The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

» Hundreds of parents, students and community members want Cobb County to offer in-person classes,

District’s decision to open school year with only virtual classes riles hundreds.

- By Kristal Dixon kristal.dixon@ajc.com

Hundreds of parents, students and community members want Georgia’s second-largest school district to offer a face-to-face option for children in the new school year.

The demonstrat­ors gathered Saturday at the Cobb County Civic Center to call on Superinten­dent Chris Ragsdale and the Cobb school board to offer in-person classes alongside virtual learning to students returning to the classroom Aug. 17.

They are circulatin­g a petition calling for the reinstatem­ent of traditiona­l classroom teaching that has received more than 7,500 signatures. The Cobb County School District has about 113,000 students.

Amy Henry of East Cobb said parents have to advocate for children who want to go back to school. She also said parents have been asking the school district to share its plan to reopen schools for in-person learning. The district, Henry said, has not provided any details to parents.

“They have no intention of getting our kids back in school,” she said. “We are the voice of the 113,000 students in this county that deserve face-to-face learning.”

Ragsdale did not respond to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on’s request submitted earlier in the week for comment, but district spokeswoma­n Nan Kiel told the AJC that all teachers, principals and leaders in the system want to return to face-to-face learning as soon as it is safe to do so.

“Until public health guidance and data for Cobb County says it is safe, our teachers will be teaching and our students will be learning remotely,” she said.

Cobb County schools in March used remote learning to close out the 2019-2020 school year because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The district, along with Gwinnett, DeKalb and Fulton, originally planned to offer parents the choice of face-to-face or virtual learning when the new school year begins. However, due to an increase in coronaviru­s cases, all the districts decided to start the year with only remote teaching. Marietta City and Atlanta Public schools also decided to offer virtual-only classes.

Ryder Kim, an Allatoona High School sophomore, said he was looking forward to going back to school. While he did well academical­ly in the spring, he said, he performs better when he is in the classroom and around his peers.

“It’s been a bit of a struggle,” he said.

As of Saturday, Cobb County had 11,206 confirmed cases of COVID-19, according to the Georgia Department of Public Health, with 297 deaths and 1,292 hospitaliz­ations stemming from the disease.

During a virtual discussion panel held Thursday, Cobb & Douglas Public Health Director Dr. Janet Memark said Cobb County is experienci­ng high transmissi­on rates. As of Saturday, Cobb reported 369 cases per 100,000 people within the last two weeks. Anything greater than 100 is considered a substantia­l spread, Memark said.

“We don’t know exactly what’s causing this huge spike, but it does seem to be around the holidays and when everything opened up a lot more,” she said.

The American Academy of Pediatrics and three education groups have come out in favor of children returning to the classroom when it’s safe for them and educators. The academy stresses that teachers, parents, local school leaders and public health experts should “be at the center” of any decisions about how and when schools reopen. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also issued guidelines to prepare for a safe return to school in the fall.

Cobb School Board member Dr. Jaha Howard, who asked to speak the crowd but was denied, said he was glad to see parents and students demonstrat­ing for their right to choose in-person learning. He said he supported Superinten­dent Ragsdale’s decision to go 100% virtual due to the spike in cases.

Howard said the Cobb district and his fellow board members could have communicat­ed more frequently to the public about the data it used to make the decision. An example of this, Howard said, was the school board’s Republican majority voting on July 16 to reject a request to hold a called meeting so the health department could discuss the pandemic in Cobb.

While he said he “agreed to disagree” with the parents in attendance, Howard said he came away with the impression that everyone at the protest cared about the children attending school in Georgia’s second-largest district.

“We agree that we need to get (back to) face-to-face because face-to-face is the best option,” he said, adding that it should only happen when it’s safe.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ??
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM
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 ?? PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Hundreds of parents, students and community members rally Saturday in Marietta to call on Superinten­dent Chris Ragsdale and the Cobb County school board to offer in-person classes alongside virtual learning when schools open Aug. 17.
PHOTOS BY HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Hundreds of parents, students and community members rally Saturday in Marietta to call on Superinten­dent Chris Ragsdale and the Cobb County school board to offer in-person classes alongside virtual learning when schools open Aug. 17.
 ??  ?? Amy Henry, an East Cobb parent, takes the microphone at Saturday’s rally at the Cobb County Civic Center: “We are the voice of the 113,000 students in this county that deserve face-to-face learning.”
Amy Henry, an East Cobb parent, takes the microphone at Saturday’s rally at the Cobb County Civic Center: “We are the voice of the 113,000 students in this county that deserve face-to-face learning.”
 ??  ?? Cobb County School board member Jaha Howard was denied the opportunit­y at the rally to discuss the district’s decision about how classes will be conducted at the start of the school year.
Cobb County School board member Jaha Howard was denied the opportunit­y at the rally to discuss the district’s decision about how classes will be conducted at the start of the school year.

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