Chicago Sun-Times

CPS TO BRING ELEMENTARY KIDS BACK TO SCHOOL IN FEBRUARY

Decision by CPS to bring back elementary students Feb. 1 comes amid increasing public health uncertaint­y as the city’s spread of COVID infections reaches an all-time high

- BY NADER ISSA, EDUCATION REPORTER nissa@suntimes.com | @NaderDIssa

In the most concrete move yet to restart traditiona­l schooling after what will have been an unpreceden­ted, nearly yearlong interrupti­on, Chicago Public Schools officials are planning to resume inperson classes for preschoole­rs and some special education students in January and all elementary school students at the start of February, the district announced Tuesday.

The decision comes amid increasing public health uncertaint­y as the city’s spread of COVID-19 infections reaches an all-time high and the school system faces heavy scrutiny from anxious teachers and parents. Officials relayed their plans to principals on a conference call Tuesday that was first reported by the Chicago Sun-Times. CPS made its plans public later in the afternoon.

Employing a phased-in return that initially was expected as soon as November, the district said it plans to bring back preschool students and children in special education cluster programs Jan. 11 for daily instructio­n, and all other kindergart­en through eighth grade students Feb. 1 for part-time classroom, part-time remote learning. Pre-K and cluster staff will go back to work Jan. 4, and elementary school teachers will return Jan. 25.

High school students will continue remote learning, and the district will consider whether to bring them back later in the spring.

“While remote learning has allowed many of our students to continue their studies over the past eight months, the reality is that our Black and Latinx students, our youngest students and highestnee­d learners have not been equitably served,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot said in a statement. “The decision to begin in-person learning this January will restore their access to high- quality instructio­n and is the result of balancing our commitment to equity with our current public health situation.”

Families will have the option to continue remote learning. CPS plans to send an opt-in form Nov. 23, and the deadline for students to let the district know whether they’ll attend in-person classes will be Dec. 7.

School administra­tors will find out the following week how many of their students have decided to return to school. Parents who choose in-person learning can change their decision to remote learning at any time, while parents who choose remote learning won’t be able to opt-in to in-person instructio­n until a later time so the schools can fectively plan.

As of this week, about 5,600 out of an eligible 16,700 preschool and special education cluster students, around 34%, had opted in to inperson learning through an earlier form sent last month — fewer than officials had expected, CPS said. Meanwhile about 1,900 of 6,800 pre-K and cluster staffers, 28%, requested accommodat­ions or leaves of absence.

While Lightfoot and CPS CEO Janice Jackson had hoped to reopen schools sooner, and city health commission­er Dr. Allison Arwady said as recently as last week she remained confident students and staff can be kept safe at schools, efthe raging pandemic has left families and teachers worried for their health and at least slightly delayed their plans.

Chicago’s seven- day average test positivity stood at 16% Tuesday, the highest since mid-May when the first stage of the pandemic had forced unpreceden­ted school closures and a stay-at-home order. The average daily caseload grew to 2,296, up 31% since last week.

CPS and Arwady offered contrastin­g explanatio­ns for why the first return date isn’t sooner than two months from now.

The mayor and CPS officials stressed in their announceme­nt the rapid rise in COVID-19 cases played no role in their decision, and that CPS is waiting until January because that will “allow students to quarantine following the holidays and because beginning class during the disruption­s posed by the holidays would not be conducive to the needs of young children who will need to adapt to a consistent, new routine.”

Arwady, meanwhile, said the city is “in the midst of this second surge right now, and there’s no doubt the trends we see are very concerning.” Setting a reopening threshold for the first time in months, Arwady said students could return once cases in the city are doubling every 18 days. Right now they’re doubling every 12 days, which indicates rapid spread.

“We want to get to a more stable place with community spread before bringing students and staff back to school,” she said. “Once we do see more stability, even if case rates remain relatively high, I’m confident in-person learning can work and be safely done.”

While CPS classes are not being held in-person, a district database shows there were 87 confirmed cases among adults that forced at least partial interrupti­ons at the district’s 500-plus schools last week, the most recent available. School clerks and tech coordinato­rs have been reporting to work in-person the entire school year.

The Chicago Teachers Union has strongly opposed reopening schools while infections spread and on Tuesday lambasted the mayor’s “worst possible leadership at the worst possible time.”

“Today’s announceme­nt appears to be based on the mayor’s political agenda, because it sure isn’t based on science,” CTU President Jesse Sharkey said in a statement. “Just unilateral­ly picking an arbitrary date in the future and hoping everything works out is a recipe for disaster.”

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? Some CPS special ed and pre-K students will return to school starting in January, while others will come back the following month, officials told principals Tuesday.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES Some CPS special ed and pre-K students will return to school starting in January, while others will come back the following month, officials told principals Tuesday.

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