海角大神

鈥榃e鈥檝e learned a lot of lessons鈥: How schools plan to navigate a new year

|
Hannah Beier/Reuters/File
Students are led onto the bus after the school day ends at Kratzer Elementary School in Allentown, Pennsylvania, April 13, 2021.

Principal Arria Coburn has embraced the word 鈥減ivot.鈥 She despised it during early pandemic lockdowns since it always meant a shift to the unknown. But with a year of pandemic schooling completed, she鈥檚 confident that teachers and students at her school can adapt again if necessary.听

鈥淚n the event that we do need to pivot, we have so much experience that I鈥檓 ready,鈥 says Dr. Coburn, who leads The Springfield Renaissance School, a public magnet school for grades 6-12 in Springfield, Massachusetts. The school plans to open for full in-person schooling on Aug. 30. 鈥淲e haven鈥檛 necessarily started to look at a hybrid plan or a remote plan, but we have it on file.鈥澨

Back-to-school season is here, with school buses revving up and renewed debates over masking, distancing, and other COVID-19 mitigation strategies that many educators and families had hoped to put in the rearview mirror.听

Why We Wrote This

What does the return of mandates and masks mean for the start of another school year? Educators focus on lessons learned in the past year, amid pointed public debate, to bring students back to the classroom.

By the end of this week, roughly 25% of K-12 students in the United States will have started school,听with openings continuing past Labor Day. And even as pandemic , dedication to reopening schools in person remains strong among many education leaders, says Thomas Toch, director of FutureEd, a think tank at Georgetown University in Washington. Schools learned lessons last year about safely reopening and are now better supported with $122 billion in federal relief funding from the American Rescue Plan, he says.听

鈥淲e鈥檝e got a year鈥檚 worth of experience. We鈥檝e learned what works and what doesn鈥檛 work,鈥 says Mr. Toch. 鈥淲e can do it well and safely, and it鈥檚 important for both academic and social and emotional reasons to get back to school.鈥

On July 27, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued听 about school reopening, including that all students and school staff wear masks indoors, regardless of vaccination status. The CDC recommends that students return to full-time in-person learning and advises schools to adopt 鈥渓ayered prevention strategies鈥 including听masks, COVID-19 screening testing, improved ventilation, hand-washing, and promoting vaccines for those eligible.听

Randy Hoeft/The Yuma Sun/AP
Aide Perez, cafeteria manager at Palmcroft Elementary School, helps a young student find a place to sit and eat breakfast before classes Aug. 2, 2021, in Yuma, Arizona.

As of Aug. 10, 87 of the 200 largest K-12 districts in the U.S. mandate masks for all students and 102 do not (the others are undecided or vaccine contingent), according to Dennis Roche, president of Burbio, a website that tracks school data.

Whether schools will 鈥 or can 鈥 follow the updated CDC guidance depends in part on geography. New York City, for example, with the largest school system in the country, is still on track to 听with masking in September. But elsewhere, several states have banned schools from setting mask mandates. The governors of and 听reconfirmed their commitments to prohibiting mandatory face masks in schools 鈥 though some districts in those states say they plan to defy those expectations. On Tuesday, two Texas judges issued local rulings allowing officials to require masks in public schools and buildings. In Arkansas, on Aug. 6, a judge temporarily the state from enforcing a ban on mask mandates.

Some schools reopening in early August have already had to change course: Carter County Schools and Martin County Schools in Kentucky school reopening, and three schools in Mississippi鈥檚听Lamar County temporarily to virtual learning after COVID-19 outbreaks, according to local news reports.

This year 鈥渁 little more complex鈥

Kristen McNeill, superintendent of the Washoe County School District, which includes Reno, Nevada, oversaw听in-person learning听last school yearin the district of about 62,000 students,听which reopened with in-person and remote options last August.听This听school year began on Aug. 9, with the vast majority of students returning in person.

