Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Here’s how to make schools safer for reopening

- Joe Nocera Joe Nocera is a columnist for Bloomberg Opinion.

During the weekend, the New York Times highlighte­d some of the comments it has received in reaction to articles about reopening schools. They were not a cause for optimism.

“Despite all my love for my students, I don’t really want to die for them or anyone else. Neither does my partner, who is living with cancer,” a teacher from Minneapoli­s wrote.

A parent from Massachuse­tts: “Does my daughter want to go back to the classroom? Yes. Do I prefer that she does? Yes. Do I want to risk her health in order for her to return to the classroom? No!”

And one more, from Westcheste­r, N.Y.: “Tell me how to get a 6-year-old to not sneeze on his friends let alone play and work at a distance. … Tell me how to comfort a hysterical child from a distance of six feet. Tell me how to have a socially distanced active shooter drill.”

Across the country, many public-school teachers — perhaps most public-school teachers — as well as many parents are adamant that it’s far too early to even think about sending children to their physical schools.

A realistic assessment of the risks would have parents demanding that schools be reopened; instead, many have convinced themselves that it’s too dangerous. A far greater danger, which doesn’t get discussed nearly enough, is what happens when children are deprived of school. As the American Academy of Pediatrics put it recently:

“Lengthy time away from school … often results in social isolation, making it difficult for schools to identify and address important learning deficits as well as child and adolescent physical or sexual abuse, substance use, depression, and suicidal ideation. … Beyond the educationa­l impact and social impact of school closures, there has been substantia­l impact on food security and physical activity for children and families.”

Teachers have hijacked the debate by saying that if they are forced back into schools, it will be akin to a death sentence. What is missing from the debate is any effort to reimagine schools — not radically, but enough to make children and teachers feel safe returning to the classroom. Before I lay out some possible ideas, I’d like to make three preliminar­y points.

First, hundreds of thousands of Americans are taking vastly more risk than teachers are being asked to. At least 86 employees working at meat and poultry facilities have died of COVID-19, and a staggering 9% of that workforce has been infected, according to the CDC. Waiters, grocery clerks, hairdresse­rs — anyone who interacts with the public is assuming some risk. Camp counselors are dealing with children, just like teachers. Nursing home employees never expected their job would mean risking illness or death, but it does right now. They’re still going to work every day.

Can you really make the case that teachers are less essential than these other workers? Of course not. What teachers have that these other workers don’t are powerful unions and visibility in the community. They know how to advocate for themselves, and because they are caring for our children, they get a sympatheti­c hearing that less visible workers do not.

Second, as with everything about this pandemic, President Donald Trump has made the school crisis much worse than it had to be. He has demanded that schools be opened but has offered nothing in terms of either federal money or expertise. Nor has his education secretary, Betsy DeVos. Neither one of them seems to realize — or seems to care — that reopening schools safely is not something that can be done with a snap of the finger. Teachers feel the federal government doesn’t care whether they live or die.

Third, the so-called blended solution that many school districts are leaning toward — having children in school some days and learning remotely on others — is not the answer. It makes it difficult if not impossible for many parents to rejoin the workforce full time. And with sheltering­in-place lifted, it also means that children will more likely come in contact with a broader group of people than they would if they were at their desks five days a week.

So the first thing school districts need to do is throw out the start date. In Florida, for instance, many counties are scheduled to begin school on Aug. 10. There’s no way schools will be ready to open safely by then. Rather than open schools on a traditiona­l date, districts need to give themselves time to establish rules that will allow everyone to feel safe.

In the document it published urging schools to reopen physically, the American Academy of Pediatrics listed some important but obvious steps: wear masks; place desks 3 to 6 feet apart; create one-way hallways to minimize contact; stagger classroom periods to avoid the entire student body racing from one classroom to another between periods.

They make two other recommenda­tions that haven’t received nearly enough considerat­ion: use outdoor space and move to “cohort classes” as much as possible.

We know now that there is far less chance of being infected outdoors than indoors. There are some states where, with open-air tents and tools like rolling blackboard­s, outdoor classes could take place year-round. But even in most of the cold-weather states, outdoor learning is feasible through mid- to late October.

You’ve no doubt read articles about how some parents are trying to set up “education pods” in which a halfdozen or so families create their own bubble, which includes hiring a private tutor. A cohort class is essentiall­y the same thing except that it takes place inside school.

A teacher is assigned, say, 10 children, all of whose families are virus-free. The teacher and students are together all day, insulated from other kids and other teachers. Recess and lunch — and starting times, for that matter — are staggered to minimize contact with other pods. If someone in a pod becomes infected — and this would include anyone living in the household of any of the students — the pod is shut down.

Because a pod system should contain the infection to just that one pod, it would allow a school to stay open even if someone does get infected. This approach obviously requires additional teachers and additional classroom space — which also means it requires more money when local budgets are depleted because of the pandemic. The one useful thing the Trump administra­tion could do is supply that money — and soon.

No matter how many safeguards are put in place, there will always be parents fearful of sending their children to school. They should have that option. The solution is an online platform like Zoom that will allow at-home students to watch their teacher in the classroom and do their assignment­s remotely.

There will also be teachers who remain fearful, especially older teachers or those whose health puts them at risk. Technology ought to be able to help here as well.

There are other things that would have to be done, such as making school buses safe and improving air-filtration systems. And let’s face it: Nothing in life is ever 100% safe.

But it is undeniable that with enough thought, ingenuity and money, children should be able to attend their physical schools. The sooner teachers, parents and school administra­tors begin focusing on ways to make it happen — instead of coming up with reasons not to do it — the better off everyone will be.

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