Marin Independent Journal

LA, San Diego schools plan online fall term

- By Shawn Hubler and Dana Goldstein The New York Times

SACRAMENTO » California’s two largest public school districts said Monday that instructio­n would be onlineonly in the fall, in the latest sign that school administra­tors are increasing­ly unwilling to risk crowding students back into classrooms until the coronaviru­s is fully under control.

The school districts in Los Angeles and San Diego, which together enroll some 825,000 students, are the largest in the country to abandon plans for even a partial physical return to classrooms when they reopen in August.

The decision came as Gov. Gavin Newsom announced some of the most sweeping rollbacks yet of California’s plans to reopen. Indoor operations for restaurant­s, bars, wineries, movie theaters and zoos were shut down statewide Monday, and churches, gyms, hair salons, malls and other businesses were shuttered for four-fifths of the population.

“There’s a public health imperative to keep schools from becoming a petri dish,” said Austin Beutner, the Los Angeles school district’s superinten­dent.

The California decisions are the latest blow to President Donald Trump’s push to fully reopen schools across the country this fall in order to get the economy moving by enabling parents to return to workplaces. Districts, parents and teachers have struggled to maintain the education of tens of millions of K-12 students while keeping them and their teachers healthy and safe.

At the White House, Trump denounced the decision in Los Angeles, arguing that schools should resume because children wanted to attend.

“Schools should be opened,” Trump said. “You’re losing a lot of lives by keeping things closed.” It was not clear what he meant because public health experts say the virus spreads quickly in poorly ventilated, closed areas, the condition of many U.S. schools.

Across the country, school districts are taking a patchwork approach to reopening.

New York City, the nation’s largest school district, announced last week that it would provide several days per week of in-person learning, with students working online from home the rest of the time. Seattle has also announced a hybrid model that is emerging as popular nationwide, among both large and small districts. Chicago, the nation’s thirdbigge­st system, has not yet announced its reopening plan.

But in cities where the virus has continued to rage, efforts at compromise solutions have increasing­ly proven unworkable a shattering realizatio­n for families that have strained for months to cobble normalcy out of a situation that is pitting their children’s developmen­t and education against parental livelihood­s and household health.

Mahogany Taylor, a 39-year-old mother of two and the president of the San Diego Unified Council of PTAs, said the loss of inperson instructio­n was particular­ly destructiv­e for elementary school students many of whom cannot type and for low-income students, who often lack internet access and who make up nearly 60% of San Diego Unified’s students.

At the same time, Taylor said, a districtwi­de survey showed that 40% of parents already were planning to insist on remote instructio­n. “We obviously believe that school is the best place for kids,” she said, “but we also want them to be safe.”

All across the nation, school officials are trying to balance safety against learning losses. Initial research showed that during the first round of school closures, American children were set back, on average, by seven months in their reading and math learning, with children from low-income families and students of color experienci­ng even bigger losses.

Still, district leaders in Los Angeles and San Diego said, California was not in a position to reopen schools.

“Those countries that have managed to safely reopen schools have done so with declining infection rates and on-demand testing available,” the statement said. “California has neither. The skyrocketi­ng infection rates of the past few weeks make it clear the pandemic is not under control.”

Beutner, whose district is the nation’s second largest, said in an interview that schools “can’t just tap our heels together” like Dorothy in “The Wizard of Oz” and “pretend it’s appropriat­e to bring people back” despite “skyrocketi­ng” rates of new infections.

California’s death toll from the coronaviru­s rose to more than 7,000 over the weekend, with 7.4% of test results coming back positive over the past two weeks, even as testing has ramped up to more than 100,000 tests a day. The state’s watch list of counties where the virus has surged, which has flagged Los Angeles and San Diego counties, includes 30 of its 58 counties.

For the time being, Beutner said, the Los Angeles district will maintain the online instructio­n it has been providing since its 700,000 students and 75,000 employees were sent home in mid-March. He said the decision would be revisited when local infection rates have been sufficient­ly lowered and public health authoritie­s have put into place adequate testing and contact tracing systems.

“It’s disappoint­ing,” he said. “But at the end of the day, we’ve got to make sure everyone’s safe.”

Many parents, students and teachers are still waiting to learn whether their districts will open this fall.

Indeed, with the pandemic still raging across much of the country, it has become clear that improving the quality of online learning will be at least as important in the coming months as dealing with the logistics of reopening physical schools.

Several other large California districts, including Santa Clara, Oakland and San Bernardino, have already announced that they will stick, at least for the foreseeabl­e future, with full-time remote instructio­n, and the state’s politicall­y powerful teachers’ unions also have come out against a return to in-person classes.

Some $13.5 billion went to K-12 education from the federal relief package passed in March by Congress. But education groups and school districts estimate that schools will need much more money to safely reopen, and with the economic effect of the pandemic having depleted many local and state budgets, it is unclear where it will come from. The Trump administra­tion has alternatel­y threatened to cut funds to school districts that fail to fully reopen and reward districts that do.

As recently as late last week, leaders in San Diego Unified were promoting their plan to reopen five days a week, in person, for all students whose families chose that option. But the district had also warned that the health, sanitation and educationa­l costs of reopening physical classrooms safely were so steep a minimum of $90 million for the coming school year that they would not be able to do so without a significan­t infusion of federal dollars.

At the same time, the district’s teachers’ union was arguing that reopening during an alarming increase in coronaviru­s cases was unwise, and would put teachers’ health at risk.

The superinten­dent, Cindy Marten, had been working with education leaders across the country to lobby the Senate to pass a second stimulus package for schools.

Marten said the district had not given up on the possibilit­y of reopening physically if infection rates get down to a safe and manageable level, and even moved forward over the weekend with plans to buy $11 million worth of masks and other protective equipment. But the state’s current infection levels, she said, “should make it clear to everyone that the virus is not under control.”

“School districts need to be able to walk and chew gum at the same time,” Marten said. “We must both plan for a physical reopening while taking measures to keep our communitie­s safe.”

 ?? JENNA SCHOENEFEL­D — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Students leave Palms Middle School in Los Angeles at the end of the school day on March 12. The Los Angeles and San Diego unified school districts, which together enroll some 825,000 students, said Monday that instructio­n will be remote-only in the fall.
JENNA SCHOENEFEL­D — THE NEW YORK TIMES Students leave Palms Middle School in Los Angeles at the end of the school day on March 12. The Los Angeles and San Diego unified school districts, which together enroll some 825,000 students, said Monday that instructio­n will be remote-only in the fall.

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