New York Daily News

YOU SHOW UP OR ELSE!

Blaz: Kids who don’t report to school will be booted from in-person classes

- BY MICHAEL ELSEN-ROONEY NEWS EDUCATION REPORTER

Use that in-person school desk — or lose it.

That’s Mayor de Blasio’s stern message to city families signed up to return to in-person classes when some city schools reopen next week.

“You have to show up in the course of this week or have a legitimate excuse or communicat­e with your school what’s going on,” Hizzoner said in a Wednesday morning news conference. “If you don’t, your school is going to let you know your child is going to be moved to all remote.”

City officials say the strict line in the sand is meant to help schools get a final number for in-person students for the remainder of the year so they can quickly begin expanding the number of school days for kids enrolled in in-person classes.

“These seats are precious ... a seat should not go unutilized,” de Blasio warned.

The strict attendance rules come on top of a decision in late October to limit the number of opportunit­ies families have to switch from remote to in-person school — a move officials said was necessary to stabilize enrollment numbers.

Despite officials’ assurances that schools are moving towards five days a week of in-person classes, some students are still scheduled for just one day a week of in-person class. That raises the possibilit­y that a student could lose an in-person spot for the rest of the year for missing just one day of class without explanatio­n.

“This is Gracie Mansion-level chutzpah,” City Councilman Mark Treyger (D-Brooklyn) said of the attendance policy. “[De Blasio] is in no position to lecture parents about making timely and informed decisions when he has failed to do that himself.”

Treyger, who has been critical of the city’s reopening plans, is calling on the city to reopen the applicatio­n to enroll in in-person classes and to utilize empty high school space to provide more in-person time for vulnerable kids.

An Education Department spokeswoma­n said the city has publicized the one-week attendance window for more than a month, and said absences for reasons including “quarantini­ng ... looking after a sick relative, or caring for a sibling ... are not reasons to move a student to remote.”

Roughly 190,000 students are expected to return to school buildings next week when preschools, elementary schools and District 75 schools for students with complex disabiliti­es reopen.

Another estimated 145,000 middle and high school students are signed up to return to in-person school, but de Blasio has said middle and high schools won’t open until January at the earliest.

The mayor doubled down Wednesday on his assertion that a “substantia­l number” of schools will offer five days a week of in-person classes as early as next week, but declined to provide concrete numbers.

The city’s pledge to move toward full-time, in-person learning in as many schools as possible when the system partially reopens next week has created confusion and concern for some families and educators whose schools can’t make the staffing or space arrangemen­ts work.

“Families are understand­ably confused,” said a Brooklyn elementary school principal who asked to remain anonymous. “We don’t have the space or teachers to make changes.”

City rules requiring reduced capacity in classrooms to maintain social distancing are still in effect — making it impossible for schools with large numbers of kids signed up for in-person classes to switch from a schedule where students alternate days in the school building from one where all students attend in-person classes full time.

City officials have said that schools that can’t expand in-person learning for all students should prioritize five days in school buildings for students who have disabiliti­es, are homeless or are learning English.

City principals union chief Mark Cannizzaro said the effort to expand in-person learning time for kids whose families have chosen it is “worthwhile,” and he noted some schools are already offering five days a week of in-person classes for some or all of their students, though he didn’t cite a specific number.

But Cannizzaro said “expectatio­ns should’ve been managed a little better” about the number of schools that would be able to move to five days a week, and the speed with which they’d make the shift.

“I think what we do sometimes is we overpromis­e and then there’s disappoint­ment out there,” he said.

Those unrealisti­c expectatio­ns have ratcheted up the pressure on principals who don’t have the staffing or space capacity to expand in-person classes, he said.

“They feel as if there’s this expectatio­n or policy going out and they’re not able to meet it,” he said.

Even if schools do have the space and staffing numbers to increase in-person learning days, there are other complicati­ons to sort through, including rescheduli­ng visits from outside therapists for students with disabiliti­es, and potentiall­y switching teaching assignment­s as classes get combined and reshuffled.

“Parents have to be onboard here,” Cannizzaro said. “There are going to potentiall­y be changes for teachers [and] children. That’s something parents have to be aware of and buy into.”

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 ??  ?? o ugh-talking Mayor de la asio (opposite page) laid own the law Wednesday, aying ay children enrolled in - person learning will lose eire seats, and will only be ll lowed to study remotely, they, t or their parents, on’t o have a good excuse r absences. Officials say e strict line in the sand needed n to efficientl­y anage in-person classes.
o ugh-talking Mayor de la asio (opposite page) laid own the law Wednesday, aying ay children enrolled in - person learning will lose eire seats, and will only be ll lowed to study remotely, they, t or their parents, on’t o have a good excuse r absences. Officials say e strict line in the sand needed n to efficientl­y anage in-person classes.
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