginning of working to help with her students and stuff and that’s interesting. I mean someone’s like that hasn’t really changed a lot in my life is my boyfriend’s. He still works in a grocery store and his life hasn’t changed a ton because he is still going to work and sleeping and playing video games like he always did. So he kind of still has the same structure, but he does have to wear a mask at work now, he has to be so much more careful. There’s like glass, like sheets of like Plexiglas or whatever, like over the deli. So like, there’s not as much germs coming in and the store has cut down their hours a little bit and they’re definitely trying to be as grateful, like the owners and managers are trying to be as grateful as they can for their workers and trying to give them days off, often telling them they can take a break but it’s just hard because there’s people that can’t go to work right now that are at higher risk and I’m proud of my boyfriend for working in the grocery store because he’s young and healthy and I hope it stays that way.

Kyle– So yeah back to what you said about  him playing video games that’s something I’ve noticed a lot is generally my male friends are handling it a lot better than my female friends because guys have video games. So it’s still kind of like a hang out.

Hannah– I mean, my boyfriend just goes to his dad’s house and plays again with his brother’s friends in his town. I mean, I try to facetime with my friends from home and from school, but it’s just hard because everybody has so much schoolwork to do. But then it’s just tough. I haven’t talked to my friends a ton, but I’ve been trying to see one of my best friends that also goes to UMass, but also lives really close to me.I went to high school with her and we’ve been going on food dates, but sitting in our cars each other through our cars. So it’s been interesting. But that’s just a way that I’ve been trying to stay sane, not stuck in my house all the time. So that’s kind of helped. But it’s still really weird to not be able to actually really hang out with her. It’s also kind of no store. And the people around me, just a lot of extremes of just people that don’t care at all.

Kyle– And I think it’s a thing that people are just taking it way too far. Just thinking that they like literally can’t step outside their house. It’s just like I’m not noting a whole lot of reasonable concern.

Hannah– Yeah, it’s weird when I go out and I see people like going into the grocery store today, I went to Dunkin Donuts with my mom just to get breakfast and someone just like wasn’t wearing gloves or a mask or anything and just went in. And I find it kind of disrespectful to the workers to not be wearing a mask at this point, like, you know, cause you’re risking their safety, too. Yeah think it’s kind of dumb for this dude, as I said, I find disrespectful to the workers that have to be wearing masks right now and you’re going into their workplace because they have to keep working without protecting.

Kyle– Then I’ve even seen on social media abundantly like widely spread videos of people saying, you’re an idiot if you’re wearing a surgical mask, like it’s not protecting you at all. It just circulates like crazy. And then it’s like the point isn’t really for you.

Hannah– Yeah, there’s just so much uncertainty in this whole time. Things nobody knows. Nobody knows if we’re gonna have classes, like in-person classes next semester. Nobody knows that they have a job this summer. How am I going to be making money for college next year. And like I said, if it’s online classes next semester, I’m taking a semester off. Like I can’t do it. It’s been really, really hard for me. Most people I’ve talked to have said they’re not going to do it if tuition costs that same paying a full semester for really just like way lower caliber learning.

Kyle– Yeah. Like I’ll just work somewhere. I’ll work at like Target or CVS. Try to make money because I have rent to pay.

Emily– And if this whole situation lasts until next semester, this is really going to hurt colleges and universities. I want to know what they’re doing for the future if this continues.

Hannah– Yeah. I mean high schoolers can’t go on like college visits their first semester, college will just be online. I’ve been seeing a lot of stuff advising graduating seniors just to take gap years. Start fresh next year. Once like we know, we have this under control.

Kyle– For seniors you want to do a fifth year. You want to just finish up like it’s going to take a semester off. And then when we get back to actual classes, I will finish off my senior year.

Hannah– Honestly, I’m OK with that. I’d rather take a semester off and now with a few classes, get it done personally. I’d talk to my parents about that too, how  I just didn’t want to do it again. And they’re now on board now.  My mom was like, that’s smart. I learn by being in the place rather than just someone speaking to me through a screen.I didn’t sign up for this, I need to be in that environment.

Kyle– Our next question is what do you think we can get out of this situation and learn from it?

Hannah– I think that, like, we can learn kindness between other humans. I hope because I know I’m not the only one dealing with mental illness, obviously, and mental health. And I know there’s plenty of other people dealing with it. One of my friends from school, he deals with depression and he actually just shaved his head and raised money for some kind of cause to help with that. I think raising awareness for men with depression, because men don’t really talk about it much.

And it’s kind of seen as a negative thing all around. So I just hope that people kind of become more loving with each other during these times.

Emily– I hope we can learn just how to cooperate and listen to what the CDC and just scientists in general are saying, just like listen. Don’t listen to politics no matter what side you’re on. Just listen to actual science and follow what they are saying and follow the guidelines because I feel like if everyone has the same mindset and wants to get this thing over with and let it die out. We can all just cooperate and all the precautions we take. And eventually it’ll go away and hopefully we can learn and yeah, just have some policy set in place on how to deal with pandemics.

Hannah– Oh, yeah. And I hope there’s more love for the environment after this. I’ve still seen a lot of people throwing their masks and gloves out the window. Luckily, I haven’t seen anybody throw it out the window, but I’ve seen masking gloves, laying around on my walks just in the street and stuff. I think they created a regulation or a law that said that there is a fine for that now. Yeah, because it’s ridiculous that people would be throwing their stuff out the window when it’s just easy enough to put in your car trash or your home trash like sorry that you don’t want to bring it home because it could have the corona virus on it.  Just use some Lysol or something like it’s gonna you’re most likely gonna be OK if it’s just in the trash. I think that ties into like we could also learn a lot about just caring about each other beyond just ourselves. That’s just the ultimate selfish move to throw your potentially infected dirty stuff out the door for someone else to pick up because you don’t want to deal with it. You know how this virus works is if you cared about the community, then it goes away faster than if you’re worried about yourself.

