The Day

Plan to return to class wanted in Stonington

Superinten­dent of schools to present proposal next week

- By JOE WOJTAS Day Staff Writer

Stonington — Facing pressure from increasing­ly impatient parents, the Board of Education instructed Superinten­dent of Schools Van Riley on Wednesday to prepare a plan to return all students to four days a week of in-person instructio­n.

He is scheduled to present that plan to the board on March 11.

“The community has spoken. They want to go back to school,” board member Gordon Lord said. “We as a board need to make that happen as safe and expeditiou­sly as possible.”

“If we don’t try to do it now, when are we going do it?” he added.

Riley said he can do this by having a plan in which students maintain 3 feet of distance, rather than the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guideline of 6 feet that has been in place since the beginning of the school year due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Riley originally had recommende­d that schools remain in the hybrid mode until the end of the school year so staff could get vaccinated. Then last week he unveiled a plan to bring back students in kindergart­en and

grades 1, 6 and 9 return to four-day a week in-school instructio­n beginning March 15. Other grades would have remained in the hybrid or remote learning modes.

On Wednesday, he tweaked that plan saying high school sophomores could return March 29 and juniors and seniors on April 19. He said this can be done because 40% of high school students are learning remotely and not engaged in hybrid learning.

He said other grades cannot be brought back if the school board wants to maintain CDC guideline of 6-foot social distance. This is because of lack of space.

Board member Jack Morehouse said students need to get back to school as soon as possible. He suggested Riley create a plan that creates the least amount of anxiety for staff but brings back students, with a priority on younger children.

A recent survey shows that while 60% of families here want their children to return to more in-person instructio­n, more than 85% of teachers want to remain in the current hybrid mode for the remainder of the school year.

Since the beginning of school last September, students here have attended school in person two days a week and learned remotely three days a week.

Also on Wednesday, Director of Special Services Allison Van Etten said an estimated 20% of school staff members still need to book their first vaccine appointmen­t. She said 325 of 371 staff members who responded to a survey said they will get the vaccine. A total of 43 school employees already have received the vaccine due to being part of a previously eligible group. She said 425 staff members are eligible to receive a vaccine.

During the public comment section of Wednesday’s meeting, school staff and parents debated the return to inschool instructio­n.

Stonington High School teacher and parent Melissa Kwan said no educator disputes that in-person learning is best practice and teachers are working harder than ever juggling instructin­g students in class and online. But she said having students in class 3 feet apart before they have an opportunit­y to be vaccinated is terrifying to most teachers.

She said bringing students back to full in-person learning now “makes me wonder how much we are valued by the community.” She urged the board to wait a few months until all teachers have an opportunit­y to be vaccinated, as crowding in the schools will lead to spread of COVID-19 into homes.

Paraprofes­sionals at the high and middle schools also asked the board to delay making changes to the current hybrid mode of instructio­n until all staff can be vaccinated.

Paraprofes­sional and parent Dan Kelley urged the board to hold off on a return until May 1 so staff can get vaccinated, and at that point windows can be opened and students can go outside.

Lily Haghpassan­d, the high school student representa­tive to the board, recommende­d the school system stay with hybrid learning through the rest of the year, saying that moving to full in-person learning was not worth the risk of having to shift to all remote learning if there were an outbreak. She urged the board to evaluate the schools individual­ly due to their unique concerns and characteri­stics.

Parents pointed out other school districts are increasing in-person instructio­n, and some districts have maintained in-person learning this year, and that 3 feet instead of 6 feet of social distancing is allowed, and virus transmissi­on rates are much lower in schools than in the wider community. They pointed out that parents wanted full in-person learning last summer but still no move has been made in that direction despite the availabili­ty of testing and now vaccines. They again said remote and hybrid learning have led to students to being left behind academical­ly, feeling socially isolated and not being engaged in learning.

Dr. Kate Wagner, a parent, said the national call for a return to schools is coming from the medical community that is evaluating an abundance of data. She said the theory from last summer that kids would spread the novel coronaviru­s was wrong. She said it’s time to do what’s best for children.

As of Feb. 19, there had been 47 COVID-19 cases among students and 19 among staff.

Two parents suggested that if the school system can’t bring students back, it should give parents vouchers so they can pay to send their children to private schools.

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