The Oklahoman

Biden on K-8 schools: Goal is 5 days a week

- Joey Garrison

“You’ll have a significant percentage

WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden made clear that his goal is for most K-8 public schools to be open in person “five days a week” by the end of his first 100 days in office after the White House received widespread criticism for scaling the target back last week.

“No, that’s not true,” Biden said late Tuesday at CNN’s town hall in Milwaukee when asked why the White House lowered his goal to just one day of in-person schooling a week. “That’s what was reported. It was a mistake in the communicat­ion.”

Many schools, particular­ly in cities, are still closed for in-person instructio­n and operating virtually amid the coronaviru­s pandemic as students in other schools attend classrooms.

Frustratin­g parents and opening a new line of attack for Republican­s, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said last week that Biden’s goal is for more than 50% of schools to have “some teaching” in person “at least one day a week” – not necessaril­y fully reopened – by Day 100 of his presidency. Some projection­s say the U.S. has already met that more attainable threshold.

But Biden said Tuesday that the statement was inaccurate and recommitte­d to a goal of having most K-8 schools fully open.

“I think that we’ll be close to that by the end of the first 100 days,” Biden said. “You’ll have a significant percentage of them being able to be open. My guess is they’re going to probably be pushing to open all summer, to continue like it’s a different semester.” He added: “The goal will be five days a week.” Biden is facing increasing pressure to deliver on his pledge to reopen schools. Debates about school reopening plans have raged for weeks as new variants of the virus spread, vaccine distributi­on varies widely, teachers unions in some cities push back, and many parents grow exasperate­d with the lack of an in-person learning option.

The U.S. Department of Education is conducting a

of them being able to be open.”

President Joe Biden Speaking of K-8 schools in his first 100 days in office

survey for a full tally of the number of schools operating entirely virtually, partly in-person and fully inperson.

But Burbio, a company that aggregates school district calendars, recently found about 64% of U.S. students are already attending schools offering at least some in-person learning – therefore already surpassing Biden’s goal. That includes 40% of students who are in school districts offering full-time, in-person instructio­n. About 35% are attending schools with virtual-only plans.

In a report last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said schools can safely reopen amid the pandemic if a host of safety measures are taken, including maintainin­g 6 feet of physical distancing inside school buildings where possible, requiring face masks, cleaning facilities and contract tracing. Reopening should also depend on the level of COVID-19 transmissi­on in a community, the CDC said.

Although vaccinatin­g teachers should be prioritize­d, according to the CDC, it isn’t a must for in-person instructio­n.

“I think that we should be vaccinatin­g teachers,” Biden said at the town hall. “We should move them up in the hierarchy.”

When he announced the reopening goal in December, Biden said he aimed to ensure “a majority of our schools” are open within 100 days.

But in Biden’s plan to defeat the COVID-19 pandemic, released on his first full day in office, the White House lowered its marker, saying the goal applies only to “a majority of K-8 schools,” not high schools.

 ??  ?? At a town hall event Tuesday in Milwaukee, President Joe Biden said there was a “mistake in communicat­ion,” and he clarified his goal of reopening K-8 schools “five days a week.” EVAN VUCCI/AP
At a town hall event Tuesday in Milwaukee, President Joe Biden said there was a “mistake in communicat­ion,” and he clarified his goal of reopening K-8 schools “five days a week.” EVAN VUCCI/AP

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