鈥淚 think we鈥檝e learned a lot of lessons from what we were able to go through last year 鈥 whether it鈥檚 around distance education, connectivity, or how we engage our families,鈥 says Dr. McNeill. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to say it鈥檚 easier [reopening this year] by any stretch of the imagination. One of the things that every school district across the country is dealing with right now is the change with the delta variant and that鈥檚 making opening a little more complex.鈥

Parents, at local school board meetings and on social media, have fiercely argued for and against continued pandemic protocols at school, and anxiety is rising again about balancing work and child care responsibilities if schooling is disrupted. Polls also show some parents continue to prefer remote learning, with听Black and Hispanic parents听 about returning to school in person.听

鈥淎s long as it鈥檚 safe enough and I鈥檓 comfortable enough, they鈥檙e going back,鈥 says Toyin Anderson, a mother of 14- and 11-year-old students in Rochester, New York. She wants her kids back in school and desires extra school counselors to help all students readjust. But she鈥檚 also concerned about crowds with more students in the building than last year when school ran on a hybrid model.听

鈥淭his COVID thing does its own thing. It鈥檚 leading and we鈥檙e following. To be honest, I fear you can make plans for today, but tomorrow you have to change them,鈥 Ms. Anderson says.

Scientific studies during the 2020-21 school year indicated听that transmission of COVID-19 in schools was not higher than community transmission rates when safety protocols were in place, according to the CDC. A July 2021 on COVID-19 in K-12 schools by Resolve to Save Lives, led by former CDC Director Tom Frieden, stated closing schools is 鈥渄eeply detrimental鈥 and 鈥渁bundant evidence shows that transmission and risk of outbreaks in schools can be reduced using layered mitigation measures.鈥

Success Academy, a large public charter school network in New York City, opened all of its听47 schools for in-person learning on Aug. 2. The network serves 23,000 students,听the majority of whom are Black and Latino, and operated remotely for all of the previous school year.听

鈥淚t is scarier than typical to open during a pandemic,鈥 says Eva Moskowitz, CEO and founder of Success Academy, 鈥渂ut we鈥檝e been planning for months and months.鈥 The network required vaccinations for all school staff, except those with a religious or medical exemption, and reached near 100% participation. New school furniture 鈥 such as individual tables instead of oblong shared tables 鈥 was ordered to accommodate social distancing.听听

Success Academy is offering a remote option to students through the end of the first marking period in early October. As of the first day of school, 90% of students signed up for in-person learning. Dr. Moskowitz attributes the high return rate to calls administrators made to every family who initially opted for remote to discuss the benefits of in-person schooling. Those choosing remote learning fell from 40% to 10% before school started.听

Hesitancy to return

How many students return for the 2021-22 school year remains to be seen. Public school enrollment by 3% during the 2020-21 school year, with the largest drops in kindergarten and pre-kindergarten. Home-school rates doubled overall, including jumping from 3.3% to 16.1% among Black families, and some parents are exploring hybrid home-schooling options for fall.听

鈥淧art of the challenge, given the great concern in recent weeks about the delta variant and rising incidents rates, is it鈥檚 going to require schools to work very hard at getting kids into school,鈥 says Mr. Toch of FutureEd.

Last year鈥檚 pandemic schooling experience showed how much parents want to be involved with changes, says Principal Coburn in Springfield, whose students are largely听Black and Hispanic. She learned early on that parents weren鈥檛 happy about finding out about decisions second hand or not being clear on the rationale behind changes.听

This year, Dr. Coburn is making a list of a cohort of parents who want to be point people for input when big decisions are necessary. The parents, about 10 from each grade level, are on a group text chat. She and her administrative team are also calling the family of every student over the summer to make sure they received their back-to-school welcome packets and answer questions.

Many educators have also learned over the past year how to make classrooms feel warm and inviting despite pandemic restrictions, says Linda Darling-Hammond, president and CEO of the Learning Policy Institute in Palo Alto, California, and president of the California State Board of Education.听

鈥淚 think there are things that aren鈥檛 great. You鈥檇 like to see each other鈥檚 faces, you鈥檇 like to see how kids are enunciating their words,鈥 says Dr. Darling-Hammond. 鈥淏ut lots and lots of kids and teachers have learned how to do this and be engaged, social, happy about the learning environment.鈥

Caitlin Yang, a rising high school junior from Boise, Idaho, is relieved that her school reinstated its mask requirement. She wishes class sizes could be smaller, but is still looking forward to school starting mid-August.听

鈥淚鈥檓 happy to have more structured and prepared classes,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited to see my friends and have teachers naturally handle their classes this year because last year was a struggle.鈥澨

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to 鈥榃e鈥檝e learned a lot of lessons鈥: How schools plan to navigate a new year
Read this article in
/USA/Education/2021/0811/We-ve-learned-a-lot-of-lessons-How-schools-plan-to-navigate-a-new-year
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe