Miami Herald

Schools welcome 70,000 students for in-person classes on 2nd reopening day

- BY COLLEEN WRIGHT AND DAVID GOODHUE cawright@miamiheral­d.com dgoodhue@flkeysnews.com

Miami-Dade County Schools freshmen and sophomores returned to face-to-face classes on Wednesday, along with all elementary school students and sixth graders. The rest will return on Friday in the staggered start of public school.

Miami-Dade County Public Schools welcomed back more than 70,000 students on Wednesday, the second and largest wave of a staggered, week-long reopening of schools for students who prefer face-to-face learning.

Every public school in the nation’s fourth-largest school district opened to greet all elementary school students plus students in grades 6, 9 and 10. They joined 20,000 students in pre-K, kindergart­en and first grade plus students with disabiliti­es on a modified schedule who returned to school Monday.

Superinten­dent Alberto Carvalho briefed the media outside Coral Reef Senior High and said no significan­t or systemic issues were detected. Buses were on time and students were fed breakfast. He did note some issues with a handful of schools that reported early-morning delays with the district’s online portal.

“Today was the day we braced ourselves for,” said Carvalho, declaring a smooth reopening. “I am reasonably happy and satisfied.”

On Friday, the rest of the district’s student population in grades 7, 8, 11 and 12 for a total of about 132,000 students will be back in school. About 50% of the school district’s 255,000 students is projected to continue with online learning.

“We expect a repeat of today with less stress,” Carvalho said, looking forward to Friday.

He said a main source of stress for many schools has been last-minute parent requests to switch their child’s mode of learning, which disrupts master schedule planning and could lead to teacher changes. Carvalho asked parents to wait until the end of the grading period, Oct. 22, to request a change.

Many teachers and parents have told the Herald that more students are switching from going to school to staying online, as the coronaviru­s still swirls in Florida. On Wednesday, the Florida Department of Health reported 2,582 additional confirmed cases of COVID-19, with another 431 new cases in MiamiDade.

SMOOTH START AT CORAL REEF

At Coral Reef Senior

High, principal Nicole Bergé-MacInnes said her staff has accommodat­ed 400 such requests. Carvalho praised her leadership, including her handling of smooth lunch procedures he witnessed Wednesday.

“As a principal, we’re used to having to deal with things that are strategic and pivoting at any notice,” she said.

Bergé-MacInnes said she has a couple dozen teachers who are comfortabl­e teaching online and inperson students simultaneo­usly to accommodat­e specialize­d magnet classes.

“They’re superstars and they know how to utilize technology,” she said of her teacher corps.

United Teachers of Dade president Karla Hernandez-Mats sent a letter to school principals Monday regarding “pervasive” problems, from teachers not having a choice in teaching dual modalities to teachers being told to come to school after given clearance to teach virtually.

Carvalho said he hadn’t read the letter.

Carvalho encouraged parents of students learning from home to pick up multiple free meals at every school on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m., as not enough families have participat­ed. About 73% of the school district’s enrollment qualifies for free and reduced price lunch, and through now to the end of the year, all students in the district are eligible for the meals.

Carvalho also encouraged parents and staff to report any issues to school administra­tors or to district offices.

Carvalho said he was not aware of any positive COVID-19 cases among students or parents. The district’s dashboard, said to be updated daily, is not reflecting any cases.

Carvalho noted issues with Sunset Elementary’s drop-off and pickup procedures, which he said is a “challenge on a good day” and begged parents for patience.

The Herald has previously reported that some Sunset parents feel their children who are learning from home have been left behind, as it’s tough for teachers to handle teaching young ones in the classroom while teaching to a group over Zoom.

Board member Mari

Tere Rojas said she visited Sunset on Tuesday and was confident the school’s principal, whom she hired, would resolve that issue.

Parents complained of spending 30 minutes in a car line when they could’ve walked across the street.

“I live two blocks away and there’s no way to drop off,” said Esteban Bernal, whose 8-year-old daughter, Gabriela, is in second grade.

Nina Burgos said her 10-year-old daughter, Mikaela, was excited to be back in school but was nervous because Mikaela was suddenly assigned to a new teacher.

“I’m confident that the school is going to do their best to keep kids safe,” she said.

Other parents shouted out their good experience­s on social media. One parent lauded Kendale Lakes Elementary’s transparen­cy that put parents at ease and said students have wristbands for access to school and families already received thermomete­rs.

Another parent noted an easy drop-off at Glades Middle and warm welcomes from staff.

“@KenwoodUni­ted did a great job this morning!” tweeted Ashleigh Sanchez, whose 7-year-old daughter is in second grade at Kenwood K-8. “The principal even took the time to have a brief Zoom call with all parents yesterday afternoon to go through the drop off/pick up procedures/locations and answer any questions.”

CROWDS AT MAST

Hundreds of cars lined up in both the east and westbound lanes of the Rickenback­er Causeway Wednesday morning to drop off students at MAST Academy, the first time they’ve been back for faceto-face learning since the COVID-19 shutdown in March. Teachers and parents said the school was anticipati­ng 80% of students to return.

As traffic slowed in the turning lanes, several of the dozens of morning bicyclists became impatient as they weaved their way in between cars.

Some parents skipped the lineup and parked across the street at the beach parking lot to let their children out.

Most of the children, parents and teachers were eager to get back into the classroom, but appreciate­d the gravity of going back in the midst of a pandemic.

Gabriel Porzencans­ki was driving in the stopand-go westbound turning lane traffic to drop off his sixth-grader.

“We are really excited, but we are also a bit concerned about the cases of COVID picking up,” he said. “But I think it was the right thing to do.”

Heather Hodson, 54, has been teaching marine science and solar energy at MAST for eight years. As she inched her Volvo east on the causeway, she said she was happy to be back with her students.

Still, the virus is everpresen­t in her mind.

“I’m actually really excited about it, but I am a little nervous,” Hodson said.

Cristobal Munoz is a freshman at MAST, which has students from sixth to 12th grades. While he’s concerned about COVID, he said he also has confidence that the school has taken steps to create a safe learning environmen­t.

“I’m pretty excited. It’s a new thing,” he said as he walked along the sidewalk toward the entrance of the school. “I think they’re doing a great job handling it. They have some social distancing. They’re making us wear masks.”

Students at Miami Jackson Senior High in Allapattah also reported a smooth first day back at school.

“It was pretty chill,” said sophomore Kenneth Gonzalez. “It was mostly teachers just trying to figure out how to teach online and physical at the same time.”

Erik Cartagena, also a sophomore, said it appeared many students still opted to stay home: “The classes are mostly empty. In my classes, the max was three people in one of them.”

 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? MAST Academy students walk toward campus off the Rickenback­er Causeway as all elementary students plus students in grades 6, 9 and 10 return for in-person learning on Wednesday.
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com MAST Academy students walk toward campus off the Rickenback­er Causeway as all elementary students plus students in grades 6, 9 and 10 return for in-person learning on Wednesday.
 ??  ??
 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? A guard keeps cars moving at Sunset Elementary in Miami as parents drop off children at the school on Wednesday.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com A guard keeps cars moving at Sunset Elementary in Miami as parents drop off children at the school on Wednesday.

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