The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Reopening survey shows split opinions on scenarios

Most like idea of having kids in school some days, virtual lessons on others.

- By Vanessa McCray Vanessa.McCray@ajc.com

ATLANTA — Results of an Atlanta Public Schools survey show the divide in how parents think the school system should reopen this year.

The district conducted the survey before announcing two weeks ago that it would start the school year with virtual-only instructio­n. Students will learn online for at least the first nine weeks of the year or until there is a minimal or moderate spread of coronaviru­s. The school board also has tentativel­y agreed to push back the first day of school from Aug. 10 to Aug. 24.

APS leaders cited the surge in coronaviru­s cases as well as feedback from staff and parents as factors in its reopening decision.

The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on obtained results of the reopening survey last week after filing a open-records request.

APS, which enrolls about 52,000 students, received 17,854 responses to the electronic survey completed in late June. The vast majority of respondent­s, 80%, identified themselves as parents or guardians of an Atlanta student. About 11% of survey-takers were students, while employ

ees made up about 8% of respondent­s.

Respondent­s were split down the middle on the idea of virtual-only instructio­n, the approach the district announced it will take to start the year. Half of the survey-takers said that idea made them extremely to slightly uncomforta­ble, while the other half felt the opposite.

Nearly 58% of respondent­s said they felt slightly to extremely uncomforta­ble with reopening schools in a full-time, in-person model.

Respondent­s were more comfortabl­e with a hybrid approach, having students come to school on some days and do virtual lessons on other days. About 57% of respondent­s said they were extremely to slightly comfortabl­e with that idea.

More than 57% of respondent­s said they preferred to “return to school for fulltime instructio­n delivered in a model in alignment with health recommenda­tions.”

Nearly 37% preferred onlineonly instructio­n.

The survey also showed APS still has work to do to make sure every student has a computer at home. About 17% of respondent­s said that not every child in their household had access to a device, and 6% said their child did not have high-speed internet.

The survey provided some informatio­n about how the parents, students and staffers want the district to keep people safe when APS reopens school buildings. More than 90% of respondent­s said they believed it was important for the district to conduct temperatur­e checks, and nearly 78% said face masks should be required, a mandate school board members are poised to adopt.

Respondent­s also believed that students should eat meals in the classroom instead of in a larger-group cafeteria setting, and that classrooms and buses should be set up for social distancing. But they strongly disagreed with the idea of canceling outdoor recess and gym time.

 ?? AJC FILE ?? Atlanta Public Schools received responses to the electronic survey from more than 17,000 people about their reopening preference­s.
AJC FILE Atlanta Public Schools received responses to the electronic survey from more than 17,000 people about their reopening preference­s.

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