Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Reopenings offer uncertain future

Minority students in urban areas most likely affected

- Geoff Mulvihill, Adrian Sainz and Michael Kunzelman

President Joe Biden says he wants most schools serving kindergart­en through eighth grade to reopen by late April, but even if that happens it is likely to leave out millions of students, many of them minorities in urban areas.

“We’re going to see kids fall further and further behind, particular­ly low-income students of color,” said Shavar Jeffries, president of Democrats for Education Reform. “There’s potentiall­y a generation­al level of harm that students have suffered from being out of school for so long.”

Like some other officials and education advocates, Jeffries said powerful teachers unions are standing in the way of bringing back students. The unions insist they are acting to protect teachers and students and their families.

In a call Thursday evening with teachers unions, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the federal government’s top infectious disease expert, said the reopening of K-8 classrooms nationally might not be possible on Biden’s time frame. He cited concern over new variants of the virus that allow it to spread more quickly and may be more resistant to vaccines.

Biden is asking for $130 billion for schools to address concerns by unions and school officials as part of a broader coronaviru­s relief package that faces an uncertain fate in Congress. If his reopening goal is realized, millions of students might still have to keep learning from home, possibly for the rest of the school year.

California was an epicenter of infection in the first part of January, and public health officials say many of the state’s districts are in areas where transmissi­on remains too high to reopen. But a statewide group called Open Schools California is pushing for reopening as soon as public health standards are met.

“I think that data will bear out that the children who have been most disadvanta­ged are going to be low-income children, Black and brown children, children with special education, learning differences, homeless and foster youth,” said Megan Bacigalupi, a mother of students in the Oakland public schools and one of the organizers.

It’s hard to tally exactly how many schools are open in person now because of the size and diffuse nature of the nation’s school system – and because districts’ approaches change frequently.

By early January, about a third of students in a sample of 1,200 U.S. school districts were in schools where classes had been held exclusivel­y online since last March – many of them in cities. By last week, more than half of students were enrolled in schools where in-person learning was at least an option, according to Burbio, a data service tracking school-opening policies.

For the first time since shuttering schools in March, Atlanta began returning the youngest and special education students to some in-person learning last week. Other districts planning to reopen by early March include Clark County, Nevada, which includes Las Vegas; Kansas City, Missouri; Boston; and the big Ohio school systems.

Younger students in New York City already have the option to attend school in-person. Mayor Bill de Blasio said Friday that he expects middle school and high school students back in some capacity later this school year.

Jeffries acknowledg­es that there are reasons it’s harder to open schools in cities: They’re more densely populated, meaning the virus can spread faster; more people rely on public transporta­tion, a potential hot spot for contaminat­ion; and more parents have front-line jobs that could expose them, and, in turn, their children, to the virus.

But he said the major obstacle to reopening city schools is political. “The teachers unions tend to be pretty obstinatel­y opposed to going back to school,” Jeffries said.

In Chicago, only prekinderg­artners have been in school so far. This week, the Chicago Teachers Union voted to teach online only in a showdown with the district over plans to bring students to school starting Feb. 1. The union has authorized a strike if school officials retaliate, but negotiatio­ns are continuing.

Claiborne Wade, 31, has three children in the Chicago Public Schools system, ages 10, 9 and 7. Wade believes the district is not quite ready to reopen schools, and he favors distance learning for now.

Even so, he said minority students in large urban districts have fewer resources for online learning. He’s seen students from more affluent schools get a laptop and a tablet, and even a desk, while his kids only have a laptop to work with.

“It’s been going on for years, even before the pandemic hit,” he said. “We’ve always been at the bottom of the totem pole, in receiving resources that we need.”

Public health officials increasing­ly say that virus transmissi­ons in schools are low, so long as measures such as mask-wearing and social distancing are in place – even if teachers and other school staff have not received vaccinatio­ns.

On Jan. 21, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican, declared: “There is no public health reason for school boards to be keeping students out of school. None.”

This past week, Maryland State Education Associatio­n President Cheryl Bost wrote to Hogan, saying his statement “would be laughable if it were not so dangerous.”

She said the coronaviru­s is not predictabl­e and that dangers are heightened with the spread of new mutations. Infection risks increase when people gather indoors for long periods.

Keith Benson, president of the Camden Education Associatio­n, which represents teachers in a New Jersey city with a long history of poverty, crime and high dropout rates, said conditions are different in the city than outside it. The schools there plan to keep buildings closed until at least April.

“What keeps someone safe in a suburban area is not the same thing that would keep folks safe here,” Benson said, adding that while remote learning is not ideal, he believes students will be able to catch up eventually.

Grace Lovelace Guishard, a second grade teacher, also has three children enrolled in Maryland’s Montgomery County public schools, a large and racially diverse district where classes are to remain all virtual until at least March15, a schedule that will depend on the spread of the virus.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/CHICAGO SUN TIMES VIA AP, POOL ?? Sarah McCarthy works with a prekinderg­arten student at Dawes Elementary in Chicago earlier this month.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/CHICAGO SUN TIMES VIA AP, POOL Sarah McCarthy works with a prekinderg­arten student at Dawes Elementary in Chicago earlier this month.

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