Kyle–  I think we can learn about this is just how fragile our whole society is. We have all these these factors hanging over our head like pandemics, volcanoes, meteoroids that we just don’t have a plan for any of them. Yeah, and it’s just ridiculous because it’s human nature to think, well, we haven’t seen it in a while, so it’s not going to happen. These things do exist. We need to have a plan for it. And also. Just like, you know, nothing is guaranteed. Sounds like a good reminder. Like when everyone goes back out there to do what you love, live a happy life.

But just it’s too fragile to be doing something that you hate all the time and just not to take things so for granted and in a way.

Hannah– I definitely took some things for granted before this. I like being able to actually hang out with my boyfriend, hang out with my friends, go out to eat, go for walks and see people around that I wouldn’t have to avoid them when I’m alone. It’s also taking college for granted in a way, cause I mean, all three of us are very lucky to have the opportunity to even go to school, college and have housing and have somewhere to live. And we’re all pretty lucky right now to be home with our families and have a roof over our heads. So no matter how annoyed I get with my family, I know I’m super grateful for having food and a house. I really wish I could donate to more things that are going on during this pandemic, but I as a college student don’t have enough money, you shouldn’t be giving it to other people right now either. And I just wish that there was more love because it’s hard to see even hateful things going on right now. Like there was vandalism that happened at UMass. I think it was Holocaust day.

Emily–  Holocaust day of remembrance

Hannah– I think that is unbelievably disturbing. During this time we should all be trying to support and love each other.

So a quote that is from an article that I wrote about. The article is called, ‘All of this panic could have been prevented’, Author Max Brooks on COVID-19. Max Brooks said, “what is not being talked about enough or what needs to be talked about are the people who are still going to die of cancer, of accidents, of other diseases, because they simply cannot get into the hospitals because the hospitals are choked with coronavirus patients”. I think that was really interesting because it is true.

One of my mom’s friends has cancer again and she was able to get a transplant or something like that and she can’t right now and her cancer is really, really bad. And that was one of the only things that probably could have saved her life. And my mom has been struggling with that a lot right now too because she doesn’t want her friend, her college friend, to pass away. And I think it’s hard because I don’t think a lot of people realize that during these times, unless you have someone that you know that probably has cancer or has gotten into an accident. So I think it’s tough. And of course, I want people that have corona to also survive. But I think it’s hard that people with other preexisting conditions or are getting into accidents should be able to be treated. But I think it’s hard because the hospitals are so overloaded. It’s also scary for the cancer patients to go into a hospital or not to because they’re more immunocompromised, so it’s harder.

Kyle– My friend’s dad just got diagnosed with stage four lung cancer during this. So they’re literally having to decide is it worth it to treat it and expose him to the coronavirus, which will wipe them out fast? Because chemo is going to make you extremely immunocompromised. So it’s kind of like a question of, do we risk killing them now or do we wait? There’s no good outcome for that right now, and there’s a lot of people that just can’t get the treatment that they need. So I’ve been hearing a bunch of people just saying like there’s no shot I’m going to a hospital right now.

Hannah– Yeah. So definitely tough, because even if your family member does get admitted to the hospitals, like you can’t visit them like people that are having babies. IIf someone gets very, very sick, even if it’s not the coronavirus, they can’t have people visit them. So it’s just hard in general because there are obviously people dying from other conditions like cancer that are probably stuck in the hospital and a family can’t actually say bye to them. I think it’s very tough. And I think all three of us so far right now are lucky that we don’t know anyone hopefully really, really close, because I don’t really know my mom’s college friend that well. But it still affects me because it makes my mom really upset and I don’t like seeing my mom upset. So it’s definitely an interesting and sad and weird situation that people can’t visit their family members or best friends in the hospitals during these times.

Emily– Yeah, I agree. And hopefully if everyone follows the proper social distancing and just take overall precautions so that less people will get sick and the hospitals will open up more space,  and soon hopefully people can go get the treatments they need.

Hannah– I can’t say that I should have went to Dunkin Donuts today. I probably shouldn’t have but my mom needed to grab stuff from the pharmacy and I just sat in the car and I just wanted something to eat. There’s like a happy medium too, but I’m not going into a crowd of people. That’s the biggest thing as far as spreading this. Like, you know, you’re still doing the things that you can do. You still go for walks. Get your support from local businesses. And I don’t run on that stuff.So I don’t always go. I don’t run on dunkin. So this is like the second time I went to Dunkin during this whole thing and the first time was literally in the beginning, the beginning of this when I was looking at my boyfriend and me.

Emily- it’s important to have like some normal aspects of your lifestyle, though so you cant really beat yourself up for that

Kyle– Going out to get fast food at a local restaurant for takeout is like relatively low risk

Hannah– Like I mean, it’s different if you go like every day. You don’t need dunkin coffee every day. You can buy a bag of the coffee and go home.

Kyle– It’s like a popular thing to be like, oh, who cares about the economy right now? But it’s like we need it.

Hannah– I mean somebody needs some money.

