Truro News

Arizona students back in class after six-day teacher walkout

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Hundreds of thousands of Arizona schoolchil­dren returned to classes Friday a day after state lawmakers approved 20 per cent raises for teachers and they ended a six-day walkout that shuttered most classrooms around the state.

Teachers at a high school in the Phoenix suburb of Mesa lined up to greet students with cheers and handshakes. An elementary school principal greeted students with high-fives on the other side of metro Phoenix.

Educators returning to work at San Marcos Elementary in the suburb of Chandler traded in their red protest T-shirts for shirts with their black and blue school colours and its bear mascot. Wearing sunglasses and smiles, they hugged and wrapped their arms around each other’s shoulders to start the day.

At Oakwood Elementary School in the Phoenix suburb of Peoria, Principal Shawn Duguid was dressed in a purple shirt in the spirit of one of the school’s colours. As he does every day, Duguid was in front of the campus gates before they opened to wel- come the roughly 1,000 students between kindergart­en and eighth grade. Some parents came with boxes of doughnuts and other goodies for the faculty after the six-day absence.

Other parents, however, were still upset about the impact of teacher walkouts. Charlene Schafer, who was dropping off her two sons, said she is “pretty ticked off.”

“They should have been in school. They were by themselves at home,” she said.

Terri Kiley, who was walking her daughter in, said she sympathize­s with the teachers but wishes they could use other strategies.

“I understand what they’re trying to do. But I didn’t like that they shut down the school. Trying to get (the kids) re-motivated is a little rough.”

For 14-year-old Sariah Stone, finding motivation to get out of bed after six days off and no homework wasn’t the easiest.

“I thought I was on summer vacation,” the eighth-grader said.

Still, she is happy to be back. She missed “just being here, the daily routine. It just felt weird not coming back.”

Fifth-grade teacher Mechelle Kester was elated to be back on morning duty in the school’s drop-off zone.

“We missed our kids ... They look like they’re still asleep but that’s OK,” Kester said with a laugh. “We’ll get them back on track.”

In Cindy Cordts’ third-grade class, children immediatel­y sat down with a worksheet. Cordts warmly welcomed them back, briefly acknowledg­ing the hiatus as “kind of like we had an extra spring break.”

“It’s very hard to put into words how excited I am to be back with my kiddoes,” said Cordts, who has been teaching for 33 years. “I have missed them absolutely greatly and we’re ready to finish the year strong.”

Strike organizers called for an end to the walkout Thursday after an all-night legislativ­e session resulted in a 20 per cent pay raise by 2020. Most districts planned to reopen Friday but Tucson’s largest district said it would resume classes next week.

“We will return to our schools, classrooms, and students knowing that we have achieved something truly historic,” said a joint statement issued by Arizona Education Associatio­n President Joe Thomas and National Education Associatio­n President Lily Eskelsen Garcia.

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