USA TODAY US Edition

My 5-point plan to reopen schools safely

This is my top priority as U.S. Education secretary

- Miguel Cardona Miguel Cardona is the U.S. secretary of Education.

The COVID-19 pandemic is the biggest and most complex challenge our education system has experience­d. It has been extraordin­ary to see schools, educators and families face this challenge head-on and continue to educate our students.

But despite heroic work by educators and staff, the pandemic has led to fewer learning opportunit­ies, more kids going hungry, greater stress and a growing sense of social isolation. The disruption in school has taken the heaviest toll on students of color, students from families with low incomes, English learners, rural students and students with disabiliti­es — impacting their social, emotional and mental health, and academic well-being.

We must continue to reopen America’s schools for in-person learning as quickly and safely as possible. As secretary of Education, this is my top priority. On Tuesday, President Joe Biden announced steps to accelerate school reopening nationwide by treating inperson learning as the essential service that it is and prioritizi­ng educators for vaccinatio­ns in every state.

There’s much more work we must also do to safely reopen schools in every community in the country. As the education commission­er in Connecticu­t, my team and I offered clear, science-based guidance and communicat­ed with all stakeholde­rs involved: teachers and staff, administra­tors, district leaders, parents and students. We knew there was no one-size-fits-all solution — that different districts know their schools best and would adjust to local COVID-19 data. My approach with our nation’s schools will be the same.

Thanks to the work of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, our nation’s schools and educators have a clear operationa­l strategy from public health experts on how to safely reopen for in-person instructio­n.

Under my leadership, the Department of Education will take a problemsol­ving, solutions-oriented approach to working with schools, educators and families to get students back in the classroom full time. Here’s our plan:

We’ll convene the experts. The Department of Education will host a national summit on safe school reopening this month that will bring students, teachers, families, community organizati­ons and school leadership together to get the critical feedback we need to make reopening as seamless as possible for students and staff, and to work together to solve problems. We’ll also discuss the academic, social and emotional needs of students. Because it’s not just enough to get them physically back to school. We must support them.

We’ll share best practices about the incredible work already happening in our schools. In Connecticu­t, I started an effort called “Learn Together, Grow

Together CT” where we found innovative ways to solve common problems and shared those practices with other schools. As U.S. Education secretary, I will ensure that my department, as directed by the president, creates a best practices clearingho­use.

We’re getting to work right away on the second volume of the Education Department’s COVID-19 Handbook. It will offer practical, research-based strategies to effectivel­y meet the social, emotional, mental health and academic needs of students; address the loss of instructio­nal time; bridge the digital divide; extend learning time; stabilize the education workforce and much more.

We need to collect better data about how schools are operating during the pandemic. To that end, the Education Department recently announced the largest representa­tive and highest quality national survey yet to collect informatio­n about schools’ reopening status and how students are learning. This month, we look forward to having a clearer picture of where students are able to safely access in-person learning and where they cannot. We’ll track our progress moving forward, and use that data to inform our decision-making.

h Most important, schools need financial help to reopen classrooms safely, stay open, meet students’ learning needs and support students’ mental health. President Biden has asked Congress for at least $130 billion in funding to ensure that schools can make the best decisions about how to address these needs.

Some schools will need to reduce class sizes to maintain physical distancing — which could mean hiring more staff to teach more classes, or providing broadband access and technology for students to learn from home in a hybrid learning model. Some schools will have to provide more transporta­tion and bus routes or adjust food service plans to keep physically distanced. All schools should make sure their students and staff wear masks.

And it will require tremendous investment from the federal government to meet the academic, social, emotional and mental health needs of students, during and after the pandemic. Over the summer, investment­s in academic enrichment activities, including inperson accelerate­d learning, experienti­al learning, tutoring and wraparound social, emotional and mental health services — with additional resources for communitie­s with the greatest needs — could start to level the playing field for the next school year.

For all of the hardship and heartache this year, I firmly believe that we — and this rising generation — can emerge from this challenge stronger. We can do the most American thing imaginable: Forge opportunit­y out of crisis, draw on our resolve, our ingenuity and our tireless optimism to create something better than we’ve ever had before. America’s students deserve nothing less.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States