The Commercial Appeal

SCS reopening plan depends on COVID-19 results

Superinten­dent retaining power to be flexible

- Laura Faith Kebede

If coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ations and cases continue to surge, Memphis students will start the school year online, Superinten­dent Joris Ray said Friday.

“If we are where we are today, in good faith I could not open schools,” the Shelby County Schools leader told Chalkbeat. “And when I say open schools, I’m talking about in person.”

For now, the plan for parents to choose between in-person and online instructio­n still stands. Parents have until July 18 to decide. But Ray emphasized he plans to be flexible based on how the virus is spreading closer to the first day of school. That’s despite President Donald Trump’s suggestion to slash education funding if districts do not open school buildings in the fall.

“I’m not going to cave in to any political pressure at the national level or any threats around having in-person instructio­n if our data and our numbers here say something different,” Ray said.

This week, Tennessee has seen its highest rates of hospitaliz­ations and deaths from COVID-19 since April. And hospital capacity in Memphis has reached 90%, the highest since the pandemic began. In Nashville on Thursday, the school district announced plans to move all instructio­n online for the first month of school because of dramatic increases in coronaviru­s cases.

Shelby County Schools’ reopening plan includes preparing students to learn fully online at some point during the year if conditions worsen, but many of the details are still being determined. Ray has already proposed moving the first day of school from Aug. 10 to Aug. 31 because the governor extended the state of emergency. The school board is scheduled to vote on the proposal Monday. And Thursday, the district announced inperson graduation ceremonies scheduled for this month would move online “given the steady rise in COVID-19 cases in Shelby County.”

If the district does move all instructio­n online in August, there won’t be enough new laptops and tablets for students. The school board approved a four-year $11 million lease in June and the new devices are scheduled to start arriving this month. So, Ray said

Friday that the district could distribute both new devices and its existing inventory if buildings do not reopen for the first day of school.

The district has also purchased mobile hotspots for families that do not have access to the internet. Some have already been distribute­d to students in summer school.

Ray noted he would be “firm” on protecting the safety of students and staff, even if it meant delaying opening buildings. School buildings have been closed since March to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s.

“And actually now the numbers are far worse than they were in March and we shut down then,” he said.

This story was originally published on Chalkbeat, a nonprofit news site covering educationa­l change in public schools.

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