The Washington Post reported this morning on a district in Tennessee that is opening for in-person instruction, even though the state is experiencing rising rates of coronavirus. Someone has to go first, and Blount County has decided to try it. The nation is watching.
The story was written by A.C. Shilton and Joe Heim, with the help of Valerie Strauss.
MARYVILLE, Tenn. — It was just before 7:30 a.m. when the line of Blount County Schools buses grumbled into the parking lot of Heritage High School and began dropping off students — some wearing masks, others barefaced — into the fraught new world of in-school education during a pandemic.
At the flagpole in front of the school, two unmasked teens hugged before sitting down in a small group to chat until the bell rang. The scene of students reuniting could have been from any other first day of school in any other year. But over their shoulders, an early August thunderstorm brewed above the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains — an almost-too-perfect metaphor for what many parents and teachers here, and across the country, worry is coming.
Last week, the district began a staggered reopening, making it one of the first in the country to attempt a full return. The goal was to have everyone who wanted to return back in school by Aug. 10. On Tuesday morning, the district changed its plan, opting to allow only half the students to return on alternating days through Aug. 21 with the goal of keeping class sizes smaller while the district eases into full attendance.
The success or failure of the Blount County school district’s reopening — as well as early attempts in Texas, Georgia, Mississippi and elsewhere — will be watched closely by many of the country’s 13,500 other school districts, which will at some point have to navigate these same ominous waters.
Already there have been significant setbacks in districts that have attempted to bring students back. A day after teachers returned to work in Georgia’s Gwinnett County last week, some 260 employees tested positive or had possibly been exposed to the novel coronavirus and were told to stay home. At Corinth High School in Mississippi, in-person classes started last week, and within days five students tested positive for the coronavirus and others went into quarantine as a result of contact tracing, according to a statement by the school district. A photo of a packed Paulding County, Ga., high school hallway with few students wearing masks went viral Tuesday as many people expressed concern about how schools could safely reopen.
With coronavirus cases reported at some reopened schools, protesters take to the streets with fake coffins
For months, administrators, teachers and staff members in this eastern Tennessee district have been preparing for the best way to safely return its 10,542 students to the classroom. The plans evolved as officials responded to information about how the coronavirus spreads as well as pressure from some parents and politicians to open the schools on time. As new cases of the coronavirus increased in the county in July, more parents began wondering whether reopening was a good idea.
Finding a path that works for everyone has not been easy. According to the school district, 75 percent of students are returning for in-school learning, while the remainder have opted to continue with virtual learning.
“Although we rejoice in seeing many of our students back in school, we recognize that reopening comes with levels of concern and anxiety,” the district’s director of schools, Rob Britt, wrote in a letter to parents in late July. “Please be assured that protecting the health and safety of our students and our staff is our top priority, and we will do our best to reduce and slow the infection rate through our daily health practices.”
One of the more contentious issues in Blount County has been whether masks need to be worn all day by students. Some parents have insisted they won’t send their kids back if masks are required all day. Other parents won’t send their kids back unless they are.
While masks are not mandatory in the school’s reopening plan (the district notes that masks are not an enforceable part of the dress code), they are expected in any situation in which social distancing is not possible, such as class changes. The district plan also encourages parents to drive their children to school in private vehicles. Students who ride buses will have to sit one per seat unless they are in the same family.
As for what happens when there’s a case of the coronavirus in a child’s classroom, the district states it will notify parents only when their child has been within six feet for more than 10 minutes with a positive case. In the classroom, the district promises “thoughtful group sizes,” though there’s no clear definition of how many students that is. School district officials declined to be interviewed for this article or to say whether any student or teacher in the district had tested positive for the virus.
Depending on who you talk to here, the Blount County school district’s decision to fully reopen schools this week with in-classroom learning is either a careful and necessary return to traditional teaching or an unwise choice that could endanger many in the wider community.
For Joshua Chambers, a single father of three whose wife passed away two years ago, the return of in-school learning is a huge relief.
