Las Vegas Review-Journal

School years reach early ends

Some districts cite students’ troubles with distance learning

- By Jeff Amy The Associated Press

CUSSETA, Ga. — After the Chattahooc­hee County school district called an early end to the school year, seniors lined up one day last week to complete their graduation paperwork.

Students who hadn’t seen each other since in-person classes ended abruptly in March amid the coronaviru­s outbreak commiserat­ed over all they’ve missed out on.

Some also wondered about what they may have lost academical­ly.

“Honestly, remote learning, I don’t think was my favorite thing,” said 18-year-old Isabella Branson. “It’s kind of hard to stay motivated when you don’t have anything to look forward to and you don’t see your friends.”

The small district in rural Georgia is among many around the U.S. that have pulled the plug on distance learning, all citing familiar reasons.

It’s too stressful, the lack of devices and internet access is too much to overcome, and what students get from it just isn’t worth the struggle.

In Georgia, where the school year is ending early for one of every 10 students, many district leaders say the final weeks of the school year would have been dedicated anyway to preparing for and taking standardiz­ed tests that are now canceled.

“We didn’t cut any class time out,” Chattahooc­hee County High School Principal Josh Kemp said. “There was no reason to pile more on our parents and students.”

But Kemp and others also acknowledg­e that there was material that wasn’t covered and that teachers will have to find a way to fold it in next year for returning students.

“They weren’t able to get all the standards,” said Tammy Bailey, the science department chair at the high school. “I think there will be a gap.”

Classes had been scheduled to run through May 21, but remote instructio­n instead came to an end May 8 in the Chattahooc­hee County school district.

A majority of the high school’s 450 students live on the U.S. Army’s Fort Benning. Only 59 percent of households in the district have access to broadband internet at home.

Others around the country that are ending the school year early include suburban districts in Nebraska, Washington, D.C., and New Hampshire.

Officials say they want to relieve stress on families, ease problems for students without internet access and focus on preparing for a fresh start in the fall.

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