Lake County Record-Bee

TEACHERS FACE ‘AN IMPOSSIBLE CHOICE’

Educators grapple with risks of in-person classes

- By Carolyn Jones

As pressure mounts for California schools to reopen for in-person instructio­n, special education teachers who have already been meeting with students in person describe the experience as a mix of fear, anxiety and occasional joy, with conditions changing at a moment’s notice.

The state does not track how many districts are open for inperson special education instructio­n, but some started offering in-person assessment­s and instructio­n in spring 2020, with more opening in the fall.

For teachers like Susan Cheramy-McNesby, a resource specialist in Lancaster in northern Los Angeles County, meeting with students in person has not gotten any easier as the months have gone by.

Two days a week, she puts on a mask, gloves and a coneshaped plastic shield, and sits behind a Plexiglass barrier while she assesses how well children can spell, or speak, or count, for placement in special education classes. The classroom is equipped with air purifiers and hand sanitizer, and everyone gets their temperatur­e taken at least once.

Still, she’s nervous. Several colleagues have contracted Covid-19, and one nearly died. Cheramy-McNesby is in her 60s and has a compromise­d immune system.

“I love my job, I really do, but this is really nerve-wracking,” said Cheramy-McNesby, who’s been a resource specialist for 23 years, teaching students with special needs and helping craft learning plans. “I’m being extra careful. I’m doing my best to stay healthy, for my grandchild­ren’s sake. But it’s scary.”

Special education has been a challenge for many districts during the pandemic because students in special education often receive services that are nearly impossible to provide

virtually, such as physical or occupation­al therapy. Assessment­s, required for students entering special education, as well as those already enrolled, are also almost impossible to provide online.

When campuses first closed in March, school districts asked U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos to waive some special education requiremen­ts, for fear districts couldn’t successful­ly provide them virtually and districts would be vulnerable to lawsuits from parents. DeVos declined, leading many districts to begin providing special education services in-person.

Marin County was among the first in California to start offering special education instructio­n in person, beginning in May. The county’s 30-point safety plan, created by the Marin County Department of Public Health and the County Office of Education, has been so successful that now 86% of the county’s schools, including charter schools and private schools, are open for in-person classes for almost all students, said County Superinten­dent Mary Jane Burke.

Support from the teachers’ unions, classified staff and parents has been key to the plan’s success, Burke said.

“They gave us their input every step of the way,” she said. “Overall, it’s going really well, but it’s been critical to have very close contact with all stakeholde­rs, right from the onset.”

Since August, when most schools opened, the rate of coronaviru­s transmissi­on has been very low, according to the Marin County Public Health Department. The county has recorded only seven cases of Covid that authoritie­s believe can be traced to schools, and no hospitaliz­ations. In fact, the county’s overall Covid rate has dropped since schools reopened.

Conditions have not been as smooth in other parts of the state. In Kern County, for example, special education classes have alternated between in-person and virtual instructio­n several times due to local spikes in the Covid rate.

Maren and Tracy Kelly, a married couple who live in Tehachapi, southeast of Bakersfiel­d, are both special education teachers who say it was wonderful to see their students again, but the experience has left them conflicted and unsettled.

“If I had a choice, I would not have gone back. Not because I don’t want to see my students. I love my job, but I was worried about my own health.” — Maren Kelly

“The back-and-forth was hard for me, hard for my students,” Maren Kelly said. “All the fluctuatio­n was detrimenta­l. There was too much chaos.”

And as much as she loves her students, seeing them in person — with all the safety protocols that entailed — was nerve-wracking. Students often took off their masks, or forgot the social-distance rules. Some of Tracy Kelly’s students have more severe disabiliti­es and need help with personal care, which cannot be done from 6 feet away.

Sometimes, students came to school with sniffles or other minor cold symptoms, prompting a disruptive quarantine protocol until the student tested negative for Covid.

Maren Kelly said she felt like she spent half her day reminding students to wear masks, wash their hands and stay 6 feet apart.

“If I had a choice, I would not have gone back,” she said. “Not because I don’t want to see my students. I love my job, but I was worried about my own health.”

 ?? ISTOCK VIA EDSOURCE ?? A caregiver is helping a young boy with a physical disability play with plastic block toys.
ISTOCK VIA EDSOURCE A caregiver is helping a young boy with a physical disability play with plastic block toys.
 ?? ALISON YIN — EDSOURCE ?? The state does not track how many districts are open for in-person special education instructio­n, but some started offering in-person assessment­s and instructio­n in spring 2020, with more opening in the fall.
ALISON YIN — EDSOURCE The state does not track how many districts are open for in-person special education instructio­n, but some started offering in-person assessment­s and instructio­n in spring 2020, with more opening in the fall.

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