Kyle–  You need some money. You need your house. You need food. That’s all the economy so we need to stimulate it somewhat

Hannah– Yeah, I’m going back to something though, I guess that we could learn is we could learn to also support local businesses more and I saw something that said that we could support American made products, which is interesting. But I think that supporting local businesses and like people’s farm stands after this. They’re like vegetables and flowers and stuff I think is a really good idea, because even though they’re not doing it right now after their pandemic, they will hopefully and they’re obviously, I think everybody suffering no matter what during this time to some extent, except that really, really rich people. But I mean, they’re still losing money somewhat probably. But they’re still okay. Like the celebrities, they’re still living in their mansions. Well, local business are definitely important to support, I think, because some people make a living like,

Kyle– yeah, like when you can just go to a local place instead of going to some huge company like that 30-cent difference isn’t a big deal to you but it’s a big difference for the local place

 Hannah– like I don’t want to pay my rent but like my landlord, it’s just him and his wife or just. They’re just teachers out of high school. That’s how they make their living. They have like three houses in, like, Amherst. Which is how they make their living. And I can’t just be like bye no money for you because then I’m just, you know, like I’m just putting them at risk and stuff of not having enough money and I don’t really want to do that to them. But eventually maybe we’ll have to figure something out and talk to them about it if I don’t go back next year. Who knows if I’ll work in Amherst all next year, if it’s just remote for the first semester or something, really depends on what I’m doing but I might have to find a subletter or something, but I don’t want to leave them high and dry during this thing.

Kyle– I can talk a little about what I discussed with my sister. I asked her two of our questions. She works in a primary care office, so like people get sick they go to her first. She actually had the coronavirus too. She ended up catching it, But I asked how it affected her personally. She said a big thing was she knew once this started there was that she wasn’t going to be seeing our family or her friends and that’s just kinda a huge hit to moral because everyone needs some human contact beyond just work and then I asked her what the biggest issue to be exposed by this and she said how underprepared we were and she said she and her coworkers were just not protected at all, they had a few surgical masks to deal with this that’s as far as they were protected, and everyone in her office that came in contact with the patient that tested positive ended up catching it and that’s such a fragile way to do things and she noted the news coverage and people living out of fear was a huge issue because she’s trained to help people with this, and when she would give people information on how to help with the virus they just wouldn’t listen to her because they heard something different on the news that this work, this works, this works, with no real medical backing to it so a lot of her patients weren’t handling it the right way when they were sick

Hannah– Yeah, I also relate to it in a way because my sister works in a hospital in virginia and she works in a NICU with babies but she was pulled into the ICU because they needed help, she just says it’s crazy down there. It’s hard for me to imagine kinda because I don’t see all of that craziness in my house and I don’t think there’s been too many more cases where I live and  there’s really no masks, so they have to reuse them every day and I‘ve seen pictures of doctors and nurses being exhausted on the internet and its disrespectful to not be wearing masks when we go out because these people are risking their lives and some people are dying from it.

Kyle– yeah that was another thing that she said, the other day my mom was talking to my sister about states reopening and my sister was like I don’t believe this it’s everywhere how do people not see this like I’m sending patients to go die alone in the hospital and this is the difference between a normal person’s perspective and a health care providers like just because you’re stuck at home and you’re not seeing it doesn’t mean it’s not happening its just difference of perspective

Hannah– We are gonna end with a quote to maybe cheer everyone up a little.

Emily– It’s a quote by Marie Curie and it goes “Nothing in life is to be feared, it is only to be understood. Now is the time to understand more, so that we may fear less.”

REFERENCES

Gross, T. (2020, March 24). ‘All of this panic could have been prevented’: Author Max Brooks on

 COVID-19. Retrieved from https://www.npr.org/2020/03/24/820601571/all-of-this-panic-could-have-been-prevented-author-max-brooks-on-covid-19?fbclid=IwAR2JFjQtPDXsTAWTaNfNlRwv-2yX0ysAmQy2NW6e72hDY2fNxUDyczOZivc

Webb, J. (2020, April 25). Personal communication

Allen, D. (2020, March 27). Inspirational quotes to get us through the coronavirus shutdown.

CNN health, https://www.cnn.com/2020/03/26/health/inspirational-quotes-coronavirus-wisdom-project-wellness/index.html

Arianna Kattner, Alyssa Pool, Oliver Gonzalez and Joshua Cabrera


Junior Year Writing, NatSci 387, Lecture 7, Group 3: 

Joshua Cabrera (Building Construction Technology), Oliver Gonzalez, (Building Construction Technology), Arianna Kattner (Animal Sciences), Alyssa Pool, (Environmental Sciences)

FINAL VIDEO PROJECT TRANSCRIPT – The Pandemic & Productivity (April 27, 2020)

Oliver: Hello, this is Group 3, consists of Alyssa, Arianna, Joshua, and I. We’re gonna talk about productivity and our experience with the pandemic, and how this will eventually affect the work life and society as a whole.

Oliver: So now we’re gonna start with Alyssa. What is your personal experience with productivity and being at home during this crisis?

Alyssa: So, I have been feeling a conflict in my mind between pushing myself to do as much schoolwork as possible and also being outraged that I am expected to do any work at all during a pandemic. I am generally a type A person when it comes to overachieving with school work, so I have found it difficult to try to slow down after coming home and switching to remote learning. Half of me wants to simply stop doing anything productive because I know none of it “really matters” for my life and future, or it feels that way, and half of me thinks that I am just being a baby and I should suck it up and do my work. I also feel like UMass did not give the student body enough time to adjust to online learning and did not properly adjust course loads for working in such stressful times. I appreciate that they allowed everyone to take classes pass/fail, but I think an additional week off after Spring Break as well as directing professors to lighten the workload would have been supremely helpful.

Josh: And how do you think this will affect the work/life balance slash society in the long run?

Alyssa: Well, I hope that the coronavirus will do its best to finally kill the “rise and grind” culture and make Americans have a much more reasonable work/life balance in the future. I found an article on The Outline that stated that right now, nobody cares “how productive you’re being right now, except your boss,” that’s a quote, and I do believe that that realization will help many people separate themselves as people instead of as drones in a system that cares about them only for their capacity for making and spending money. At least to me, this coronavirus has placed a stark spotlight on the futility of working and consumerism just for the pursuit of money because I’m still receiving junk emails from websites like Vera Bradley trying to sell me handbags when I have been legally recommended to not leave my house. And I think and hope that many people during this period of working from home will come to realize that extra productivity generally serves no one but the business people in charge of the big corporations, and living for one’s own interests is more important than working twelve hours per day.