“I’m perfectly okay with them going back. Doing virtual was impossible for me,” said Chambers, 46, a machinist who works 50-hour weeks and has children in ninth grade, eighth grade and kindergarten.
Chambers said he thinks the district has put a good plan in place and is taking the necessary precautions to keep children and teachers safe. Like many parents interviewed for this story, he said it has been difficult to find reliable information on the risks involved. His biggest worry is that an outbreak of cases will cause the schools to be shut down again.
“A lot of families in this area, both parents work and they need to be at work,” he said. “If the schools close, it’ll be a logistical nightmare for me, and I don’t know how I could get it done short of hiring a tutor. And that’s sort of out of my price range.”
Jennie Summers has boys in eighth and sixth grade and a daughter in second. She and her husband said that even though it wouldn’t look like a normal school year, it was important for their children to be back in class with other students.
Summers studied the district’s plan and did her own research. Her main objection was to the possibility of masks being required all day in all circumstances. She was a little nervous when the kids left for their first day of school last week, but she said she was reassured after talking with them when they came home.
“We all realize it’s different than what it should be for our kids, but there’s no way to have what we want right now,” Summers said. “Most of the people I talked to had pretty good days and were pleased with what went on. It was nice to even hear the normal first-day-of-school whining from the kids.”
Her son, Joshua Summers, 13, began his first day of eighth grade at a county middle school on Friday. Everyone wore masks, there were signs in the halls reminding students to wash their hands between classes, and the class sizes were smaller, he said. Because everyone had become accustomed to wearing masks, it didn’t seem odd to him to see students wearing them in school.
“It was basically the same as last year. I was a bit nervous, but that’s what usually happens on the first day of school,” Joshua said. “Everyone was just happy to see their friends again.”
All summer long, Cindy Faller has agonized over whether to send her daughter, Ellie, to first grade in Blount County this fall. At first, as stay-at-home orders seemed to be tamping out Tennessee’s spread, she had felt hopeful about Ellie going back. In July, as coronavirus cases throughout Tennessee kept climbing, Faller couldn’t help but feel as though the odds were shifting, and not in the right direction.
Faller used to be a special-education teacher in Knox County, which borders Blount. Having experienced firsthand all the sticky fingers and hugs and body fluids that seem to be part and parcel when dealing with first-graders, Faller just couldn’t imagine how social distancing would work. “I refuse to expose my daughter to this disease at this extent, and I also don’t think it’s possible to keep them safe,” she said.
According to the state of Tennessee, since March, Blount County has had 1,186 confirmed cases of the coronavirus. Of those cases, 509 are active. Right now, the county is averaging 42.07 new cases a day, a level deemed “above threshold” by the state.
Elsewhere in the state, cities and counties are all approaching school reopening slightly differently. Knox County has a similar case rate, with 843.78 cases per 100,000. Knox County, however, has decided to push back reopening until Aug. 24. Nashville, which has been hit hard by the coronavirus, will begin the 2020 school year with online learning only.
Closing schools around the world could cause a ‘generational catastrophe,’ U.N. secretary general warns
Across the globe, countries such as Finland and South Korea have successfully navigated school reopenings without case spikes, especially in primary schools. Up until late June, South Korea boasted that it didn’t have a single coronavirus case spreading in a classroom.
Not every country has had that same success, though. Israel opened schools in May, but by early June officials had closed 100 of those schools as cases surged all over the country. Officials in Israel said it’s unclear how much spread happened at school vs. in the community, but at one middle and high school more than 100 students and 25 staff members tested positive for the virus.
In a paper published July 29 in the New England Journal of Medicine, the authors argue that reopening primary schools is important and that many countries have successfully opened them without dire repercussions. They note one important difference, however, between what’s happening abroad and here: In every case except Israel, countries had contained the spread to less than one new daily case per 100,000 residents. The United States has 18 new daily cases per 100,000 residents, according to a Washington Post analysis of the data.
