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Let's Not Panic; Schools Should Reopen
Townhall.com ^ | August 7, 2020 | Laura Hollis

Posted on 08/07/2020 5:11:53 AM PDT by Kaslin

As I write this, some schools across the country are beginning to reopen -- albeit under serious restrictions necessitated by social distancing -- for the 2020-2021 academic year. But the reopenings are patchy and inconsistent, and there is still much opposition. For example, here in South Bend, Indiana, where I live, we were told in July that school would start -- online only -- on Aug. 12 and gradually ease back to in-person classes by Aug. 31. Yesterday, it was announced that all K-12 schools will remain online only through Oct. 5. Whether live, in-person classes will resume after that will depend upon "current health data."

It's unclear how much data is driving these decisions and how much of it is public sentiment. Teachers unions in many cities have made clear their opposition to reopening schools. But plenty of parents and families have also expressed concerns.

We are now a long way from February and March of this year when our elected leaders told us that a temporary shutdown would be necessary to "flatten the curve" and avoid overtaxing our health care resources. The implicit assumption in those initial decisions was that yes, people would continue to be infected with COVID-19. Now the mere prospect of that is making people panic about sending their children back to school.

It's evident that this coronavirus is no ordinary flu. It is serious. We don't know as much as we'd like. At this juncture, it's difficult to predict who -- other than the elderly and those with preexisting comorbidities -- might be seriously affected by the virus.

By the same token, we do know that the virus has a high survival rate. (This is strengthened by COVID-19 antibody testing in California, Connecticut and New York, which indicates that many more people have had this coronavirus than have been officially diagnosed with it -- anywhere from six to 50 times more.) And we know that children seem, consistently, to be more resistant to infection or more likely to have mild cases, or both.

We also know much more about the effectiveness -- or lack thereof -- of K-12 online education than we did last winter. And on those bases, we should honestly conclude that the risks of reopening schools (assuming that we take sensible precautions) are far outweighed by the costs of keeping K-12 education online.

An April 6 article from The New York Times provides statistics that should concern us all. In the city of Los Angeles, for example, 13 percent of all high school students (15,000) had had no online contact with their teachers nearly a month after online learning started, and one-third (40,000 students) were not participating regularly in online classes. The Chicago Sun-Times published data at the end of the spring semester showing that 40 percent of Chicago's public school students participated in online learning two days a week or less, despite 93 percent having access to the internet and a computer. Nader Issa, author of the Sun-Times piece, summarized the data, saying, "In the best circumstances, remote learning has been an uneven and dubious replacement for in-person instruction; and in the worst, it has left students entirely disconnected from their teachers."

That same dynamic was playing out in the inner-city schools of other major cities as well as those in rural areas of the country. Some school districts reported fewer than half of their students were participating in e-learning. Teachers in Cleveland reported that 30 percent to 40 percent of their students had no reliable access to the internet. Schools in Washington, D.C., simply stopped taking attendance.

Nor was the data provided exclusively by teachers and administrators; NPR published a survey of American teenagers in April in which 41 percent of those who responded (and 47 percent of those attending public school) said that they had done no classwork at all since schools moved online.

The inability to be in a facility dedicated to learning, where instruction is conducted by people who are trained to provide it, can mean that little-to-no learning takes place at all. And these are not temporary setbacks. Experts in K-12 education warn that the gaps in children's education created by sporadic or inconsistent online learning can have serious implications for years to come. How can students advance to the next grade, where classes will build on materials they never learned (or never learned well enough)? Some school districts opted to promote students to the next grade whether they participated in online learning or not; how will these students perform in school this year, even if classes are in person? Will they ever be taught the missing content? How do teachers effectively teach to groups of students with even larger academic disparities?

And what will happen if half a semester of online "learning" becomes a semester-and-a-half? A year? More?

Unsurprisingly, disadvantaged students are more negatively affected than are children from economically secure families. These are precisely the children whose education we should be trying harder to ensure; their families do not have the resources to compensate for shortfalls in their education, and the risks associated with lack of education are even higher for them.

The same is true for health and nutrition. For many students in low-income circumstances, meals provided by schools represent their primary source of daily nutrition.

And all children are negatively by the lack of physical activity associated with online learning. We're already aware of the developmental dangers associated with "too much screen time." That is even harder to police when school is now "on screen" and physical education classes and youth sports are canceled.

