The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Vaccinatio­ns tip scales to open Clayton schools

Leaders explain call to restart in-person classes next month.

- By Leon Stafford leon.stafford@ajc.com

All year long, Clayton County school officials had been firm about keeping classes virtual until positive COVID-19 infections dropped to 100 new cases per 100,000 residents.

But that changed when vaccines for the highly infec- tious disease starting rolling out, especially for teach- ers, the district said Monday during a board of edu- cation meeting.

“Initially when we made the decision that we would not be returning back based upon the data, we did not have the vaccine nor did we have our own vaccine rollout,” said Ralph Simpson, deputy superinten­dent of school leadership and improvemen­t.

The comments were the first time Clayton school leaders explained their aboutface on in-person learning since they made the deci- sion to bring students back to classrooms earlier this month.

Pre-kindergart­en to fifth grade students will return to face-to-face instructio­n beginning April 14, first on a hybrid schedule and later on a five-day-a-week plan.

Clayton’s explanatio­n also came as the board Monday set Aug. 2 as the first day of classes for the 2021-2022 academic year, and May 24 as the last.

The early start date is a push to make sure the academic year ends before Memorial Day, district leaders said. But it also reflects apprehensi­on over the continuing impact of the COVID19 pandemic, which led leaders to delay the first day of school by a week last summer.

About 48% of the roughly 23,000 K-5th grade students have said they plan to return to school buildings, the district said. Parents of Pre-k to first grade children were more evenly split on in-person and virtual learning, while those of older students wanted to keep their kids home.

Middle and high school students currently will remain all virtual.

The district reported new positive COVID-19 infections had dropped to about 151 per 100,000 residents as of March 27, down from an all-time high of 724 cases in early February.

Board mem b er Mark C hristmas opposed the return to in-person classes, arguing the district was reneging on its promise to residents.

“We still get backlash because we said we weren’t going to do this until those cases were below 100,” he said, adding that students would only be in classroom for a month before the end of the school year May 25. “I just don’t think that’s a wise decision.”

 ?? COURTESY ?? With teachers now eligible, Clayton County set up vaccinatio­n sites for school employees.
COURTESY With teachers now eligible, Clayton County set up vaccinatio­n sites for school employees.

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