The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cases reported as schools reopen

Cherokee County shuts down classroom after student tests positive.

- By Ty Tagami ty.tagami@ajc.com and Maureen Downey maureen.downey@ajc.com

A handful of schools in Georgia opened this week as the pandemic raged beyond their doors, while officials worked to balance the risk of spreading the coronaviru­s against the urgent need to get students in front of teachers.

The pandemic did not stay outside the schoolhous­e doors in

Canton. In its second day of the new school year, the Cherokee County School District shut down a second-grade classroom at Sixes Elementary School after a student tested positive for COVID19, spokeswoma­n Barbara Jacoby said Tuesday, adding that the teacher and 20 other students in the class must quarantine for two weeks. The teacher, who is symptom-free, will teach the class online from home and the classroom will be deep-cleaned.

Also, on the first day of school

Tuesday in Marietta, where students are fully remote, a spokeswoma­n said five district employees had tested positive for COVID-19. More than three-quarters of

Cherokee County’s 42,000 students returned to classes Monday, while 23% chose the district’s digital learning option. Cherokee is among the first districts in the country to reopen in what will be a vast experiment in keeping a wily and determined virus at bay.

are still not sure what the

best ways to open different schools are,” said Charlene Wong, an assistant professor of pediatrics at the Duke School of Medicine. “This is going to be an opportunit­y for us to learn and to course correct as we go because we are probably not going to get it right out of the gate… this is the first time we ever tried to do something at this scale across the country. “

Some districts that had planned to hold in-person activities are reconsider­ing as the virus surges.

The City Schools of Decatur had previously decided to start school online Aug. 17, but on Tuesday announced it was postponing sports and other extracurri­cular activities until late September and is no longer opening its child care center this week. An employee who visited the center tested positive for COVID-19, the district said.

Other districts were moving forward with in-person plans. Gwinnett and Cobb county school districts — the first and second largest in the state — both announced on Tuesday plans to return to in-person classes.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, repeated Monday what many child advocates, including the American Academy of Pediatrici­ans, have been saying for weeks: Students need school for the psychologi­cal and nutritiona­l benefits. He added a crucial caveat: only if they can be there safely, according to CNN.

Parents such as Tara Duke of Paulding County have had to make a difficult choice. Paulding is meeting in person, but the single mother of four enrolled her children in the district’s online alternativ­e because she felt the schools would be too risky.

After glitches during the first two days this week she worried she made the wrong decision. Live video sessions on Zoom have been canceled and reschedule­d and she’s not sure her youngest boys will be able to keep track of their changing schedules once she returns to work.

She said a teacher leading about 40 students lost her connection to Zoom on Tuesday, “and all the kids were just sitting there talking to each other … where’s the teacher, where’s the teacher?”

Duke manages an office a half-hour drive from home, so her mother, age 74, would have been the one collecting the kids from school. People her age are at a higher risk of severe consequenc­es from COVID-19, so Duke opted for online.

Photos published online by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on Monday show parents in nearby Cherokee County walking children to school in clusters, often without masks.

“That’s unquestion­ably unsafe,” said Dr. Harry J. Heiman, a clinical associate professor at the Georgia State University School of Public Health, after reviewing the photos at the AJC’s request.

Cherokee and Paulding both encourage but don’t mandate masks for students.

Dr. Marybeth Sexton, an assistant professor of medicine at Emory University’s Division of Infectious Diseases, said the latest research indicates that teenagers are just as capable as adults at spreading the virus. Handwashin­g is important, but face coverings and social distancing are more important since the disease is mostly spread from one person to the next by respirator­y droplets, she said. “This is really a respirator­y virus.”

Heiman, who has been critical of Georgia’s handling of the pandemic, was also troubled by a photo that circulated on social media: It shows scores of Cherokee County seniors posing shoulder-to-shoulder outside Etowah High School on the first day of classes Monday, nearly all of them without a mask.

The Cherokee spokeswoma­n said a parent, and not school staff, took the photo. “We are strongly encouragin­g and recommendi­ng all students wear masks inside the school and on buses and are providing all students with two reusable masks,” said Jacoby.

Not everyone was outraged, pointing out that first-day photos are a senior tradition and likely only took a few minutes to assemble and take.

“Photos represent a moment in time,” said Buzz Brockway, a former Gwinnett state representa­tive and now an appointed member of the Georgia Charter Schools Commission. “How do we know these kids weren’t wearing a mask all day except for the moment this photo was taken? ”

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER / FOR THE AJC ?? Parents walk their children to the entrance of Woodstock Elementary School on the first day of school this week. Photos of similar gatherings also show very few if any adults wearing face coverings.
STEVE SCHAEFER / FOR THE AJC Parents walk their children to the entrance of Woodstock Elementary School on the first day of school this week. Photos of similar gatherings also show very few if any adults wearing face coverings.

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