Tiffani Russell also researched the plans to return to school, and she and her husband decided they weren’t comfortable sending their seventh- and second-grade children back for in-school learning. The couple both work but have altered their schedules and made arrangements with a neighbor so they can stick with the school’s virtual plan until they feel in-school learning is safer.
“Not everyone can do virtual, but they shouldn’t be opening [schools] anyway, because it’s not safe for our children,” Russell said. “And you can’t just think about the kids, you have to think about the bus drivers, the workers, the teachers.”
Rebecca Dickenson, a librarian at Eagleton Elementary School and the president of the Blount County Education Association, which represents the district’s teachers, wears a mask and a face shield whenever she’s around students. While that combo gets hot, she says, by far the hardest part of the first few days has been the strict no-hugs policy. “That’s my favorite part of being an elementary school teacher,” she says.
Dickenson is 40 and considers herself low-risk, but she lives with her sister, who has an autoimmune disorder. Every evening, when Dickenson returns home from school, she de-scrubs the way a nurse might, shedding her clothes at the door and beelining for the shower.
“If I really think about it, it’s very worrying. I’m not so much worried about myself getting sick, but if I get sick and I don’t know it, if I spread it, that’s so many people I am in contact with,” she said.
How to stop magical thinking in school reopening plans
The division in the county reflects the national debate about whether schools should reopen with students back in classrooms. President Trump has repeatedly urged districts to fully reopen, and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has threatened to withdraw federal funds from districts that don’t. At the same time, top health officials in the administration, including the White House’s top coronavirus coordinator, Deborah Birx, and Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, have cautioned about reopening in areas where the virus continues to thrive.
Last week, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee (R) announced the state’s plan to reopen schools, saying that “in-person learning is the medically sound, preferred option” and urging districts to make in-classroom learning available to students.
But on Monday, the Tennessee Education Association responded on behalf of the state’s teachers to call for a pause on reopening across the state because of increasing rates of new coronavirus infections.
“Educators want to get back to in-person instruction,” said TEA President Beth Brown in a statement. “However, it is prudent and not contrary to Tennessee law to delay reopening school buildings for the next several weeks, when hopefully the data shows new infections have slowed.”
For now, though, the Blount County school district is moving forward with its plan to get students back in classrooms.

I read the article and this stuck out: “there were signs in the halls reminding students to wash their hands between classes,’
Really. The school has enough washrooms for kids to wash their hands between classes? They can do this and stay 6 feet apart?
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and from every experience I’ve had with kids, the goal of following what turn out to be difficult directions lasts only a few days, if that
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Good morning, Panthers! Just a couple of announcements. Please report bodies of Covid victims encountered in the hallway to maintenance ASAP and make sure that your parental contact forms are returned to the office by August 12. Anyone interested in trying out for the online cheerleading squad and glee club, please contact Ms. Cuccicelli before Tuesday, or, if she passes away before then, Mr. Dilthy. Now, please stand for the Pledge of Allegiance.
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As far as I can tell public schools are just muddling through and figuring it out without any assistance at all from the federal or state government or the thousands of full time paid “ed reformers” who have contributed absolutely nothing other than criticism.
So it’s like any other school year.
They’ll figure it out or they won’t, but what we know is they won’t get any practical assistance or support.
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This is good info & glad to have it: “In every case except Israel, countries [which successfully reopened schools] had contained the spread to less than one new daily case per 100,000 residents.” And of course it was a flop in Israel. They point out our country has 18/100k new daily cases.
In such a large country as ours, there may be whole sections of some states with only 1/100k. They could/ should be the ones venturing forth. It’s so strange & counterintuitive that districts in states with high current spread are the ones opening. And so typical– predictable– that the so-called safety measures in place include scenes caught on video of crowded, partially- or even un-masked kids bunched together at entry, in halls, etc. What the nation wants to be watching is safety-measured reopenings in counties w/only 1/100k new daily cases. The examples given here are models of what not to do.
