Las Vegas Review-Journal

Never happier to be in school

Long, odd wait over for young students

- By Aleksandra Appleton, Julie Wootton-greener and Jonah Dylan

Young students across the Las Vegas Valley returned to school Monday for a first day of instructio­n like no other, following almost a year of distance learning amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The excitement outside Tyrone Thompson Elementary School rivaled that for Sunday’s Golden Globes, as adoring parents snapped photos and the PA system blared Journey’s “Don’t Stop Believing.”

Preschoole­rs sat in the center of hula hoops to help them envision social distancing before following their teachers inside — a sign, like the masks they were wearing, that this is not a typical

school year.

Just over 40,000 students in preschool through third grade district-wide are returning this week for hybrid instructio­n — two days of in-person learning in classrooms and three days of distance learning — after being out of school buildings since March 2020.

The hybrid phase for elementary students will end on April 6, when full-time in-person instructio­n will resume for those whose parents choose to return them to the classroom, according to a plan announced last week by Clark County School District officials. Older students will return under the hybrid model in two waves beginning March 22.

At Thompson, where around 90 students returned Monday — or about one-quarter of the total — parents reported no hesitation in sending their kids to the classroom, citing the need for social interactio­n as a primary motivation.

“It sucks doing school from the kitchen table,” said Sarah Colwell, parent to a third-grader.

Colwell said she realizes there are only a few months left of school but added that her daughter needs interactio­n with her peers and teachers after a year of being home.

“And honestly, I just want her out of the house,” she said.

Frank Hoffman, parent to two Thompson students, said he was hoping they’d benefit from face-to-face time with a teacher.

For his daughter Abigail, the answer to what she was most looking forward to came easily:

“To sit at my desk and see Miss Stanley, ” she said.

‘Reignited with joy’

When it was time to head in, one 3-year-old preschoole­r burst into tears but regained his composure soon after walking into the building, Assistant Principal Vanessa Price said.

Price said she was most looking forward to the personal contact with kids.

“Teachers are reignited with joy,” she said. “They didn’t sign up for teaching online.”

“You are on campus and that’s awesome!” Principal Robert Hinchliffe said over the loudspeake­r as the day officially began.

Hinchliffe said the reopening was bitterswee­t, as the new school had grand plans for its first classes of students.

“But we just have to find a different way,” he said.

Schools have baked in numerous precaution­s to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s among students and then on to their families and others. In addition to social distancing and face masks for all, schools have improved ventilatio­n and added special sick rooms where students showing symptoms will be isolated until their parents can pick them up.

In a news release Monday, Nevada Health Response also said the Division of Public and Behavioral Health has provided funding for more than 150 additional contact tracing staff from the Southern Nevada Health District to support the school district. The agency also is working with the state Department of Education to implement rapid COVID-19 testing at interested public, private and charter schools, which also is part of the district’s reopening plan.

Parents also are prohibited from entering school buildings under the plan.

Some mitigation­s are easy to spot from outside the schools.

At Goolsby Elementary School, which is returning about 69 percent of its 491 students this week, parents walked their children up to two side gates at the northwest Las Vegas school: one for preschool and kindergart­ners, and one for firstthrou­gh third-graders.

The Cheung family was first to arrive, staking out a piece of sidewalk more than 30 minutes early.

Siu Cheung described the first day as “so exciting” and asked her 6-year-old son Cayden what he was most thrilled about. “Kindergart­en!” he exclaimed.

Many parents stopped for a photo in front of an oversized welcome sign, including

Lupe Tapia, who took a picture of her second grader, Ariel, in her tie-dye face mask.

Tapia said she’s glad her daughter is attending in-person classes, adding that they had discussed what precaution­s she needed to take.

‘She needed to go back’

“She needed to go back. She missed friends and the social environmen­t,” she said. “She knows that she should wear the mask at all times.”

Physical education teacher Mike Shenkberge­r used a microphone to welcome the crowd, instructin­g the kids to walk slowly through the gate, find their teachers and line up on yellow dots 6 feet from their classmates.

