Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Year going smoothly for Cooper Elementary, principal says

- LYNN ATKINS Lynn Atkins may be reached by email at latkins@nwadg.com.

BELLA VISTA — The school year is flying by, Cooper Elementary School principal Chad Mims said recently, but in spite of restrictio­ns to slow the pandemic, it’s been a very smooth year.

“Everyone has adjusted,” he said about the mask requiremen­t. Teachers are able to provide “mask breaks” throughout the day, he said. Cooper kids have PE every day, as well as recess time, so that helps, he said.

Students are able to spread out and take off their masks. Parents have accepted the new regulation­s without any “pushback,” he said.

District communicat­ions director Leslee Wright said parents have been helpful with the mask regulation­s. They helped by getting students used to wearing them before the school year started. Parents also supply the masks for their children.

About 150 Cooper kids are doing online school, Mims said. Those students are divided into classroom groups, and specific teachers have been assigned to teach those classrooms. The teachers are at Cooper every day, even if their students aren’t, Mims said. That way online teachers can attend the common planning period for their grade level and ensure online students are keeping up with the students attending in person. A student working at home this semester will be ready to return to in-person school when necessary.

Districtwi­de, a few teachers who are at risk for the virus, teach from a district building where there are no children in attendance, he said.

Virtual teachers follow the same schedule as in-person teachers, Mims said.

Teachers are preparing for online parent/teacher conference­s at the end of October. Conference­s were done online last spring, Mims pointed out, so it should go smoothly.

Across the district all students were online as schools were closed Thursday and Friday. Those two days will be used for deep cleaning buildings. Teachers who are usually in the classroom each day will be working from home, Wright said. That will give them some extra time to work on special projects for their students.

All over the district, students bring their school-issued Chromebook­s home each day.

That way, if school becomes online only, the students are ready, Wright said. Younger students may not use them every day, Wright said, since they aren’t assigned very much homework, but older students use them for assignment­s. Families are asked to buy insurance for the equipment each school year.

“We do miss our volunteers,” Mims said.

Schools have limited access to everyone except staff and students. At Cooper, volunteers used to be in the building every day helping with everything from classroom preparatio­n to the front office. Now, not even PTO members can spend time at the school and the staff has noticed the difference, he said.

But in spite of challenges, the school year is going well and quickly, he said.

“Everyone has adjusted.” — Chad Sims, principal, Cooper Elementary School

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