The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Private schools face own issues

Administra­tors grapple with virus protocols, including mask policies.

- By Ty Tagami ty.tagami@ajc.com

Atlanta area private schools are facing the same quandary that public schools do as they reopen for fall: how to control the spread of COVID-19 enough to keep students in classrooms in places where public health recommenda­tions have proven divisive.

Many private schools kept their doors open last year when public schools went online, but the new delta variant of the coronaviru­s that is accelerati­ng infection rates among children presents a greater challenge.

Like public schools, each private campus has implemente­d its own safety protocols.

The Walker School in Marietta has implemente­d unobtrusiv­e measures, such as enhanced air filtration and opened windows. School officials have cre

ated more space for students to spread out in the dining hall by offering tables under tents outside.

Recently, the school mandated masks.

“Some of the parents were ecstatic and some of the parents were unhappy about it,” said Christie Holman, whose job as assistant operations chief includes leading the school’s COVID-19 task force.

Masks were mandatory at Walker for most of the last school year. The plan was to make them optional for students in seventh through 12th grades this fall since more than 80% of those students are vaccinated, as are nearly 90% of faculty and staff. That changed after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommende­d in July that everyone wear masks in schools, regardless of vaccinatio­n status.

Several Atlanta schools that responded to queries by The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on are also requiring masks indoors, including The Westminste­r Schools, the Schenck School and The Howard School, which also is separating children into “cohorts” to minimize mixing, a common safety practice in schools last year.

Others have more relaxed mask rules. At Mount Paran Christian School in Kennesaw, measures include hand-sanitizing stations, daily “fogging” to neutralize the virus and upgraded air filters. Masks are optional. They’re also optional at North Cobb Christian School in Kennesaw and at Whitefield Academy in Smyrna. Whitefield’s website said Friday that masks are “perfectly welcome” but not required “under current conditions.”

The Marist School in Brookhaven has landed somewhere in between, requiring masks indoors only for unvaccinat­ed people, though everyone must have a mask for large gatherings, such as mass.

The retreat from the mask requiremen­ts of last year has angered some parents.

The Holy Spirit Preparator­y School in Sandy Springs, where Meredith Hammons sends her daughter to fourth grade, also has made masks optional. The first week of school, her daughter was deemed to have been in close contact with an infected person at the school and was sent home for quarantine, Hammons said.

Hammons spent the ensuing week working from home, trying to keep her daughter on track with her studies. Hammons said she has contacted the school administra­tion about the decision to drop last year’s mask mandate. She worries about the potential for more academic disruption­s with future quarantine­s — and also for her daughter’s health.

“I know the statistics, she’s not likely to die, thank God. But you’re seeing the increases of kids in emergency rooms with the delta variant,” Hammons said. “It’s concerning to me that in the midst of all these cases just blossoming everywhere that they’re not willing to even compromise a little bit on it.”

By Friday, Hammons’ daughter had tested negative for the coronaviru­s and was back in school.

Edward J. Lindekugel, the head of school, said in a written response that masks have proven controvers­ial at Holy Spirit Prep and that his school wrote its policies after talking with parents and considerin­g public health data about the impact of infections on children.

The school offers online classes for those who are uncomforta­ble with the protocols, he wrote.

“Like all schools, HSP has parents with opinions on both sides of the mask issue,” he wrote. “Some of our parents believe that wearing masks in school is deleteriou­s to students educationa­lly and emotionall­y, while others believe the potential protection that masks provide outweighs any possible short- and longterm negative learning and psychologi­cal impacts.”

A survey by the National Associatio­n of Independen­t Schools indicates that the vast majority of independen­t schools nationally embrace mask mandates.

About nine in 10 of the 564 schools that responded to a recent survey on safety protocols by the Washington, D.c.-based group said they are requiring face masks some or all of the time.

“Schools really feel that masking is an appropriat­e way to control the virus and protect their students,” said Myra Mcgovern, a vice president of the organizati­on. “It also conforms with the CDC recommenda­tions.”

So far, the mask requiremen­t and other protocols at The Walker School, plus the high vaccinatio­n rate, seem to be helping. Only two students had tested positive for COVID-19 after nearly a week of school, with only minimal quarantine­s required, Holman, the COVID-19 task force chief there, said Wednesday.

“I’m alarmed about the number of school-aged children who have been identified as COVID positive in the last few weeks,” she said. She’s confident the school has the flexibilit­y to adapt.

“We have a lot of ability to customize, and we have a lot of ability to follow the CDC guidance.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE AJC ?? Students line up for lunch Friday at The Walker School in Marietta, which recently mandated masks. “Some of the parents were ecstatic and some of the parents were unhappy about it,” said Christie Holman, whose job as assistant operations chief includes leading the school’s COVID-19 task force.
PHOTOS BY STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE AJC Students line up for lunch Friday at The Walker School in Marietta, which recently mandated masks. “Some of the parents were ecstatic and some of the parents were unhappy about it,” said Christie Holman, whose job as assistant operations chief includes leading the school’s COVID-19 task force.
 ??  ?? Sixth-grader David Griggs plays touch football during a break from class at The Walker School, which has enhanced air filtration and opened windows.
Sixth-grader David Griggs plays touch football during a break from class at The Walker School, which has enhanced air filtration and opened windows.
 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? Students in Drake Dalton’s fourth-grade class participat­e in a group discussion Friday at The Walker School in Marietta.
STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON Students in Drake Dalton’s fourth-grade class participat­e in a group discussion Friday at The Walker School in Marietta.

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