Alyssa: So that’s how I feel. So Arianna, what is your experience with productivity and being home during the COVID-19 crisis thus far?

Arianna: For me, staying productive during this time – it’s been difficult, and I like to stay on top of my schoolwork, I’m generally more of a type-A person, um, but not being in the physical classrooms on campus has really sort of diminished my motivation, uh, and therefore my productivity. And one example of this is I always go to the Design Building to do work, uh, and it’s kind of like a physical separation, um, between my home and where I do work, uh, but unfortunately now, um, I can’t really go anywhere. So I am sort of forced to be at home and do work and be productive in the same environment which has been really difficult for me and has definitely decreased my productivity. And, uh, yeah that’s about all I have for that.

Alyssa: Well how do you think this will affect the work/life balance of society in the long run?

Arianna: Um, as for how I think this will affect the work/life balance in the future, uh, I hope it will teach us as Americans, who have an obsession frankly with productivity, that it’s okay to not constantly work or produce something. And in a perfect world, at least in my opinion, um, I think we’d adopt something similar to the Italians where they have, like, a couple-hour break in sort of the late afternoon, sort of break up the day. But do I think this will happen? Absolutely not. Not in America. Um, I think that people already feel pressured, even in a global pandemic, to make the most of their time. I recently came across an article from Refinery29 which made some points I agree with. And one of the points illustrated the pressure to be productive in the time of COVID-19, saying, “Everywhere we look, we are being encouraged to optimise a global pandemic. To use it as an opportunity – not to mourn the senseless loss of lives, of our freedoms and, however temporarily, of our futures but for self-improvement.” Additionally, the article had a sense of humor about this pressure that really struck a chord with me. My favorite line was probably  “If you didn’t write a Pulitzer-worthy book and get shredded during the great coronavirus pandemic of 2020, were you even there at all?” So, that really struck a chord with me because I feel like I see a lot of, uh, Instagram and social media pressure to, um, be productive and work out and whatnot. And I think that once society and America – the nation – reopens, I think that people will just go back to the whole, as Alyssa said, “rise and grind” culture.

Arianna: And, uh, so Oliver, for you personally, what is your experience with productivity and being home during the COVID-19 crisis?

Oliver: What this has affected, productivity wise greatly affected me by having this transition from staying home all this time and not being able to leave. When I was at UMass Amherst, I felt as things constantly were moving and in some sort of “always on the move” mode. Even simple things like walking to the little cafe in the Design Building for breakfast or eating lunch at the Franklin Dining-Common felt as if things were always on the move. I loved how things were and I felt busy, but not necessarily overwhelmed, but now that I have so much time being at home and all this, things have changed. I’ve been doing my best in regard to that and keeping up with work. I’ve been going to the nearby park and running in the morning, keeping myself up to date with homework and assignments. For me, I have to grade for two BCT courses where I am a Teacher Assistant for them and listening to music to keep me sane from all this On the note of productivity, while I was at Amherst, things were so busy I did not have time to maintain the most active lifestyle, but while being at home, it has allowed me to use the excess of time I have on my hands and focus on my health which I would consider a good thing from all this. Overall I feel my productivity feels as it has plummeted, but at the same time it has given me lots of time to focus on myself and my family.

Arianna: And how do you think this will affect the work/life balance and society in the long run?

Oliver: In terms of the long-run after this pandemic is all over, I think personally I will be more cautious about things around me and subconsciously be aware of things in general so in the aspect of health and disease. This pandemic has made me realize how important my health is, how I want to continue and lead with a healthy lifestyle moving forward while also being alert about my surroundings. My predictions for the long term regarding society and what medical experts will do in the future is most likely being more hygienic in public places like train stations and buses. My hope is, well, to think of it we don’t know what will happen, but is for companies to become more aware of the spread of diseases and have some sort of hygienic systems in place to combat those diseases that we face annually like the flu. Ideally, this will be a wake up call for many of us to be more sanitary and clean compared to our previous habits before the pandemic. Do I think things will greatly change how we operate I guess? I don’t think so, but I have hopes that things will change so we are more prepared and have better/more medical equipment for next time.

Oliver: Alright, so, Joshua, how has this pandemic affected you personally and productivity-wise?

Joshua: So, being home has made me a little less productive in terms of academics, but more productive in other aspects of my life. I’ve started playing guitar again which I haven’t done in years! And, as you said Oliver, I have more freetime to go outside and enjoy the outdoors, so I’ve been occasionally going for walks around my neighborhood to get some fresh air and sunlight. At Amherst, I didn’t really have this time because I had to worry about going to work in the mornings and then class and then studying and working out and it was just a lot of things keeping me busy. Now that I’m stuck at home, I’m not as busy. I have more time to relax and do the things I enjoy. I think that’s one of the benefits of being at home and I think society has begun to appreciate all this free time that we’ve had. I’m not stressing over being so busy anymore and I’m the kind of person who doesn’t like doing too much, so this has been pretty good for me.

Oliver: Alright, and, in terms of society and this pandemic, what do you think will happen in the long run?

Joshua: So, after we are allowed to leave our homes again, I hope society realizes that there is such a thing as overworking. I see a lot of people going for walks around my neighborhood, like I’ve been doing, and I see people learning how to cook and learning new hobbies that they enjoy. And a lot of these things are activities that people didn’t have the time for before the pandemic because they were so busy trying to be the most productive they could be. I’m not sure how the work/life balance will be affected after the pandemic, but in terms of schools, I feel like a lot of schools will be a little more lenient in terms of schoolwork. For example, one of my courses that was previously only in-person during previous years now has an online version that students are encouraged to enroll in. I have a feeling many courses that can be taught online will make online versions available. This might help alleviate some of the stresses that come with having to attend classes.