Yes, the virus is frightening. But it's going to be with us for a long time, and we cannot keep schools shuttered. An entire generation of undereducated young people should frighten us more.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: coronavirus; lockdown; reopening; schools

1 posted on 08/07/2020 5:11:53 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Teacher unions want to help collapse the economy to further the communist agenda.


2 posted on 08/07/2020 5:14:05 AM PDT by MeneMeneTekelUpharsin (Freedom is the freedom to discipline yourself so others don't have to do it for you.)
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To: Kaslin

Schools (AKA polling locations) need to be shut until after the election. Because they’re counting on fraud.


3 posted on 08/07/2020 5:19:55 AM PDT by ClearCase_guy (If White Privilege is real, why did Elizabeth Warren lie about being an Indian?)
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To: Kaslin

I’m torn on this one. On the one hand, the government schools are the educational choice of the majority of families.

On the other hand, full disclosure. We were a homeschool family with all the kids graduated. I have little respect for the corrupt and largely useless education establishment and even less respect for the unions and the liberals running it.

It can’t burn down fast enough.

More and more families are exploring their options, homeschooling, the pod thing, private schools etc. You can even make a case that formal education isn’t all that important at certain levels. (It’s a very weak case but some may explore it)

For those teachers who refuse to come back, OK, you’re fired.


4 posted on 08/07/2020 5:22:44 AM PDT by cyclotic (The most dangerous people are the ones that feel the most helpless)
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To: Kaslin

A typical grocery store clerk comes near thousands of people in 9 months.

A teacher might come near 30 people in a school.


5 posted on 08/07/2020 6:08:08 AM PDT by Brian Griffin
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To: Kaslin

It is easy to delay school reopenings.

Teachers could get salary advances in the interim.


6 posted on 08/07/2020 6:09:59 AM PDT by Brian Griffin
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To: MeneMeneTekelUpharsin

Besides risk of covid, you now have great risk of AFM A POLIO LIKE DISEASE. IN CHILDREN.


7 posted on 08/07/2020 6:13:33 AM PDT by GailA (I'm a Trump Girl)
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To: Kaslin
Every year when school starts eveyone starts getting the cold again - we all know this, happens every frickin year. This virus is different and won't be just like the cold and flu at school, okay sure.

Either the virus is a virus or not - the kids will get it and a cold, who would bet against this with their own money? Losers

They'll start school, a kid will get sick, people will go nuts and they will shut school down. Lets pretend that isn't whats going to happen.

8 posted on 08/07/2020 6:15:12 AM PDT by datricker (the war of 2024 will be fought at 2.4Ghz stock up on aluminium foil now!)
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To: Kaslin

Any school not reopening should forfeit the check to the parents and let them spend it on a school that is reopening.


9 posted on 08/07/2020 6:15:32 AM PDT by Phillyred
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To: Kaslin

Once again it’s Blacks and low income people who will suffer as the Democrat cities will not allow them to open schools.

Frankly, Blacks voting Democrat is nuts when it’s the GOP that wants to provide a life line to their children with school choice, charter schools, vouchers.


10 posted on 08/07/2020 6:16:41 AM PDT by 1Old Pro (#openupstateny)
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To: GailA
What has changed now to give us "GREAT RISK OF AFM A POLIO LIKE DISEASE IN CHILDREN"?

You sound like Fawci.

Do you ever consider the risk of the schools NEVER opening up, which would be exactly what the Stalinists want.

Why does the U.S. have to be educated at all? Turn the schools to rubble, let the wild chirrun run wild!

11 posted on 08/07/2020 6:26:04 AM PDT by Fightin Whitey
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To: cyclotic

This whole school thing is BS. These kids have been wandering around ever since the schools closed. I guarantee every teacher in the country has been out and about too in the less draconian states.
The Montgomery schools in Alabama are doing the first 9 weeks on line. My granddaughter goes to the only rural school in the county. It’s starts this Monday. I get to deal with this. I just got her Chromebook and the instructions yesterday. I don’t even know if I have good enough internet. I will probably be a felon before this over.


12 posted on 08/07/2020 6:46:44 AM PDT by Himyar (Comes A Stillness/ God Bless Robert E. Lee)
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To: Himyar

My brother teaches high school. He’s on the technical education side of things so he’s a normal, not a typical union hack.

He went a got himself some sort of summer job at a factory to earn some extra income. I’m not sure what he’s doing, but if it’s assembly work, I’m sure he’s already submitted a constraint processing report to improve their throughput.


13 posted on 08/07/2020 7:22:27 AM PDT by cyclotic (The most dangerous people are the ones that feel the most helpless)
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