“Good morning and welcome back to school,” he told them.

To their parents, Shenkberge­r added: “Parents, go enjoy your break. We know you did your time.”

At Wengert Elementary School in east Las Vegas, Superinten­dent Jesus Jara was on hand to welcome the 55 students as teachers waited to take them to their respective classrooms.

Tania Keys dropped off her kindergart­ner son, Marcus, for his first day of in-person elementary school.

She was nervous and said she’d worry “all day,” but was excited to get him back to school after seeing the toll that virtual instructio­n took on Marcus and his classmates. And she left him with one simple piece of advice.

“I told him to just please keep his mask on, and don’t forget to wash his hands.”

Third-grade teacher Shelby Mazza was planning to teach a hybrid class with half the students in the room and half the students online. She wanted to focus on building relationsh­ips between the two groups of students through a “class family” project.

“This week was just preparing for students to physically be here, and then mentally, a lot of praying,” she said. “We’re just trying to stay positive that the kids will make it all worth it.”

Jara and state Superinten­dent

Jhone Ebert also joined Bell Elementary Principal Jaymes Aimetti to lead the Pledge of Allegiance at the central valley school.

Dwayne Dukes reflected on the past year after watching his son, Jordanmich­eal, hold the flag next to Aimetti to start his first day of in-person kindergart­en.

“It set me back to make me love my family more,” he said. “I already loved them like crazy, but the setback made me sit home and really get into their lives. But it’s been the most beautiful, serious time in our lives.”

3K teachers on campus

Jara said at a midday news conference that around 3,000 teachers had returned to the classroom, with 1,500 others teaching virtually, adding that around 50 percent of all employees — or 20,000 — had received COVID-19 vaccine.

In addition to the 40,000 students on campuses, around 50,000 students opted for the Cohort C distance learning option, Jara said.

“Families will see that the mitigation strategies work. Our kids and staff will be safe, and we are expecting to see an increase in those students coming into face to face (instructio­n),” Jara said.

In addition to safety measures inside the classroom, school and elected officials are trying to raise awareness of another public health concern: inattentiv­e motorists.

At a news briefing on Friday, Andrew Bennett, spokesman for the Department of Public Safety, noted that last school year 41 students were struck by vehicles while walking to or from schools.

“One of those resulted in a fatality and three of those (students) were left seriously injured, which resulted in life-changing injuries,” Bennett said. “When we talk about the importance of pedestrian safety, literally lives are on the line.”

Contact Aleksandra Appleton at 702-383-0218 or aappleton@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ aleksapple­ton on Twitter. Contact Julie Wootton-greener at jgreener@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-2921. Follow @julieswoot­ton on Twitter. Contact Jonah Dylan at jdylan@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @ Thejonahdy­lan on Twitter.

 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto ?? Principal Jaymes Aimetti welcomes students on Monday at Bell Elementary School in Las Vegas. Holding the flag is kindergart­ner Jordanmich­eal Dukes, 6.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto Principal Jaymes Aimetti welcomes students on Monday at Bell Elementary School in Las Vegas. Holding the flag is kindergart­ner Jordanmich­eal Dukes, 6.
 ?? Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal ?? Driver Donald Brace inspects his bus Monday as he prepares to head out to pick up students for the first day of faceto-face hybrid instructio­n.
Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-journal Driver Donald Brace inspects his bus Monday as he prepares to head out to pick up students for the first day of faceto-face hybrid instructio­n.
 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images ?? Principal Danny Eichelberg­er, center, welcomes a student Monday at Goolsby Elementary School in Las Vegas.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images Principal Danny Eichelberg­er, center, welcomes a student Monday at Goolsby Elementary School in Las Vegas.
 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto ?? Jordanmich­eal Dukes, 6, greets Clark County School District Superinten­dent Jesus Jara and Superinten­dent of Public Instructio­n Jhone Ebert on Monday.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto Jordanmich­eal Dukes, 6, greets Clark County School District Superinten­dent Jesus Jara and Superinten­dent of Public Instructio­n Jhone Ebert on Monday.

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