Alyssa: Ok, so, you have have heard from all of us and our perspectives on productivity and coronavirus, and while we hope that in the future, the coronavirus will cause us to maybe slow down a little bit more, we’re not quite sure if that’s really gonna happen. So, thank you all for listening and have a lovely rest of your day after watching this!

References

Millard, D. (2020, March 26). There’s no such thing as ‘productivity’ during a pandemic. The Outline. Retrieved from https://theoutline.com/post/8883/working-from-home-during-the-coronavirus-pandemic-is-not-a-recipe-for-productivity

Spratt, V. You don’t need to write A novel during isolation. Retrieved from https://www.refinery29.com/en-gb/2020/04/9600145/productivity-coronavirus-guilt

Rachel Blasko, Cory Rebello, Tina Cardone and Brenna Tomaino

Junior Year Writing, NatSci 387, Lecture 4, Group 3:

Brenna Tomaino (Animal Sciences), Rachel Blasko (Animal Sciences), Cory Rebello (Natural Resource Conservation), Tina Cardone (Earth Systems /Geology)


FINAL VIDEO TRANSCRIPT (April 27, 2020)

Intro:

Hello, my name is Brenna and I am a junior Animal Science major.

My name is Rachel and I am a junior Pre-vet major.

Cory, I’m a senior Natural Resource Conservation.

And I am Tina, a senior Earth Systems major on the Pre-Med track.

We each are going to describe lessons and advice we have learned from this global crisis that are worth taking into consideration. We each have our own individual stories to tell. These are ways we can adjust to a new normal and prepare for the future. 

Brenna

This entire experience with Covid-19 has made me reflect a lot on the way I carry out my day to day life. All of a sudden my world was changed from a scheduled day to a completely unscheduled day every day. Even my work days have changed. I work at a doggy daycare and a veterinary ER. Doggy daycare is not even opened at the moment, and the other one has changed immensely. At the ER, we are required to wear a mask and gloves at all times and the clients cannot come into the building; we come to them. My home life and routine has also changed. I have been walking or running outside every day. It is a very simple task, but being outside and exercising has helped me keep a schedule in these unstructured times. I never really focused on walking or running before. I have found that in quarantine there is not much to do other than this. I have spent a lot of my days working out or going on a run outside just to keep myself busy. You can still exercise together with friends during this time of social distancing as well. Goldman’s Article Just Keep Moving and Sometimes Double Your Distance, says that they do not know of any “documented transmission of COVID-19 through a baseball, basketball, football or frisbee game, although… it’s theoretically possible” (Goldman 2020). So it could be safe to play a game of catch or frisbee with your friends while maintaining a proper social distance of at least 6 feet. I know that I have been missing my friends in quarantine and this is a way to stay active and happy while seeing my friends. I would tell my past self to not take the time I have with my friends for granted.

Question: What have you done to set a schedule during quarantine?

Discussion:

Rachel: I definitely believe maintaining a schedule and some physical activity is important. I make sure to wake up and go to sleep at the same time and stretch or do yoga everyday. We might as well utilize our extra time to keep in shape!

Tina: I have also been trying my hardest to wake up and go to bed at the same time every day. Some days are more successful than others, of course, but the intention is there. I have also been making sure that I am working out for at least 30 minutes a day, whether it be strength training, running, or just getting outside. I think it is really important to stay active, especially since we are stuck at home.

Cory: Yeah, I have mostly kept an alarm to wake up at about the same time. That will keep some semblance of a routine in place. At large it has been a bit of a mess as far as a routine goes.

Rachel

So, I have learned a few things to help us stay healthy and prepared for a future pandemic from living through this one. Regarding health, I stocked up on natural antivirals such as oregano, basil, green tea, garlic, rosemary, and many other types of teas. In the article What Are Antiviral Herbs?, the author discusses the usage of herbs and how they work (Foret 2020). I drink tea everyday, sometimes more. I also started yoga, specifically stretches that help to drain lymphatic fluid, and lung strengthening exercises. I found all of these videos on youtube and followed along in my living room. Whenever I went out, I wore a mask and made sure to wash my hands once I got home and disinfected my keys, phone, and door knob. I have also heard that it is best to leave your groceries or whatever you have bought outside for a  few days in case the virus is living on it. Once we ran out of lysol wipes, we used rubbing alcohol and paper towels to make our own wipes. Surprisingly, with all of the stores disinfectants wiped out, family dollar still had a lot of gallons of bleach so I would definitely go there. On top of wiping down surfaces, I also burn sage in our house because of its antiviral properties. I am not sure how effective it is, but anything helps. I would also recommend growing your own vegetables. In the article How to Grow Vegetables Indoors by Marie Iannotti, she explains how to grow different types of vegetables inside. The best thing to do during these times is to be as self-sufficient as possible.

Question: Would you be willing to try these and what are your thoughts?

Discussion:

Brenna: I have actually been growing vegetables in my garden for two summers now and they are such a convenient thing to grow and have. I definitely believe that growing your own food in times like these is super beneficial becaue are not taking the same risk as you are by getting food from the grocery store.

Tina: I have also been growing vegetables and we have fruit trees in our backyard as well. I agree that it is highly important that we be as self sufficient as possible. Also, the antiviral herbs you mentioned were really cool to learn about and I happened to have most of those in the kitchen. So,I am going to use them more.

