Chattanooga Times Free Press

CDC releases guidance for reopening schools amid virus

- BY MEGHAN MANGRUM STAFF WRITER

Staggered arrival times, desks spaced 6 feet apart, closed lunchrooms, off-limits playground­s, canceled extracurri­cular activities and all staff and students wearing face masks.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has called for these measures in newly issued guidance for reopening schools amid the global coronaviru­s pandemic.

School leaders across the state of Tennessee are looking for such guidance as they begin to roll out their own plans — or processes for developing plans — to reopen schools this fall.

Hamilton County Schools Superinten­dent Bryan Johnson in Chattanoog­a has launched his own School Reopening Task Force, and the group is meeting with different sectors and preparing to present recommenda­tions to the superinten­dent in late June or early July.

Guidance from the CDC and health officials are of utmost important for that work, Johnson told the Times Free Press.

“We are always going to give deference to CDC and public health profession­al guidance and expertise around this area. I anticipate as we work through the next couple of months, we will see more guidance evolve. The good thing is [that] everybody is trying to figure it out,” Johnson said.

The latest guidance recommends myriad social distancing policies for schools, such as placing desks at least 6 feet apart and facing the same direction, serving lunch in classrooms, staggering arrival times, requiring staff to wear cloth masks and daily temperatur­e screenings for everyone.

It even includes a “reopening decision tool” to help guide school leaders through these

decisions, and it encourages administra­tors to ask themselves what recommende­d health and safety action plans and ongoing monitoring are in place before reopening. The interim guidance is laid out in a series of three steps, to inform a gradual scaleup of operations, according to the report.

For scaling up operations and actually getting students back on campus, the CDC recommends:

› Step 1: Schools that are currently closed, remain closed. E-learning or distance learning opportunit­ies should be provided for all students. Support provision of student services such as school meal programs, as feasible. Camps should be restricted to children of essential workers and for children who live in the local geographic area only.

› Step 2: Remain open with enhanced social distancing measures and for children who live in the local geographic area only.

› Step 3: Remain open with distancing measures. Restrict attendance to those from limited transmissi­on areas (other Step 3 areas) only.

But during each of these steps, there are specific recommenda­tions for all types of activities, whether it is how schools handle a sick student or employee or what students have access to during the school day.

In Steps 1 and 2, for instance, schools are encouraged to keep students with the same group as much as possible throughout the day; limiting gatherings, events and extracurri­cular activities; cancel all field trips and close communal-use spaces such as dining halls and playground­s if possible, among other recommenda­tions.

By Step 3, the CDC still recommends staggering arrival and dismissal, as well as lunch times, allowing limited mixing among groups and limiting nonessenti­al people’s access to the school, such as volunteers or visitors.

Former Tennessee Education Commission­er Candice McQueen, now the chief executive officer for the National Institute for Excellence in Teaching, recently co-authored the report, “Blueprint for Back to School” for the American Enterprise Institute.

Along with CDC guidance, Johnson is using this blueprint and other reports like one released in April by the global consultanc­y company McKinsey & Co. to inform the district’s plans.

McQueen recently spoke about the report and what all educators have to consider as they plan with AEI’s deputy director of education policy, Nat Malkus, on the Report Card podcast.

“It’s overwhelmi­ng. It feels overwhelmi­ng when you start ticking through all of the considerat­ions, but if you don’t plan now you will not be ready for any type of face-to-face or remote learning experience going into the fall,” McQueen said. “I believe there are real possibilit­ies that folks may not start face-to-face, they may start remote again; so you may start one way and come back another way and not planning for what those transition­s will look like will be a mistake.”

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Bryan Johnson

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