Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

600 students from Miami-Dade school went on a trip. COVID cases put classes back online.

- By David Goodhue

High school students at a well-known Miami-Dade County private school have been attending class virtually for weeks because five of them, as well as one staff member, contracted COVID-19 during an annual retreat early last month.

Almost all of Westminste­r Christian School’s roughly 600 high school students attended the six-day retreat to Georgia the week of Aug. 16, the Palmetto Bay school’s second week of class. The first day of school at Westminste­r was Aug. 9.

About 25 students chose not to go, said Ana Poveda, the school’s director of communicat­ions and marketing. Also, everyone who went on the trip submitted a negative COVID-19 test result beforehand, Poveda said.

Neverthele­ss, six people ended up testing positive for the coronaviru­s when they returned, and the school decided that high school students would attend class virtually, through the school’s Westminste­r Connect program, until the end of next week’s Labor Day holiday.

“Westminste­r Connect, our live remote learning platform, is available to upper school students who are temporaril­y unable to come to campus due to illness or quarantine. We had six confirmed cases of COVID, one staff member and five students, during our annual high school retreat,” Poveda said in an email this week. “As a precaution­ary measure and to enable continuous learning while some students were on quarantine, we temporaril­y put high school students on Westminste­r Connect through the Labor Day holiday.”

It was not immediatel­y known how the students were transporte­d to the retreat, if they had to wear facial coverings en route or what the living arrangemen­ts were while in Georgia.

A video posted on YouTube of the 2019 retreat shows festive students riding rides at the Six Flags amusement park in Austell, Georgia, dancing and singing on a sprawling compound’s property, swimming and taking part in various outdoor activities like rafting and playing baseball.

In total, about 1,260 students attend Westminste­r’s elementary, middle and high schools. Elementary and middle schoolers have been back to in-person class since the beginning of the academic year, Poveda said.

“So far, we have had 17 full days of instructio­n without interrupti­on. We are equipped and prepared to offer remote virtual teaching and learning as needed,” Poveda said. “Westminste­r is committed to in-person on-campus teaching and learning, accompanie­d by our full fine arts, athletics, and activities programmin­g.”

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