Cory: So with plants central to my career, I have always been interested in growing my own food. This situation has given me more time and reasons to feed my plant hoarding obsession with various vegetables. I am particularly interested in the edible plants that are perennial here, like say strawberries or asparagus or even brussels sprouts.

Cory

So as a natural resource conservation student, I find it tough to stay at home and sit in front of a computer to do school work. I need more activity in my routine, even if it’s just walking to classes while at school. Particularly with my interest in plants, going outside and tending to a yard full of plants is far more enticing. I also have a deceptively large amount of time on hand. In reflecting on my new routine, grasping at straws of productivity, I was reminded of a podcast episode I heard. In her podcast Before Breakfast, Laura Vanderkam titles an episode “Watch TV Wisely” and points out how it is designed to keep you watching. I’m sure most of us can relate to an intent to watch just a single episode then do something more productive. I find myself in a similar position with many activities that, while still productive, overshadow more important tasks like say school work. Especially in these unique times the traditional crutch question of where to find the time is not as applicable. Instead, we need to ask ourselves what we are doing that is hard to stop. Once we realize this, then we know what needs to be before the item. With her focus on watching TV, Vanderkam suggests that you do the other thing that you wish you had time for before stepping on the slippery slope of watching TV. The TV is just one example of a slippery slope in our lives that may need to be addressed. (Vanderkam, 2019)

Question: Ladies, have you noticed any of these slopes in your lives?

Discussion:

Brenna – I have definitely noticed myself getting into the netflix or social media slope. I also have a bad habit of procrastinating, so slipping down one of these slopes is not hard to manage during times where it is easy to get bored and sidetracked.

Rachel: I have been watching a lot more TV, but honestly I have been on my phone more. TikTok has taken over my day. When I am home and not in the college atmosphere, it’s very easy for me to spend hours on my phone and not be productive

Tina: I have also found myself getting sucked into social media more, especially YouTube. I have been on my phone a lot more as well, more than I would like to be. It’s gotten to the point where I need to put it in another room so that I don’t just stare at it all day.

Tina

So, lastly, I wanted to draw on some personal experience for my part of our video. First off, this whole crisis has greatly changed my plans for the future. I am set to graduate in the next few weeks and was supposed to start my journey towards medical school and my career in the military. But now that COVID-19 has virtually taken over our everyday lives, most of what I had planned has fallen through. It was beyond discouraging at first and I lost most of my motivation to continue with school work, etc. But, as the weeks have dragged on, I now realize that this is not the end of the world. I must say I am really glad we are not living through a world war right now but either way it is still a global crisis that is going to greatly shape our everyday lives for the foreseeable future. So, I wanted to take this time to share some insight from one of my favorite authors, C.S. Lewis, who you may know as the author of The Chronicles of Narnia. He wrote a letter of advice to students who are living through a global crisis that I found quite interesting and it was written in 1939 during World War II. He cited three enemies to the student during times of global crisis, “excitement, frustration, and fear” (Griffith, 2020). Excitement refers to how the news and media are currently overwhelming our thoughts, actions, and, not to mention, draining every last bit of motivation from our minds. The frustration that we may be currently feeling seems to be more of a frustration with our futures and how uncertain they seem to be at the moment. The third enemy that C.S. Lewis wrote about was fear, which is, in our case, a fear of you or a family member contracting the virus as well as a fear of what if we don’t make it. That can be through the illness itself, economically, mentally, etc. (Griffith, 2020). I think all of these thoughts and feelings are perfectly valid to have. I have had them myself. I think one of the most important things to remember at this point is that this is all temporary and that it is not going to be forever, even though it feels like it will be. As students, we cannot give up. We set out in this journey to learn and educate ourselves and we need to try our hardest to keep going. My advice to ourselves right now and those living through future crises is to keep your mind occupied so that you don’t feel like you are wasting away into a world of anxiety and fear. Occupy your mind with upcoming assignments and exams, read a book, create a daily schedule/ routine, exercise more, play a video game, or anything that helps you to stay relaxed and sane. Trust me, I know it is easier said than done, but we will all come out of this for the better if we don’t give up on ourselves and go down a path that will set us back. So, keep on keeping on everyone, we can do it! Enjoy every moment because they are precious.

Outro:

Tina: So, we decided that this was a great way to end our video. If any of us have any final thoughts, we can share those now.

Brenna: Thank you for listening and thank you for listening to our tips.

Tina: Thank you everyone, we enjoyed making this little video. I hope you all enjoyed.

REFERENCES

Forêt, R. d. l. (2020). What are antiviral herbs? The Spruce. Retrieved from https://learningherbs.com/remedies-recipes/antiviral-herbs/

Goldman, T.Just Keep Moving. And Sometimes, Double Your Distance. NPR.org. https://www.npr.org/2020/04/01/825143172/just-keep-moving-and-sometimes-double-your-distance

Griffith, J. (2020). C. S. lewis’ advice to students during A pandemic will do us good. The Federalist. Retrieved from https://thefederalist.com/2020/04/09/c-s-lewis-advice-to-students-during-a-pandemic-will-do-all-our-souls-good-right-now/

Iannotti, M. (2019). Use these tips to grow vegetables indoors. Retrieved from https://www.thespruce.com/how-to-grow-vegetables-indoors-1403183

Vanderkam, L. (Host). (2019, April 28). Watch TV wisely [Audio podcast episode]. In Before Breakfast. iHeartRadio. https://www.iheart.com/podcast/105-before-breakfast-30642889/episode/watch-tv-wisely-30897036/

BIOS:

  • Tina Cardone:  Hi, my name is Tina Cardone and I am a senior at UMass Amherst. I am majoring in Earth Systems (Geology) and I am on the Pre-Med track. I hope to one day become a surgeon for the United States Navy.
  • Brenna Tomaino: My name is Brenna and I am currently a rising Senior at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. I study Animal Science on the Animal Management track. On weekends I work at a veterinary emergency room as a technician assistant.

