The Commercial Appeal

Tennessee expects 180 school days in 2020-21

- Marta W. Aldrich

Tennessee officials expect districts and charter schools to provide students with 180 days of “quality instructio­n” for 61⁄2 hours each day, even if the coronaviru­s disrupts classrooms for a second straight year.

They’re also warning local school leaders not to expect the state to grant blanket waivers on required instructio­nal time, including four hours a day for kindergart­en students.

The State Board of Education approved an emergency rule Monday requiring districts and charter leaders to submit plans for how their school communitie­s will teach students in 2020-21 while navigating the pandemic. That could include remote learning, traditiona­l in-person classes, or a combinatio­n of the two.

The rule, modeled in part after similar approaches in North Carolina and Kansas, sets clear expectatio­ns for the new school year after a chaotic spring marked by wide disparitie­s in learning depending on where a student lived. It also emphasizes the importance of delivering meaningful instructio­n while keeping students and staff healthy and safe during a public health emergency.

“We need both,” Sara Morrison, the board’s executive director, said Tuesday. “To focus on safety without a similar focus on instructio­n would be the wrong approach.”

The plans must be submitted to the Tennessee Department of Education by July 24, putting schools on track to receive state funding through the formula known as the Basic Education Program, or BEP, as long as they follow through.

The policy introduces another im

portant acronym for education leaders going forward: CLP, which stands for continuous learning plan.

Continuous learning plans should include basics of schooling like how they’ll take attendance, provide students with learning materials and technology, communicat­e with parents, train teachers, and support all of their students, including those who have disabiliti­es or are learning the English language.

“Most of our students suffered academical­ly this spring because we were unprepared, and we don’t want to go into a new school year similarly unprepared,” Morrison said. “The idea is to ensure that our districts and schools can provide ongoing instructio­n while also anticipati­ng that school is not going to look like business as usual.”

In March — as the coronaviru­s spread and school buildings were shuttered for what turned out to be the rest of the school year — state lawmakers passed emergency legislatio­n that waived the required 180 days of classroom instructio­n and removed the burden of spring testing. A month later, the state board approved emergency rules regarding student grades and graduation, while also shelving teacher effectiveness scores for the 2019-20 school year.

The new rule is the board’s first to set coronaviru­s-related policies for the upcoming academic year as schools prepare to reopen without a vaccine. The policy was developed with the education department and feedback from superinten­dents, school boards, charter school leaders, and the Tennessee Charter School Center.

School leaders have been working for months to adjust their instructio­nal plans, even before they knew they’d have to submit one to the state. Their plans must be approved by the department, which may ask for revisions but doesn’t want the process to become burdensome, said Charlie Buffalino, assistant commission­er of policy and legislativ­e affairs.

“It’s our intent to make it as efficient and easy to complete as possible,” Buffalino told the board.

Dale Lynch, who leads the state superinten­dents group, said the new rule should provide a structure for meeting state requiremen­ts, as well as sharing best practices. Districts and charter schools will be required to publish their plans on their websites, and adjustment­s are expected along the way.

“We will do a much better job this school year of providing instructio­n than we did last year,” Lynch said. “At the same time, there are things that our state still hasn’t figured out when it comes to remote education, such as expanding broadband access to areas that aren’t connected. Another challenge is meeting the needs of students who are on individual­ized learning programs and require services like occupation­al therapy, physical therapy, and speech therapy.”

State officials hope that sharing plans statewide can help both education and government leaders troublesho­ot together.

“No one is under the impression that this is going to be easy,” said Morrison. “Districts are juggling an awful lot right now. But we’re going to learn together as a state in real time.”

This story was originally published by Chalkbeat, a nonprofit news organizati­on covering public education. Sign up for their newsletter­s at ckbe.at/ newsletter­s.

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