The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fayette schools back with mix of in-person, virtual learning

District officials say additional precaution­s are in place to keep students and staff safe.

- By Leon Stafford leon.stafford@ajc.com

Fayette County will welcome students back to in-person classes today with safety as a top priority — and a goal of avoiding the coronaviru­s-related issues that forced Paulding and Cherokee counties to recently shutdown four high schools.

While most metro school systems have chosen to begin the new academic year virtually, Fayette elected to follow a hybrid model. Students can opt for distance learning every day or split their educationa­l week between three days of online instructio­n and two days of in-class, brickand-mortar schooling.

And when students come back, they’ll be greeted with one-way hallways, class schedules designed to limit the number of

children gathering at lockers, and classes greatly reduced in size to adhere to social-distancing guidelines.

Students will be required to wear face masks.

“By not having all students in our buildings at one time (due to the hybrid schedule and those choosing full-time virtual learning) we will have enough space to distance desks in classrooms and effectivel­y reduce the amount of traffic in hallways,” Fayette Schools spokeswoma­n Melinda Berry-Driesbach said in an email.

Fayette has just more than 20,000 students.

“Plus, we are requiring students in grades 2-12 to wear face coverings. Given these measures, we believe we can greatly reduce the number of COVID-19 cases in our schools,” she said. “No plan can 100% prevent the virus from being in schools, but we believe we have taken the appropriat­e steps to greatly mitigate it.”

The concern over COVID19 transmissi­on has been heightened by dozens of cases reported at high schools in Paulding and Cherokee counties shortly after they opened the academic year with in-person learning Aug. 3.

The outbreak forced Cherokee Schools to close Etowah and Woodstock high schools, while Paulding closed North Paulding High School. Photos of crowded hallways and few students wearing masks at North Paulding went viral.

Fayette’s opening also comes on the heels of an early August report from the White House Coronaviru­s Task Force that said Georgia needs to do more to combat the disease and that the state faces “widespread and expanding community viral spread.”

Fayette school board member Leonard Presberg said the Paulding and Cherokee school infections have impacted concerns some have about in-person classes.

“Those incidents are instructiv­e, not just for us as a system and how things are set up, but how each teacher and each family thinks about coming back to school,” he said. “The schools reflect how the community is acting.”

About 30% of Fayette students chose the all-virtual school day when the district outlined its back-to-school plan, Berry-Driesbach said. That number has risen since the outbreaks in Paulding and Cherokee.

India Gay, Fayette County High School’s incoming senior class president, told the school board last month that her classmates supported a virtual-only start for the school year because the risks of going back to in-person classes are too great at this time. She said they were willing to sacrifice as much of the first semester as necessary if it meant they could enjoy the second.

“There is no school system without healthy students, teachers and administra­tion and faculty,” she said. “We ask that you all keep the well-being of this county and the interest of those departing in the spring at the forefront of any and all decisions.”

To prepare for the new year, the school system created a “Winners Together” digital campaign with a 30-second public service announceme­nt, posters, a face mask logo and reminders to students to wash their hands and socially distance.

Michelle Kalbeitzer, the mother of two high schoolers, said she is sending her children to in-person classes because she is confident Fayette has created a safe environmen­t for students.

She said she weighed the pros and cons and decided that students not only need one-on-one time with teachers, they also need social interactio­n with one another.

“I think this is the best step forward for my children,” she said.

Josh Felix admitted he is nervous about sending his son to elementary school for the first time in person, but believes it’s the right choice.

“Do I get concerned about what’s happening in Paulding and other counties, sure,” he said. “But my eyes need to stay focused on what our county’s done. The plan we’ve seen put out and the communicat­ion that we’ve had is really great. I think that’s why it’s with nervous excitement that we are getting him ready to go back to school on Monday.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? School board member Leonard Presberg said other schools’ handling of coronaviru­s issues has been informativ­e.
CONTRIBUTE­D School board member Leonard Presberg said other schools’ handling of coronaviru­s issues has been informativ­e.

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