College reopenings push K-12 schools online

Source: The Verge - All Posts

Article note: This is a conversation I've had with a couple people. The loss from high school and college students going remote is ...manageable. We'll loose some socialization and some hands-on experiences, but it's not going to be a fundamental gap. The losses on elementary and middle school aged students are way deeper, and the effectiveness of remote learning with them less, and I haven't heard of _any_ plans that prioritized formative-age students. Yes, plans that involve children distancing are automatically suspect, and in-person-but-no-normal-socialization is bizarre for kids, but it seems like someone should have tried.
Connecticut School District Prepares Classrooms For Hybrid LearningPhoto by John Moore/Getty Images

The temperature was in the 70s in State College, Pennsylvania on Friday, but the local school board voted to call a “snow day,” cancel classes, and have students in the town’s public schools stay home. Cases of COVID-19 in the area had spiked, and the school district’s board of directors needed time to decide what to do.

No students or staff in the district were sick. Instead, the local increases were driven by outbreaks at Penn State University.

“We knew that we were opening schools at the same time Penn State was opening,” Amber Concepcion, the school board president, said during a meeting. “We knew there would be a growth curve.”

COVID-19 cases are climbing in college towns around the country, and those outbreaks are forcing local...

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