Item

Kalin Morphet Oral History, 2020/11/22

Media

Title (Dublin Core)

Kalin Morphet Oral History, 2020/11/22
Changes to How Life Operates

Description (Dublin Core)

This interview is with one of my closest friends. Although we talk all the time, and are a part of each other daily lives interviewing her in this kind of almost formal format and asking her very pointed questions that I don't typically ask was a bit eye opening. I already knew a lot of what she said, but to hear it all laid out and not intertwined and in bits between the busyness our lives really opened my eyes to how much our lives has had to change because of COVID-19, even as we continue to chug along. I think this is important to know because so often we're bogged down with continuing to go though the motions and check boxes we forget to slow down and think about the circumstances of out situation with COVID.

Recording Date (Dublin Core)

11/22/2020

Creator (Dublin Core)

Victoria Saldana
Kalin Morphet

Contributor (Dublin Core)

Victoria Saldana

Event Identifier (Dublin Core)

HS3390

Partner (Dublin Core)

St. Mary's University

Type (Dublin Core)

oral history

Controlled Vocabulary (Dublin Core)

English Education--Universities

Curator's Tags (Omeka Classic)

#coveryourfangs
courses
virtual learning
mask
extracurriculars
student life

Contributor's Tags (a true folksonomy) (Friend of a Friend)

#coveryourfangs
changes
student life
HS3390

Collection (Dublin Core)

College COVID Stories

Linked Data (Dublin Core)

Exhibit (Dublin Core)

#CoverYourFangs

Date Submitted (Dublin Core)

11/22/2020

Date Modified (Dublin Core)

11/25/2020
02/16/2021
04/05/2021
05/08/2021
07/17/2021
05/22/2022
12/13/2023

Date Created (Dublin Core)

11/22/2020

Interviewer (Bibliographic Ontology)

Victoria Saldana

Interviewee (Bibliographic Ontology)

Kalin Morphet

Location (Omeka Classic)

San Antonio
Texas
United States of America

Format (Dublin Core)

mp4

Language (Dublin Core)

English

Duration (Omeka Classic)

00:04:05

abstract (Bibliographic Ontology)

This interview is with one of my closest friends. Although we talk all the time, and are a part of each other daily lives interviewing her in this kind of almost formal format and asking her very pointed questions that I don't typically ask was a bit eye opening. I already knew a lot of what she said, but to hear it all laid out and not intertwined and in bits between the busyness our lives really opened my eyes to how much our lives has had to change because of COVID-19, even as we continue to chug along. I think this is important to know because so often we're bogged down with continuing to go though the motions and check boxes we forget to slow down and think about the circumstances of out situation with COVID.

Transcription (Omeka Classic)

Victoria Saldana 0:01
All righty. So let's start out first with your name.

Kalin Morphet 0:06
My name is Kalin Morphet.

Victoria Saldana 0:09
Alrighty, and what is your classification and major, Kalin?

Kalin Morphet 0:14
I am a senior, and I'm a business and history major.

Victoria Saldana 0:18
Awesome. And how many classes are you taking this semester?

Kalin Morphet 0:22
I’m taking five.

Victoria Saldana 0:25
How many of your classes have gone almost completely online?

Kalin Morphet 0:30
Um, well, initially, the real-life classes are online and two in person. And now four are online and only one person.

Victoria Saldana 0:43
So a lot of changes. Um, do you feel that you've benefited more- that you would have benefited more being in the classroom this semester, specifically with any course material, specifically, like any specific courses have been better?

Kalin Morphet 0:59
Um, for a few of my courses, sure, it would have been nice to be in person. But I have been- I was pleasantly surprised that Zoom wasn't as like, incumbent on my education. I thought it was mostly okay. I still got the material I needed. The professors worked pretty hard to accommodate anything else that we needed that wouldn't work over Zoom.

Victoria Saldana 1:29
Do you see any benefits other than just the safety benefits of being online, of course?

Kalin Morphet 1:36
Yeah. I don't think there's any other benefits to being online other than safety.

Victoria Saldana 1:41
Um, were you involved in any extra- are you involved in any extracurriculars outside of class?

Kalin Morphet 1:48
I was involved in previous years, but I have not been involved in any this semester.

Victoria Saldana 1:55
And is that because of COVID because they had to function differently or just busyness?

Kalin Morphet 2:00
Um, partly both. I was also taking an extra course, so I was extra busy, and I also work which takes a lot of time. And a lot of organizations have been a lot more different online, because of COVID, which is understandable, so there was less opportunity, and it just wasn't as viable this semester.

Victoria Saldana 2:20
And talking about work, has COVID affected your job? Do you feel like you've had to- or you-they have made you cut back in hours or any new regulations?

Kalin Morphet 2:31
Well, we have decrease hours now. And so that is cut back an hour. And we also have to wear a mask while we're at work, which makes sense, but it makes it frustrating, especially since I work with children. So it's hard to communicate with them and yell at them when I need to. Um, other than that, it hasn't really affected work too much, which is honestly probably a negative one than a positive ‘cause I don't think my work is taking proper precautions.

Victoria Saldana 3:05
Definitely. And do you feel like you've gotten the same education this semester as you have in previous semesters because of online classes? Or do you feel like it's kind of a downgrade in quality and your expectations?

Kalin Morphet 3:22
I think it really depends on the course. But overall, it's definitely been a downgrade. A lot of professors that I've had in previous years, though, are scattered this semester. They didn't put nearly as much time or energy into the course was just because everything was so up in the air. And so they're barely do anything goes all over the place. I don't think I've ever learned anything in the course, which I know would have been different if we were in person, and it was much more consistent, regular semester.

Victoria Saldana 3:52
Awesome. I really appreciate you taking the time to talk to me. And I will send you over just a little document, and it's basically a consent form. Okay?

Kalin Morphet 4:02
Okay, sounds good. Thank you.

Victoria Saldana 4:04
Thank you.

Item sets

This item was submitted on November 22, 2020 by Victoria Saldana using the form “Share Your Story” on the site “A Journal of the Plague Year”: https://covid-19archive.org/s/archive

Click here to view the collected data.

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