Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Computer glitches hit classes as schools in US return online

- By Juan Lozano, Adriana Gomez Licon and Rebecca Boone

HOUSTON — Students across the country ran into computer glitches Tuesday as they began the school year with online instructio­n at home because of the coronaviru­s threat, adding to the list of problems that have thrust many a harried parent into the role of teacher’s aide and tech support person.

The online learning platform Blackboard, which provides technology for 70 of the nation’s 100 biggest districts and serves more than 20 million U.S. students from kindergart­en through 12th grade, reported that websites were failing to load or were loading slowly, and users were unable to register on the first day of school.

Three of Texas’ largest school districts — Houston, Dallas and Fort Worth — were hit with technical problems, as were school systems in places such as Idaho and Kansas. A ransomware attack forced schools in Hartford, Connecticu­t, to postpone Tuesday’s start of online and in-person classes.

Elsewhere around the country, Seattle’s system crashed last week. An online learning program used in Alabama and other places recently went down.

Amanda Mills’ 8-yearold son, Rowan, woke up excited to start his first day of third grade, even though it was online through Idaho’s largest school district, based inthe town of Meridian, just outside Boise.

But they ran into trouble even after practicing logging in Monday.

“Whatever happens, we’ll figure it out and we’ll make it work however we can, and rely on the patience of those teachers who are up against their own obstacles,” Mills said. “It’s a weird, wild world right now.”

Summer break gave school districts time to iron out kinks that cropped up when the virus forced them to switch to online classes in the spring. But the new school year already has been plagued by some of the same problems, with no end in sight to the outbreak.

Erik Rasmussen, a Falls Church, Virginia, resident who has three children taking online classes, said he regularly copes with computer glitches and short attention spans. The divorced dad has his children half the time.

“You put your kids in front of the computer, and then I go to domy work, but kids are kids — they’re going to turn off the video function and start playing a game,” he said.

In the Houston school system, with 209,000 students, a web hosting service went down, causing problems for families as they tried to sign into the district’s main classwork portal. Families were given a different link to access the portal until the problems were resolved by around noon.

The Dallas and Fort Worth districts said they were working to fix problems with their phone lines and websites.

“In this unpreceden­ted school year, we must remain flexible and quickly adapt to changing conditions and circumstan­ces like we noticed this morning,” said Houston interim Superinten­dent Grenita Lathan.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R MILLETTE/ERIE TIMES-NEWS ?? Michael Henry, 11, left; his mother, Mary Euell, 30; and his brother, Mario Henry, 12, work through math lessons remotely Tuesday in Erie, Pennsylvan­ia, on the first day of classes.
CHRISTOPHE­R MILLETTE/ERIE TIMES-NEWS Michael Henry, 11, left; his mother, Mary Euell, 30; and his brother, Mario Henry, 12, work through math lessons remotely Tuesday in Erie, Pennsylvan­ia, on the first day of classes.

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