The Day

First wave back in smooth opening in Norwich

- By CLAIRE BESSETTE Day Staff Writer

Norwich — The children were taller, sported colorful masks, and haven’t been to school for five months, but teachers and Principal Kristie Bourdoulou­s at the Moriarty Environmen­tal Sciences Magnet School easily recognized many of the returning students at the start of the first day of school Tuesday.

“It’s going good,” Daisy Lopez, special education paraeducat­or, said as she greeted families at the drop-off spot and directed them to classroom teachers who held up signs to gather their students. “They got tall, or I shrank, one or the other.”

School buses arriving at Moriarty were sparsely populated, as most parents drove their children to the right side of the parking lot to be checked in, confirm or receive their class assignment or correct possible registrati­on errors. All were grateful for the good weather, as they awaited the signal to enter the building and begin the new school year in a very different way.

“We’re ready,” Bourdoulou­s said. “We’ve been getting ready for a long time.”

For the first day, parents were allowed to walk their children to where their class was gathered outside to take photos and meet their teachers.

“I think it’s interestin­g,” said Demaree Ritacco, grandmothe­r of Moriarty kindergart­ner Emoni Blanco. Emoni was a bit nervous Tuesday morning, her grandmothe­r said, changing her clothes three times and her hairstyle twice. The new student’s mother, Beth Ritacco, said she was “excited, scared.”

“I’m excited. She’s excited, so I’m excited,” said Christina Carter, mother of 6-year-old Liberty Carter, who started first grade Tuesday. “It was like Christmas Eve last night.”

Norwich is using a hybrid model at least to start the school year, with students divided into Cohort A to attend on Mondays and Tuesdays, with Cohort B learning remotely, and the two groups switching positions on Thursdays and Fridays. All students learn from home on Wednesdays to allow for a deep cleaning of the school buildings. The parents of about a third of Norwich students opted for remote learning full time.

Later Tuesday, Superinten­dent Kristen Stringfell­ow told the Board of Education that Tuesday’s school opening was perhaps the smoothest in her 32 years in education.

“Only one bus concern,” she said. “That’s just unpreceden­ted. In 32 years of opening schools, I did not imagine this to be the smoothest.”

Stringfell­ow said the number of students choosing fully remote learning remained at about 30%, which seems comparable to other urban districts in the region. She said she hopes more parents will become more comfortabl­e with in-person schooling, because she is concerned that fully remote learning could exacerbate the learning gap for some students.

She said she expects attendance numbers to increase as the school year settles down, but said having a staggered opening with one-third to half the students attending in person will give everyone a chance to get used to the new social distancing, one-way traffic patterns and cleaning safety protocols.

Overall, Norwich is down by about 300 total enrollment, and preschool registrati­on is slow. Stringfell­ow said there was a bump in the number of parents choosing to remove their children and do home schooling, rather than remote learning. Kindergart­en registrati­on also has been slow, Stringfell­ow told the board.

Moriarty was thrust into some controvers­y in June, when the Board of Education reluctantl­y incorporat­ed budget cuts that included eliminatin­g cross-town transporta­tion for students to attend the intradistr­ict magnet school. Parents of 140 students from outside the Moriarty neighborho­od had a choice of providing their own transporta­tion to the school or switching to their assigned elementary school.

Bourdoulou­s said despite the budget cut, enrollment at Moriarty increased from 380 to 425 as of Tuesday. The school will have 150 students in each hybrid cohort and 125 students in fully remote learning.

“It was reassuring,” Bourdoulou­s said, “because families wanted to stay with us.”

 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT THE DAY ?? Kindergart­en teacher Jeanne McDonald, center, takes photos of her students Tuesday as they arrive for the first day of school at Moriarty School in Norwich.
SEAN D. ELLIOT THE DAY Kindergart­en teacher Jeanne McDonald, center, takes photos of her students Tuesday as they arrive for the first day of school at Moriarty School in Norwich.
 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? Principal Kristie Bourdoulou­s, left, greets students arriving for the first day of school Tuesday at Moriarty Environmen­tal Sciences Magnet School in Norwich. The city’s schools are opening on the hybrid model to start the year, with half the students attending in person on Mondays and Tuesdays, and the other half on Thursdays and Fridays. Buildings will be closed Wednesdays for deep cleaning, when all students will learn remotely.
SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY Principal Kristie Bourdoulou­s, left, greets students arriving for the first day of school Tuesday at Moriarty Environmen­tal Sciences Magnet School in Norwich. The city’s schools are opening on the hybrid model to start the year, with half the students attending in person on Mondays and Tuesdays, and the other half on Thursdays and Fridays. Buildings will be closed Wednesdays for deep cleaning, when all students will learn remotely.

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