Baltimore Sun

A blue ribbon commission is needed to chart path to reopening for schools

- By Annette Campbell Anderson, Megan Collins and Ruth Faden Annette Campbell Anderson (Annette. anderson@jhu.edu), Megan Collins (mcolli36@jhmi.edu) and Ruth Faden (rfaden@jhu.edu) are the founders of the Johns Hopkins University eSchools+ Initiative. Sara

Across the state and around the country, school systems continue to be challenged in charting a path to school reopening. Efforts to sustain the education of children most at risk are flagging, with educators growing increasing­ly concerned that chronic absenteeis­m is skyrocketi­ng as COVID learning fatigue has set in.

As parents across the country actively wrestle with the choices before them, new choices have emerged for the most privileged among us: home-schools, microschoo­ls, learning pods and private tutoring are thriving in the face of continuing concerns around returning to in-person schooling. However, for the balance of the country, and for our most vulnerable children in particular, these options are completely out of reach.

The longer that this pandemic persists unabated without a national plan for reopening our nation’s schools, the greater the prospect of permanent disruption to the well-being of our most vulnerable children and to the landscape of public education as we know it.

One way to move forward is to establish a blue ribbon commission whose members include a diverse representa­tion of parents, students, teachers, district administra­tors, school design experts, ethicists, public health officials and others who can together chart a realistic path to school reopening, one that can engender trust and confidence in parents, children, teachers and staff across the country.

Roughly 10 months into this pandemic, a blue ribbon commission would be positioned to examine best practices from school systems large and small, within the U.S. and around the world, that have been able to successful­ly reopen, and to identify key data and evidence gaps that still remain. Beyond considerin­g items like improving the antiquated ventilatio­n systems in older buildings and expanding safe transporta­tion options, the commission could add both specificit­y and teeth to calls for significan­t investment in providing sufficient and ongoing personal protective equipment for students and educators. The same could be done for financial resources for testing and contact tracing staff in every school.

This commission could also make specific recommenda­tions for the establishm­ent of a federal tracking database, to be coordinate­d with state education and health officials, that establishe­s a mandated methodolog­y for collecting and reporting virus transmissi­on metrics, cases and onward transmissi­on in schools, and detailed local reopening metrics.

A blue ribbon commission could also make longer-term recommenda­tions about how we can permanentl­y reduce the density of students in our existing schools, not just to reduce risk during a pandemic, but to promote learning and student well-being at all times. The commission could also make recommenda­tions to higher education and funding agencies about how to address the previously existing challenge of teacher shortages that is continuing only to get worse in this pandemic.

Perhaps most importantl­y, as a nation, we finally need to make the investment to ensure that every child has access to the technology and digital literacy that will enable them to regularly learn online for at least some portion of the school day, during but also well past the pandemic. The idea that nearly a quarter of America’s schoolchil­dren do not have sufficient access to high-speed quality internet service and/or a reliable device that will support their efforts to learn is a national disgrace. As we look to rebuild our country on the other side of this pandemic, a blue ribbon commission could recommend to the Federal Communicat­ions Commission that it prioritize expanding E-Rate, the program that assists schools in obtaining affordable telecommun­ications and internet access, to the homes of all students who qualify for free and reduced meals as a national priority.

Many families have already personally experience­d the devastatin­g impact of a COVID-19 diagnosis in their homes and communitie­s. Despite public health recommenda­tions, growing angst over returning to school as cases rise exponentia­lly will persist without a credible national vision that restores the public’s confidence in the safety of classroom instructio­n for all students. The coronaviru­s has potentiall­y disrupted learning for a generation. Not only do our children, their families and our educators deserve this investment to make a solid course correction, America’s future depends on it.

 ?? MATTBUTTON/BALTIMORE SUNMEDIA ?? Teachers and their supporters participat­e in the Harford County Education Associatio­n car caravan, left, while other groups advocate for the reopening of Maryland schools during a Harford County Board of Education meeting Dec. 21.
MATTBUTTON/BALTIMORE SUNMEDIA Teachers and their supporters participat­e in the Harford County Education Associatio­n car caravan, left, while other groups advocate for the reopening of Maryland schools during a Harford County Board of Education meeting Dec. 21.

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