The Boston Globe

A DAY OF JOY AND JITTERS

(along with a couple of hiccups) The day sizzled, but spirits were high and bus service improved — mostly

- By James Vaznis and Naomi Martin

With bells tingling and upbeat R&B music bumping, a festive atmosphere enveloped Mildred Avenue K-8 School in Mattapan Thursday morning as students streamed in on a red carpet for the first day of classes. Along the way, they were greeted by cheering adults, including Mayor Michelle Wu, Superinten­dent Mary Skipper, and someone dressed as a bunny.

Approachin­g the hubbub, Lanaiyah Wilder-Williams, an eighth-grader who was excited for school but wished she’d gotten more sleep, smiled as teachers hugged her and welcomed her back.

“It’s the first day of school,” she said. “I’m tired, but I’m feeling all right.”

Boston Public Schools students in grades 1-12 returned to school, amid a heat emergency marked by thick humidity and temperatur­es that soared into the 90s. The sultry weather is expected to persist Friday, but more comfortabl­e temperatur­es are forecasted for Monday, when preschoole­rs and kindergart­ners start classes.

But in many ways the weather was a side note to an otherwise joyful day. It’s a big year for Boston Public Schools and for Skipper, who is entering her second year leading the district and is enacting a number of changes that include beefing up reading instructio­n, expanding college-preparatio­n offerings for high schoolers, and completing a long-term plan for new school buildings.

“This is going to be an incredible year,” Skipper said. “We’re starting so strong from last year.”

Skipper is also under pressure from state Education Commission­er Jeffrey Riley to overhaul the district under a 15month-old improvemen­t plan that calls for dramatic changes in such areas as special education, instructio­n for multilingu­al learners, facilities, and transporta­tion.

In two positive developmen­ts, BPS saw a notable increase in the timeliness

of its buses, with 61 percent arriving to school in the morning on time, compared to 50 percent last year, which coincided with the Orange Line shutdown, according to preliminar­y school district data.

All scheduled trips in the morning also had drivers, a significan­t improvemen­t compared to day one last year when 3 percent of scheduled trips did not have a bus driver.

But the district still needs to make significan­t improvemen­ts to get 95 percent of buses to arrive on time each month, required under the state plan, which BPS failed to meet last year.

Several families expressed relief about timely buses.

“Her bus was right on the money,” said Anna Ovalles after her daughter Gigi, 11, boarded a bus near the intersecti­on of Geneva Avenue and Bowdoin Street that was destined for the Edison K-8 School in Brighton. “It’s the first day, so you just never know whether it’s going to be late, 5 or 10 or 20 minutes.”

Along Washington Street in Roslindale, a punctual bus bound for the Rafael Hernandez School in Roxbury picked up Natalia Maria’s children, Jose, a fifth-grader, and Esther, a thirdgrade­r, who were warmly welcomed by other students with shout outs of their names.

Other families, however, contended with late buses.

Cheryl Buckman waited with her son for nearly 40 minutes for a bus that never came. Her son Landen, who is starting fifth grade at the Paul A. Dever Elementary School, experience­d late and no-show buses in previous years but were hoping this year would be different. They arrived at their bus stop on Thursday morning at 6:50 a.m., and by 7:30 a.m. Buckman said the bus tracker showed it had skipped their stop and was headed to the school.

“The poor kid was bummed because he wanted to be on time,” Buckman said. She said she waited on the phone for 45 minutes to speak to someone from the school’s transporta­tion department, but ended up having a neighbor give her and Landen a ride to school. He arrived an hour late.

“Landen is a special needs student, he can’t miss any curriculum activity on his IEP, because then he loses out,” she said.

In Dorchester, Balexa Tejeda called an Uber after growing impatient waiting for a bus that was supposed to take her children Kelvin, 7, a second-grader, and Kaylanie, 6, a first-grader, to the David Ellis Elementary School in Roxbury.

It was the family’s first introducti­on to BPS after moving here from New Bedford.

“This is not my happy face,” Kelvin said, frowning before his mother shelled out the money for their own ride.

Throughout the day, many BPS students settled into classrooms with newly installed air conditione­rs. The district has installed hundreds of new air conditione­rs in recent years, thanks to federal pandemic relief funds, and now nearly all of the district’s schools have central air or air conditione­rs, according to BPS.

In the approximat­ely dozen schools without cooling systems, school leaders made sure there were enough fans.

Boston Teachers Union president Jessica Tang said the improvemen­ts in air conditioni­ng were “long overdue.”

“It makes such a difference,” she said. “The heat is no longer a distractio­n and they’re able to actually focus on their learning.”

The district took other precaution­s as well. Skipper allowed principals to decide whether to hold recess outside for the rest of the week and the athletics department postponed all outdoor games and canceled all indoor and outdoor practices for Thursday, while decisions were pending about Friday’s athletic activities, according to a letter Skipper sent to families Thursday.

On a tour of the district, Skipper stopped by a darkened classroom at the Frederick Pilot Middle School, where students who were learning English and had limited schooling in their native countries were filling out questionna­ires about themselves. An eighth-grader from Liberia wrote that he had five siblings and his favorite musician was The Weeknd, but he was puzzled over how to spell his favorite food: chicken.

“I got you,” said his teacher, Nyree Smith. “That’s one of my favorite foods, too.”

In another classroom, Shawn Ralph led his students in a series of ice-breakers. Which did they prefer: pandas or koalas? Dogs or cats? Mashed potatoes or french fries? As pictures flashed on the wall, the students — immigrants still learning the English language — shuffled across the room to show their opinions. Skipper played along, standing alone in support of mashed potatoes.

In an interview, Skipper said the first day of school is her favorite time of the year.

“It’s just filled with hope and optimism – it’s a fresh restart,” she said. “We all need that in life.”

 ?? ERIN CLARK/GLOBE STAFF ?? Students were greeted by rows of staff, politician­s, and community members Thursday at the Holmes Innovation School in Dorchester.
ERIN CLARK/GLOBE STAFF Students were greeted by rows of staff, politician­s, and community members Thursday at the Holmes Innovation School in Dorchester.
 ?? CRAIG F. WALKER/GLOBE STAFF ?? A Conley Elementary School second-grader waited 20 minutes for her bus but eventually took an MBTA bus with her mother Thursday.
CRAIG F. WALKER/GLOBE STAFF A Conley Elementary School second-grader waited 20 minutes for her bus but eventually took an MBTA bus with her mother Thursday.
 ?? ERIN CLARK/GLOBE STAFF ?? As some students received red carpet treatment Thursday at Mildred Ave K-8 School in Dorchester (above), others, including 7year-old Kelvin (left) and his 6-year-old sister Kaylanie (middle), waited for an Uber with their mom after a bus location mishap.
ERIN CLARK/GLOBE STAFF As some students received red carpet treatment Thursday at Mildred Ave K-8 School in Dorchester (above), others, including 7year-old Kelvin (left) and his 6-year-old sister Kaylanie (middle), waited for an Uber with their mom after a bus location mishap.
 ?? ERIN CLARK/GLOBE STAFF ?? Lexy Marsh, a social worker at the Holmes Innovation School in Dorchester, hugged students as they arrived Thursday for the first day of school.
ERIN CLARK/GLOBE STAFF Lexy Marsh, a social worker at the Holmes Innovation School in Dorchester, hugged students as they arrived Thursday for the first day of school.
 ?? TANNER PEARSON FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE ??
TANNER PEARSON FOR THE BOSTON GLOBE

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