The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

District mulls permanent remote learning option

Official notes a mandate will be considered if board takes that stance.

- By Leon Stafford leon.stafford@ajc.com

After temporaril­y closing at least 20 schools because of COVID-19 outbreaks, Clayton County is weighing whether to create a permanent program for remote learning and implementi­ng a vaccine mandate.

During a Youtube Live on Tuesday, Clayton Schools Superinten­dent Morcease Beasley said the south metro district’s current coronaviru­s policy does not require students to be vaccinated. But Beasley, who in the past has opposed a vaccinatio­n mandate, left the door open for one if the county board of education takes a different position.

“We’ll look at the various laws and opportunit­ies that have to support that in our state,” he said of the board. “And if that decision is made, it will be communicat­ed at the highest level.”

Clayton Schools, like most districts in metro Atlanta, saw

a surge of COVID-19 infections in classrooms throughout August. The infections were so widespread that school systems from Cobb to Henry counties temporaril­y switched entire grade levels to remote learning or closed buildings to try to bring the virus under control.

Earlier this month, Decatur Schools said it planned to require staff to be vaccinated as a condition of employment, but would not require the same mandate for students.

“We all have to take individual responsibi­lity and appropriat­e actions to ensure that we are safe and that others are safe,” Beasley said during the Youtube Live. He said all but two schools that had temporaril­y closed — Sequoyah Middle and Forest Park High — were back in class for faceto-face instructio­n.

Beasley made the remarks just hours after dozens of students and Clayton Schools employees filed into Babb Middle School on Tuesday to get inoculated and tested for the virus. The district, , which has some of the lowest vaccinatio­n numbers in metro Atlanta, will host testing and inoculatio­n clinics on a number of school campuses in the coming weeks to get more

shots in arms.

Clayton Schools is offering full-time staff $500 and part-timers $250 if they get inoculated by the end of the month. Beasley said 80% of staff who responded to a recent survey said they had been vaccinated, but only about a quarter of the district’s employees filled out the questionna­ire.

The district is also looking at hiring a principal and

teachers for a permanent school for remote learners, according to Beasley.

“Our goal is to provide an option for families who would like to do remote learning for an extended period of time,” he said, adding that the district is still in the planning stages. “More details are forthcomin­g.

Despite the challenges, Beasley said he still believes in-class instructio­n is preferable to returning to the all-virtual education most Clayton students received for the entire 2020-2021 academic year. He said students suffered academical­ly last year and it’s easier to manage individual outbreaks than go through more learning loss.

“It’s our responsibi­lity to ensure that students are safe and that they are learning,” he said.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? G.P. Babb Middle School student Isiah Osby gets a bandage Tuesday after receiving the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at G.P. Babb Middle School in Forest Park.
ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM G.P. Babb Middle School student Isiah Osby gets a bandage Tuesday after receiving the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at G.P. Babb Middle School in Forest Park.
 ??  ?? Clayton County Public Schools Nurse Supervisor Micah Sawyer takes a swab Tuesday from G.P. Babb Middle School Assistant Principal Sharnelius Colbert at a Clayton Schools COVID-19 vaccinatio­n and testing drive.
Clayton County Public Schools Nurse Supervisor Micah Sawyer takes a swab Tuesday from G.P. Babb Middle School Assistant Principal Sharnelius Colbert at a Clayton Schools COVID-19 vaccinatio­n and testing drive.
 ?? PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? G.P. Babb eighth grader Christina Roblero receives the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine from Clayton County Public Schools Nurse Supervisor Lisa Gattis on Tuesday during the drive.
PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM G.P. Babb eighth grader Christina Roblero receives the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine from Clayton County Public Schools Nurse Supervisor Lisa Gattis on Tuesday during the drive.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States