The Standard Journal

Jill Biden drawing on classroom time for case against Trump

- By Will Weissert

WAUWATOSA, Wis. — When Jill Biden introduced herself to millions of Americans during last month’s Democratic National Convention, she did so from a high school where she once taught English near her Delaware home.

Since then, she’s visited a classroom that would otherwise be filled with elementary school children, participat­ed in a health briefing on how to safely resume in-person learning and met with teachers in a Wisconsin backyard.

The emphasis on education is a natural fit for someone who was a public school teacher for more than 20 years, earned two master’s degrees and then a doctorate in education and continued teaching at a community college when her husband, Joe Biden, was vice president.

But in an election year where reopening schools shuttered by the coronaviru­s is emerging as a flashpoint, Jill Biden is increasing­ly drawing on her classroom experience to empathize with parents struggling to cope with the shift to virtual learning. She’s taking a mostly virtual 10-city tour of schools disrupted by the pandemic and is trying to make the case that President Donald Trump doesn’t deserve reeelectio­n because of his handling of the coronaviru­s.

“I feel if Joe had been president at this time we would not be in the midst of this chaos,” Jill Biden told a mother and two teachers during a discussion that lasted more than half an hour on the patio of a private home last week in Wauwatosa, outside Milwaukee.

Trump has also tried to seize on schools as an election-year issue, pressuring state and local leaders to resume classroom instructio­n and threatenin­g to withhold federal dollars for those who don’t. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has sent mixed signals, saying students should return to the classroom but also noting that virtual classes present the lowest risk of COVID-19 spread.

The public appears more skeptical of reopening than the White House.

Only about 1 in 10 Americans thinks day care centers, preschools or K-12 schools should open this fall without restrictio­ns, according to a poll released in late July from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs. Roughly 3 in 10 say that teaching kids in classrooms shouldn’t happen at all.

If Biden wins the election, his wife has pledged that his administra­tion will make listening to teachers’ concerns a priority. She also could play a role in shaping school reopenings. Both Bidens listened and took notes during a virtual briefing last week with public health and education experts about how to approach a reopening without exacerbati­ng the pandemic.

“How many times have we had someone who’s wanted to be the education president and is very good on rhetoric but has very little or no idea how to translate that rhetoric into reality,” said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers, which has endorsed Biden. “She sends a message throughout America, not only of the importance of education, but also the importance of sweating the small stuff.”

Sometimes her message is the contrast between Trump and a Biden administra­tion. On the same day that the president traveled to Kenosha, Wisconsin, last week to blame protests that sometimes turned violent on “domestic terror,” Jill Biden was touring Evan G. Shortlidge Academy, a kindergart­en through second grade school in Wilmington, Delaware, where she and her husband live.

 ?? Ap-Carolyn kaster, File ?? Jill Biden, wife of Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden, walks past a dry erase board in a classroom that reads “Shortlidge Welcomes Dr. Biden,” as she tours the Evan G. Shortlidge Academy in Wilmington, Del.
Ap-Carolyn kaster, File Jill Biden, wife of Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden, walks past a dry erase board in a classroom that reads “Shortlidge Welcomes Dr. Biden,” as she tours the Evan G. Shortlidge Academy in Wilmington, Del.

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