As the time nears for
reopening public schools, Ohio educational officials and Scioto
County superintendents face important decisions – How and in what
manner should staff and children be safely reintroduced to their
classrooms in the middle of a raging COVID-19 pandemic? Of course, no
decision is foolproof and all answers to these difficult questions
raise many public concerns.
What to do? We all know
opening schools will benefit families beyond providing education,
including by supplying child care, school services, meals, and other
family supports. And, we all realize without in-person instruction,
schools risk children falling behind academically and exacerbating
educational inequities.
However …
Let's talk about some very
real considerations that pose huge risks.
Some of the personnel and
students in the school systems are immuno-compromised, or have a
weakened immune system. For many schools social distancing seems
nearly impossible, and even if children could be separated at
distance desks, how about “hand-over-hand” learning required to
work on lessons? Those at greatest risk for infection would surely
have to stay at home and communicate with distance learning. Strain
on teachers will increase.
How many students –
especially young grade school pupils – don't know how to cough or
sneeze into their arms? Also, if students are required to wash their
hands and wear masks, how many are simply going to reject these
safety standards over and over simply because of sensory issues?
These are valid concerns as school must not only distance but also
minimize contact with shared surfaces and increase regular surface
cleaning. The goal for schools would be to drive as much of the risk
down as they can – admittedly, a far from perfect strategy.
Another daunting task for
person-to-person learning is limiting large gatherings of students,
such as during assemblies, in the cafeteria, and overcrowding at
school entrances. School lunches seem especially troubling as many
Scioto schools feature lunch times of 30 minutes (or less). Children
now barely have time to get their meals and eat.
Surely, staggering
congregation times and rearranging public areas will be necessary.
Some health experts say “cohorting,” when a group of 10 students
or less stay with the same staff as much as possible, is a promising
strategy for physical distancing.
Also, we cannot forget the
large numbers of Scioto students who have long commutes on buses.
Will mask wearing and distancing be enforced? Safety would seem to
demand significant modifications to the bus schedule. District
leaders will have to consider how to put fewer students on buses at
once, as well as how to adequately sanitize the buses and protect the
drivers.
One important group of
students in Scioto schools are those with disabilities. They may have
more difficulty with the social and emotional aspects of
transitioning out of and back into the school setting. Children with
special healthcare needs have conditions that must be met on a
case-to-case basis.
According to the American
Federation of Teachers, as the number of children with special
healthcare needs in public schools has increased, the facilities and
conditions under which health-related procedures must be performed
are still often woefully inadequate. Putting these students back into
face-to-face settings will require careful planning and
implementation.
(Randi Weingarten. “The
Medically Fragile Child.” American Federation of Teachers. 2009.)
Most of the push to return
to in-person instruction rests on the assumption that COVID-19 isn’t
especially dangerous for children, and the benefits outweigh the
risks. However, given how little time researchers have had to
investigate the novel coronavirus and its recent mutation, the
science in this area is not yet settled.
And, of course, there is
the increased cost of returning to school. The National Academy of
Sciences Engineering Medicine report “Reopening K-12 Schools During
the COVID-19 Pandemic: Prioritizing Health, Equity, and Communities”
(2020) estimates the cost of implementing COVID-19 precautions will
be very high, totaling approximately $1.8 million for a school
district with eight school buildings and around 3,200 students.
These high costs could
lead to funding shortfalls. The report concludes: “While the size
of the funding shortfall will depend on how well-resourced a school
district is, many districts will be unable to afford implementing the
entire suite of mitigation measures, potentially leaving students and
staff in those districts at greater risk of infection.”
Juliette Kayyem, former
Department of Homeland Security official and author of Security
Mom, says …
“Schools do not have
a simple on-off switch. To reopen schools will not just take a lot of
money. Classroom layouts, buildings, policies, schedules,
extracurricular activities, teacher and staff assignments, and even
curricula must all be altered to minimize the risk of coronavirus
transmission
“Stakeholders—including
teachers’ unions, scared parents, and the colleges and universities
that will someday enroll a portion of the 50 million students in the
nation’s public K–12 schools—all have interests, some not
easily avoided or ignored by a governor.”
(Juliette Kayyem.
“Reopening Schools Was Just an Afterthought.” The Atlantic.
July 06, 2020.)
Kayyem concludes: “The
federal government and the states have no firm plans for restarting
school in August and September because they had no such plans in
February and March; public officials simply didn’t classify
education as a crucial form of infrastructure in need of protection.”
Hopefully, at the end of
this debate over Scioto County schools reopening, any error in
judgment by those in charge will be on the side of safety. If we just
trust our children and grandchildren to the odds of infection, we
fail as caretakers. Local schools must address reopening in detail
and they must do it now. The risks are enormous and public education
should be held to all the new and necessary standards of safety –
not one child should face an unnecessary risk.
“Reopening
schools cannot be considered in isolation – what happens outside of
schools is as important as what happens inside of schools. The most
important step we can take to reopen schools this fall is to come
together to reduce spread of the virus in our communities and
statewide.”
– Lacy Fehrenbach,
Washington DOH deputy secretary of health
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