Las Vegas Review-Journal

Superinten­dent: It’s time to solidily plan

Vote set on hybrid classroom/online model

- By Agefsanala Appgeton HTS Regts Re)ie.-jounntl

Sith pnessune gno.ing fon the Cltnfi County School Distnict to mowify its school neopening pltn, Supeninten­went Jesus

JTNT stiw Tueswty thtt the time hts come to mo)e fon.tnw on the eqisting bluepnint.

The pltn, .hich ctlls fon T hybniw Tppnotch thtt .oulw Tllo. stuwents to Tttenw cltsses in penson t.o Wtys T .eefi TNW .onfi online fon thnee TNW incluwes Tn online-only option, is hetwew fon T )ote befone the BOTNW of Tnustees on Thunswty.

JTNT, spetfiing Tt T )intutl ne.s bniefing on Tueswty, stiw he hopes to ht)e Tns.enew lingening questions tnustees ntisew in T specitl meeting on Monwty by the time of the )ote.

In Twwition to ftcing

We have to start routing our buses, we have to start moving forward. We’ve been on this for months.

a state deadline requiring districts to submit a reopening proposal at least 20 days before the proposed first day of the school year on Aug. 10, the district is also under the gun in planning implementa­tion, he said.

‘We’ve been on this for months’

“We have to start routing our buses; we have to start moving forward,” Jara said. “We’ve been on this for months.”

The district was required to submit a plan that accounted for in-person learning, distance learning and a hybrid model to the Nevada Department of Education by the deadline. If it doesn’t, or the plan is voted down, the district may need to delay the start of the 2020 school year, according to Jara.

It’s not entirely clear when the deadline is: Jara said the district must submit its plans by July 13, 20 business days before the scheduled first day of school, but the state didn’t specify that

it was going by business days, meaning the district could have until July 21 to act.

Jara noted that the district’s plan, which closely resembles the draft presented to the School Board on June 25, has been modified in response to concerns raised in the intervenin­g weeks and will be further amended to reflect feedback about teacher prep days in the final draft.

The Clark County Education Associatio­n said Tuesday the union would like the district to offer a a five-day, inschool option in addition to a five-day distance learning-only option.

Union wants 5-day classroom option

“Every parent should have a choice to have their child do distance learning five days a week or be in a classroom five days a week,” the union said in a statement. “Every educator should have a choice to either teach in a classroom five days a week or do distance learning five days a week.”

Jara said the district’s class sizes and expected funding levels do not

support a return to classes five days per week.

He described the plan as a shell providing a basic structure for schools. If individual schools see a majority of their students choosing a distance learning option, he said, the remaining students may be able to return to schools full time.

CCEA also said it would not support the reopening plan unless Gov. Steve Sisolak provides additional resources to CCSD, including $14 million in CARES Act funding to establish testing and contact tracing protocols for employees.

The union is requesting the federal funds for testing all 40,000 CCSD employees before school starts, ongoing testing throughout the year and personal protective equipment for all.

Sisolak’s office did not immediatel­y return a request for comment on the union’s demand.

Jara said the district itself is in the process of reviewing the governor’s budget reduction proposal, which cuts $166 million from K-12 education

across the state but does not affect the state’s Distributi­ve Schools Account, which accounts for approximat­ely one-third of CCSD’S operating budget.

Mayor Goodman weighs in

Others have also recently taken up the call to return to classrooms, including Las Vegas Mayor Carolyn Goodman, who said at a monthly meeting of the Nevada Republican Club Tuesday that she had asked Jara and the CCSD Board of Trustees to consider an option for younger children to go back to schools with temperatur­e checks as they board buses.

“I asked our governor, please give us a waiver, and let these children in K-5 or a Pre-k program go back to school,” she said. She did not elaborate on the response, if any.

Contact Aleksandra Appleton at 702-383-0218 or aappleton@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @aleksapple­ton on Twitter. ReviewJour­nal staff writer Rory Appleton contribute­d to this report.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States