China Daily

Schools back to remote classes as coronaviru­s cases surge

- By BELINDA ROBINSON in New York belindarob­inson@chinadaily­usa.com

The COVID- 19 pandemic hitting every state in the United States is forcing schools in big cities to stop in- person classes and revert to remote learning.

Boston, Indianapol­is and Philadelph­ia have put in- person classes on hold until later in the school year. In New York state it is wait- and- see for the largest public- school system in the country.

With coronaviru­s cases surging, some experts are calling for widespread school closures, or considerin­g about them, while other school districts and state officials are pushing back for continuing in- person instructio­n, pointing to the number of confirmed COVID- 19 cases reported in schools as being relatively low.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo on Saturday cautioned against making too quick a decision to close schools, saying shutting them has “ancillary consequenc­es that people don’t often think of ’’.

Closing the schools makes it much harder for parents to go to work, creates issues with underprivi­leged children who depend on meals served at the schools and makes it more likely children will spend more time on the street in areas with high virus rates, Cuomo said.

He also said parents and teachers should be part of the decision- making process.

The city of New York should consider a school’s COVID- 19 rate when deciding whether to close it to in- person learning, he said.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said last week that the city would stick to its policy of closing schools if the seven- day average virus rate exceeded 3 percent.

On Saturday the city reported a rate of 2.47 percent, and as a result officials say schools remain open.

“We expect the daily test positivity to backfill and increase as more test results are entered into the system, but do not expect that increase to push today’s seven- day average to 3 percent,” they said.

Coronaviru­s cases in California surpassed 1 million cases last week, with county rates surging and hospital admissions rising.

On Saturday Los Angeles county, the most populous county in the United States, reported a record single- day increase in confirmed cases since the summer surge, Xinhua reported. Public and private schools could once again be forced to shut down completely for in- person instructio­n if the rises continue to worsen, health officials warned school leaders.

New cases in Pennsylvan­ia have been averaging about 4,000 cases a day, setting record rates for infections.

Philadelph­ia’s school district has abandoned plans to bring back staff and students to the classroom this month. Rich Askey, president of the Pennsylvan­ia State Education Associatio­n, said: “We must follow these guidelines to the letter. It’s the best way for us to slow the spread of this virus and keep our students, staff and their families safe.”

We must follow these guidelines to the letter. It’s the best way for us to slow the spread of this virus and keep our students, staff and their families safe.”

Rich Askey, president of the Pennsylvan­ia State Education Associatio­n

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