Shelby Hasu, Erica Jackson, Sidney Johnson, Samuel Teerlinck

Junior Year Writing, NatSci 387, Lecture 3, Group 3:

Shelby Hasu (Natural Resource Conservation), Erica Jackson (Animal Sciences/ Commonwealth College), Sidney Johnson (Environmental Sciences/ Commonwealth College), Sam Teerlinck (Pre-Vet/Natural Resource Conservation / Commonwealth College

FINAL VIDEO PROJECT TRANSCRIPT (17, April 2020)

Erica: Hi I’m Erica Jackson. I am a Pre-Vet major at UMass Amherst.

Shelby: Hi I’m Shelby Hasu. I am a NRC Wildlife major at UMass Amherst.

Sam: I’m Sam Teerlinck. I’m a Pre-Vet major with a NRC minor at UMass Amherst.

Sidney: Hi I’m Sidney Johnson and I am an Environmental Science major at UMass Amherst.

Erica: Today we as a panel are here to discuss how our lives have been affected by the recent COVID-19 outbreak. In order to convey our messages effectively we will each answer the same three questions, allowing all viewpoints to be heard.

The first question is: What was your initial response upon hearing about COVID-19?

Upon hearing about COVID-19 I did not think it would escalate as quickly as it did. Prior to this pandemic other diseases, like Ebola, had travelled the globe. DUring the Ebola spread, very few in the United States had been affected and I assumed COVID-19 would follow suit. But wow was I wrong. With over half a million people confirmed positive with the disease and tens of thousands dead, this virus is certainly a different animal. When schools began to close, the severity of the situation heightened in my mind as plans were being set into action for our safety. I never thought we wouldn’t return to UMass, but I’m okay with being home.

Shelby: I think my initial reaction to the pandemic was I didn’t think that it was going to spread as fast as it was. I understood why it spread in China because it was just so crowded there, we know there is just so many people, but for it to spread around the world so quickly was a real shock and honestly my initial reaction kind of as a joke was to buy a lot of survival stuff, but now I’m like maybe this is good stuff to have in case we are all destroyed by this virus.

 Sam: Yeah, I’m kind of on the same page, my initial reaction was I did not think much would come of the virus. I thought it would stay in Europe and Asia and I really didn’t think much of it, didn’t take it seriously at all. I think most of the U.S. really didn’t until universities started being affected and the possibility of schools would close.

 Sidney: Yeah, I had a very similar reaction to that too. I really thought this was going to be something that stayed in Asia and when I first heard about it I thought it was something that even if it did spread a little bit, it would be able to be taken out pretty easily, and I know this is naive, but because of modern medicine and stuff like that I thought it would be something that wouldn’t spread as much as it did. I guess it makes sense with the travel that we do nowadays.

 Shelby: Yeah that makes sense.

Erica: Yeah, the second question is: How has COVID-19 impacted us and the people around us? Personally, my family has not been very highly affected by the virus. Both my parents have been able to maintain their jobs, working from home,so financially I am in a very similar situation as I was in before the virus. One of my aunts did test positive for the virus as she lives in a nursing home in New York City. This is a heavily hit demographic so I wasn’t very shocked when I heard that she did test positive for it. Luckily, she is asymptomatic and we are in hopes that it stays that way. The only reason she tested positive or would have been tested at all was because her whole facility was coming down with it, so as a precaution they tested the whole facility for it, which is how her positive test was confirmed, but we are just in hopes that it remains asymptomatic.

Shelby: My parents are in the same boat as yours Erica where they are both working from home. I think my aunt is also in an assisted living situation, and a portion of her facility was devoted to COVID-19 and patients and we were all like okay she has pre-existing health conditions and she’s one of those people who are definitely higher risk of getting COVID-19 and not doing so great, but I think my family is pretty lucky so far. I know a lot of my friends have either lost their jobs because they are not essential or they work in the restaurant business and their hours are completely cut now.

Sam: Yeah, I’m kind of in the same boat. I haven’t been affected too much, but I haven’t been able to get my old job back, which kind of sucks being unemployed, but other than that being stuck at home is alright. That’s really the only complaint I have is that I can’t leave home, but I haven’t been affected too much by it.

 Shelby: Same.

Sidney: Yeah,my parents, luckily, haven’t lost their jobs, which is really good, and they’re in really good health and stuff. Actually, funny enough, at the very beginning of the pandemic, my dad travelled to Chicago, and when he came back he was sick with symptoms that are very similar to what we are seeing now and my mom got really sick, and they didn’t think anything of it. But now, looking back, they might have had it, but we’re not sure. Otherwise, not much else has changed for me, except obviously being home and having to balance school and free time. That’s kind of difficult. And having so much screen time, that’s kind of been an issue, but besides that I’ve been good.

 Erica: The final question leaves this discussion a bit open ended, as we do not know what is truly to come, but the final question is: What does the future look like in each of our eyes?

And, I am going to start by showing you guys these graphs, as I am a little concerned what the future will hold and how we will come back from such a quarantine process.

*share screen with four graphs

Lately, I have been doing a little research on the Spanish Flu, and the corona virus and Spanish Flu pandemics parallel rather closely. I find it odd that they take place exactly one hundred years apart. This is just interesting as I find that it would be strange for two diseases to have such a similar playout at such intervals in history. In the United States during the Spanish Flu, these are four popular cities. In the top left, we have Philadelphia. Philadelphia waite a while before enforcing social distancing policies and therefore had a very large initial spike of the Spanish Flu. Their death tolls were the highest amongst all cities in the United States and due to them having such a high spike, their second spike was minimal because so many people were affected by the first round. New York on the other hand, had a rather low death toll, especially being the size of the city that it is. I had one of the lowest death rates. They started social distancing very early and maintained them very late after the first spike had hit, making their second spike also low. San Francisco on the other had, waited a long time to enfore social distancing making their first spike high, anf they did not maintain them an slacked them off rather early, which shows the second spike, around sixteen weeks after the virus initially presented itslef. And finally is St.Louis.

