San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

CLASSROOM INSTRUCTIO­N PLANNED IN SOME PARTS OF CALIFORNIA

- BY AMY TAXIN

School districts in lesspopula­ted California counties are moving ahead with plans for classroom instructio­n, albeit with face masks, hand-washing stations, socially distant seating and lots of hand sanitizer.

Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Friday that most counties will start the school year online due to soaring coronaviru­s cases and hospitaliz­ations. But rural counties in the central and northern parts of the state have seen little of the virus and can bring students and teachers back to campus.

Jaime Green, superinten­dent of Trinity Alps Unified in far Northern California, said he’s planning to reopen school in a month for the district’s 700 students. The county has had only two confirmed virus cases since the pandemic began, and Green said he’s worried about the impact on students’ mental health if they are isolated at home.

“We have bought gallons and gallons of hand sanitizer,” Green said, adding that school will be in session half-days for the first week so teachers and staff have ample time to assess and retool any procedures. “Any protocol the state’s going to require, we are going to fundraise and do whatever we can to be back in school.”

Newsom said the state prefers for schools to resume in-person instructio­n when it’s safe but that time isn’t now for more than 30 of the state’s 58 counties seeing a spike in virus cases, and they must meet strict criteria for reopening.

In Lone Pine, a community on the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada 200, school officials are planning to return to classes after surveying teachers and parents. Patrick Traynor, superinten­dent of the 330-student Lone Pine Unified School District, said teachers agreed that distance learning wasn’t optimal, and they won’t return to it unless they must.

“We don’t want to experience that lack of success compared to what we’re used to experienci­ng,” he said.

But Traynor said they will be prepared to do so if the virus dictates.

In the spring, Traynor said they only had an independen­t study program when the pandemic brought school closures. It took about a month to get students the devices and Internet access needed for virtual instructio­n, something they’re much better prepared to do now with a mapped out schedule for online classes and teachers’ office hours, he said.

That preparatio­n will be critical should the virus crop up in the community near scenic mountain peaks that typically draw tourists throughout the summer. Already, Traynor said the district had to cancel the third and final week of a summer school class held in a campus gymnasium after a staff member tested positive for the virus.

“I am just hoping we can hold off until the vaccine comes and the environmen­t changes and we don’t have to close,” Traynor said.

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