The Boyertown Area Times

PART-TIME RETURN

School board OKs hybrid reopening with 7-2 vote

- By Evan Brandt

BOYERTOWN » With a 7-2 vote, the Boyertown School Board July 28 approved the “scaffoldin­g” plan for a part-time return to school that had originally been proposed by the administra­tion.

Board members Ruth Dierolf and Christine Neiman, both citing families’ need to have their children in school so parents can work, cast the two no votes.

Stressing that the plan continues to evolve as conditions change, Superinten­dent Dana Bedden, noted one new element, which the board also approved, is moving the first day of school from Aug. 24 to Aug. 31.

The plan calls for elementary students to attend their neighborho­od schools five days a week, but for the fifth and sixth grades to be moved to Boyertown’s two middle schools for live instructio­n.

(Bedden warned circumstan­ces may require that elementary students only attend in-person classes four days a week, with Friday being reserved for on-line learning, but that decision has not been made yet.)

Seventh, eighth and ninth graders will be taught in-person in the high school building three days a week, and learn online the remaining two days.

Grades 10, 11 and 12 would attend the high school two days a week and undertake online learning the other three days.

Additional­ly, the district has developed a fully online virtual program taught by Boyertown teachers, as much to prepare for another full shut down, as to give parents another option.

In fact, Bedden said “I will be shocked if the state doesn’t turn around and make us go virtual. This plan allows for that.”

The district will also continue to provide the virtual program offered through the Berks County Intermedia­te Unit, said Michael Stoudt, the district’s assistant superinten­dent for teaching and learning.

The approval had a bumpy road to the finish line.

Two weeks ago when it was outlined for the board at the July 14 meeting, five board members — Dierolf, Neiman, James Brophy, Roger Updegrove and Brian Hemingway — indicated they wanted to see what a full return to school would look like.

Thrown by the request, Superinten­dent Dana Bedden and his team came back to the board at a hastily called board meeting seven days later and told them essentiall­y, that it could not be done and still meet the safety protocols being recommende­d by national and state health authoritie­s.

After weathering a flood of opinion on both sides of the question, board members Brophy, Hemingway and Dierolf all said they were only asking to see what a full open would look like.

During Tuesday’s meeting, held online and which attracted more than 600 people, Brophy said again that those board members who had asked for an alternativ­e “were only doing our due diligence, so we had something

to compare” the administra­tion’s recommenda­tion to.

“There are a lot of things the administra­tion just can’t mitigate,” said Brophy “There is some gain in health and wellness” in the hybrid plan, “but as for academics, it’s a distant second.”

Neverthele­ss, “voting no would subject parents, students and teachers to limbo again and I won’t do that. I don’t fully support this plan but it allows us to move forward,” Brophy said.

“We have to move on, we have to get something going,” said Updegrove.

“I’m not crazy about this either, but we have to submit a plan,” said Hemingway. “We need to trust the people we hire to make recommenda­tions and we need to think about whether this will work, and be flexible.”

“Perhaps,” said Hemingway, “the community is going to have to make sacrifices for the school district.”

School board member Lisa Hogan said the plan “puts health and safety first, which is where it belongs.”

“We’ve done the best we can to offer something for everyone,” said board member Jill Dennin. “Each family will have to decide what’s best for their child.”

“At the end of the day, schools can’t be all things to all people,” said Bedden.

“It absolutely is a compromise,” said School Board President Brandon Foose. “Under the circumstan­ces, we have to be flexible.”

Next, the district plans to undertake another survey of families to determine more details on the options now approved.

 ?? DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA FILE PHOTO ?? The Boyertown Area School District’s Education Center in Colebrookd­ale, where the school board approved a hybrid reopening plan for fall.
DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA FILE PHOTO The Boyertown Area School District’s Education Center in Colebrookd­ale, where the school board approved a hybrid reopening plan for fall.
 ?? IMAGE FROM SCREENSHOT ?? Boyertown School Board President Brandon Foose speaks during a video conference meeting.
IMAGE FROM SCREENSHOT Boyertown School Board President Brandon Foose speaks during a video conference meeting.

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