St. Louis I find very interesting because they did not enforce socail distancing until prettylate in the game, this resulted in, it was odd that they had a low initial peak, but due to them having such a low initial peak they slacked off rather early and resulted in them having a very large second peak forcing them into a second social distancing period. Even though their death rate wasn’t very high I just find it interesting how their second peak was bigger than their first and this makes me concerned for us and our future. I understand that it is very difficult being at home for a long period of time and I know people need their jobs back, but I just hope the government enforces social distancing to a point where we don’t believe we will have a second spike, as if we have to go into a second period of social distancing, like St. Louis did, our entire summer would be affected by it, and possibly into our fall semester. By maintaining a longer social distancing period after we believe the virus is completed I think it will save us in the long run.

 Shelby:That was actually pretty interesting, I liked that. I guess for me I have two different ways that this could go, or two different things that I think could happen. One, since everyone has been quarantined, wildlife has had the opportunity to have their run of the place, and I think when everything opens up again there is going to be a lot of increased conflict and I think it is going to be hard for people to mitigate the conflict between them, and the animals are going to be confused about why the people are here again. Because, I know, in England the foxes are pretty prevalent in London and big cities and they are becoming even more crazy in their populations now because they have all this room, no cars, no people, no dogs, and I think once they come out there’s going to be a lot of conflict and we are going to see a lot of dead wildlife basically coming out of this.I think so far as I’ve seen, and China has reopened, they’ve continued to sell exotic weird animals that started this thing too.

Sam: So none of us are really sure what the future is going to hold, but I’m kind of hoping it will be a wake up call for the governments and society in general. Hopefully it will be a wake up call to better procedures and ways to deal with stuff like this, so if it ever happens again, even with modern technology and everything, we’re still vulnerable to diseases like this especially in such crowded populations. Hold on I’m going to share my screen real quick.

*shares screen with “Coronavirus pandemic leading to huge drop in air pollution” Can you guys see that?

 Sidney, Shelby and Erica: Yes.

Sam: Okay so this is aerial footage of air pollution in Asia. In 2019, it was all that pink is air pollution and I think it was nitrogen dioxide, yep, and in 2020 it was so much lower, so hopefully it will be another wake up call that we’re causing all of this pollution and us being stuck inside and not being outside is having an actual benefit on the world.

 Sidney: And kind of going along with that, I read this article by the L.A. Times, written a couple of days ago, and it was about this environmentalist named Alan Weisman, who wrote this book a while ago called “A World Without Us” and this book was kind of about what would happen to the environment in a theoretical post human world type of thing and in his book he was talking about how since all of this activity was halted, wildlife was able to take over these places we had normally been in and it’s kind of interesting because I guess he’s been getting a lot of people sending him messages being like this situation that we are in now is similar to the one in your book. Since so many people have been staying inside, wildlife has been returning to different places. Like Sam, you were saying there is less pollution. I think like what you were saying, hopefully this is a wake up call and people will see we have such a delicate connection with the environment and what we do impacts the environment a lot, so hopefully it is a call to change in the future.

 Shelby: Yeah.

Erica: Thank you guys all for watching, I hope our discussion has allowed you to reflect on your experiences during COVID-19 and what the future will be like after. Thanks!

REFERENCES

Coste, V. (2020, March 30). Tails up? Is wildlife the big beneficiary of the COVID-19 lockdown? Retrieved April 21, 2020, from https://www.euronews.com/2020/03/30/coronavirus-is-wildlife-the-big-beneficiary-of-the-covid-19-lockdown

Mcnamara, M. (2020, April 14). Column: Bears thriving at Yosemite. Clear skies. Does coronavirus reveal a ‘World Without Us’? Retrieved from https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/story/2020-04-14/coronavirus-yosemite-wild life

Strochlic, N. and Champine, R. (March 27, 2020). How some cities ‘flattened the curve’ during the 1918 flu pandemic. National Geographic. Retrieved from https://www.nationalgeographic.com/history/2020/03/how-cities-flattened-curve-1918-sp anish-flu-pandemic-coronavirus/

Watts, J., & Kommenda, N. (2020, March 23). Coronavirus pandemic leading to huge drop in air pollution. Retrieved from: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2020/mar/23/coronavirus-pandemic-leading-t o-huge-drop-in-air-pollution

Westcott, B. (2020, March 6). China has banned eating wild animals after the coronavirus outbreak. Ending the trade will be hard. Retrieved April 21, 2020, from https://www.cnn.com/2020/03/05/asia/china-coronavirus-wildlife-consumption-ban-intl-h nk/index.html

BIOS:

  • Erica Jackson is a Pre-Veterinary major at The University of Massachusetts Amherst. After she graduates in 2021, she plans to attend veterinary school where she strives to specialize in exotics, with hopes of one day working in a zoo.
  • Sidney Johnson is an Environmental Science major at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. After graduation in 2021, she plans to work in wildlife conservation. 
  • Sam Teerlinck is a member of the class of 2021 at UMass Amherst. He is a Pre-Veterinary major with a Natural Resource Conservation minor. After graduation he aspires to attend Vet school with the goal of focusing on wildlife.
  • Shelby Hasu is a Natural Resources Conversation major at UMass Amherst, focusing on Wildlife Conservation. Post-graduation, she hopes to work on educating her community about different animal species and the natural world.