From Military.com:
“DODEA Plans to Reopen Classrooms
at All Schools in Fall, But With Virtual Option”
-- All of the Pentagon's 160
schools will reopen classrooms in the fall if local health conditions allow,
while a virtual option also will be available to students, school officials
said Wednesday. "The safety of students and our teachers is most important
and the imperative to get children back to class for learning," said Tom
Brady, the director of the Department of Defense Education Activity. "It's
not taken lightly," he said of the decision to resume classroom learning. The
anticipated return to school for some 69,000 students and 8,700 educators worldwide
comes after months of closure due to the coronavirus pandemic. DODEA rolled out
a digital learning plan when facilities began closing last spring as the
pandemic began to spread. Brady said schools are prepared to return to that if
necessary. "We've got to be flexible," he said. "If there's any
indication that there's a spike (in infections), we'll work with our local
commanders and go back to the digital platform that we did last year because
safety is the most important thing we're concerned about."
Most schools plan to open on time
and as scheduled, officials said. The exceptions, for now, are eight DODEA
schools located in Kentucky, Georgia, Alabama and South Carolina, whose opening
dates in August will shift up to three weeks due to increased coronavirus
infection rates. The virtual school program will begin Aug. 24 and parents when
signing up their child for the program must agree to one full semester, with an
option for the entire year. DODEA's virtual high school for grades 9-12 is
expanding to include elementary and middle school. Students enrolled in virtual
school will not be able to participate in any extracurricular activities. Schools
will adhere to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other guidelines,
and coordinate with local military commanders, who review and update the health
protection condition for their installations. Social distancing will be a key
component of protecting the health of students, staff and families, Brady said.
The extent of social distancing to be implemented in schools depends on the
health protection condition, also known as HPCON.
In guidance published online,
DODEA laid out social distancing strategies in classrooms, cafeterias,
playgrounds and other areas. "There is no single solution to this
challenge," the guidance said. "The diversity of our geography,
building structures, HPCON levels and student needs necessitates a wide range
of options." In the classroom, options include spacing desks or seating at
least 6 feet apart where possible, turning desks to face in the same direction
and using tape on the floor to indicate proper distancing. Mask wearing by
students and staff will depend on the HPCON level and what distancing is
possible. Physical education classes could be conducted outdoors and schools
may stagger mealtimes in the cafeteria, and avoid having students line up by
creating an ordering method. Schools would close if an installation went to
HPCON Charlie -- indicating substantial and sustained community transmission of
the virus. Schools no longer give perfect attendance awards, so children won't
be penalized for being ill, officials said.
^ As someone who went to DODDS (now DODEA) Schools I think it is
responsible to allow in-class instruction to resume with different safety
measures and plans in place to allow for flexibility – including an online
option. School Districts or School Systems that simply stay completely online
are only showing that they can’t learn themselves (not good for a place that is
supposed to teach.) Only having online classes is a lazy way to teach and doesn’t
take into account the students’ needs. I would hate to learn online- I took some college courses online and did
not like it at all, but did do well in class. A school system should have
in-class instruction for those that want/need it as well as online instruction
for those that want/need it. The special needs of the disabled students also
needs to be addressed in all of this. I’m aware that things may change in the
future – they always seem to with this pandemic – so the plans that a school
system has today needs to include Plan B, C, D, etc. and be flexible to move to
a new way. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.