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The US Department if Education’s contribution was to spend tens of thousands of dollars to send DeVos to a private school where she trashed public schools.
Good work team! Our tax dollars at work- not supporting or assisting the public schools that serve 90 per cent of kids, but instead conducting anti public school ideological campaigns.
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I keep thinking about the choices we’ve made- how we plowed billions of dollars into paying Harvard economists for teacher ranking schemes instead of making sure all kids had internet access.
20 years of Ed reform, billions spent, and every low income kid in this country is struggling to find internet access to do their schoolwork.
Wise public investment?
What if we had just invested in and accomplished that one thing?
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But, the expenditure you suggest wouldn’t facilitate oligarchy.
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Two states away from Tennessee, in the theocratic state of Ohio, a county health director refuses to identify the church where one worshipper caused an outbreak of 91 Covid cases across five counties.
GOP Governor Dewine who took his oath of office on 9 Bibles also won’t identify the church. A meat packing plant, a bar, a school, etc. would be named, but not government -protected Christian sect institutions
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Dewine has Covid-19, just reported. He will not be able to greet Trump at a fundraiser in Cleveland.
I ran across this from an economist who speaks of the reluctance of Republicans to support social services, and the stupidity of believing that via “the invisible hand,” people will do the right thing…like wearing a mask to prevent the spread of deadly disease.
Begin quote: Tens of millions of people are anxiously waiting to find out whether they will be able to pay for food and shelter next week and next month, but Republicans have decided to punish them lest Americans become lazy slobs.
I wish I were exaggerating, but I most definitely am not. Notwithstanding the worst economic upheaval in ninety years, the Republicans to a man (and the very occasional woman) have stuck to their guns (pun intended) and are doing everything they can to insult their constituents and make the economy even worse.
This is a result of economic illiteracy, and it is not only unconscionable but amounts to political malpractice. That illiteracy, however, goes deeper than it might seem. It is not only Republicans’ typical panic over helping people in need, along with a huge dollop of anti-government fervor, that is causing them to catapult us into a dystopic fantasy world.
Republicans actually do not even understand that the field of economics does not reduce to the lesson that “markets are good, so free choice is great.” I am an economist who is very much on the record as a skeptical critic of my field. …
We cannot “get the government out of the way” and assume that selfish people will converge on the best outcome. And that is especially true of personal decisions during a public health crisis. Whereas it is one thing to count on people to choose among, say, competing brands of ketchup without government intervention (conveniently ignoring, of course, the Health Department’s essential enforcement of food safety rules), it is quite another to count on people to act in ways that will reduce the spread of a deadly disease. End Quote.
See more at : https://verdict.justia.com/2020/08/06/economic-theory-shows-that-people-will-make-choices-that-worsen-the-pandemic?
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Workers are owed the $600 a week and, then some, for years of building GDP, with the rewards of their productivity stolen by those who eat the bread for which others toil. The rich should be paying the weekly $600 and consider it a real bargain that staves off revolution.
After the government of the people exerts control, let the rich try to eat from the legacy of conservative political institutions like Fordham Institute.
America would be a kinder, gentler, less selfish nation if Charles and David Koch, Norquist, both George Bushes, Raegan and men like Bill Gates had ever existed.
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Two new studies show that young children are twice as effective at transmitting the Coronavirus infection, even though they show milder overt symptoms (if they show any at all).
https://www.forbes.com/sites/williamhaseltine/2020/07/31/new-evidence-suggests-young-children-spread-covid-19-more-efficiently-than-adults/#64dc294e19fd
Here we are. Much of the country is taking a lesson in scientific crisis management from IQ45.
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Charter school personnel love to refer to their students as “scholars.” Here’s another great endearment we can start using: “our little vectors”
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How sad. I live in an adjoining county, and that makes the pain even worse.
The people running Tennessee (mostly ALEC and the Chamber of Commerce) should sacrifice one of their own for every parent, child, or teacher that dies as a result of this opening. And, the Governor deserves a lash at the whipping post for each one, as well.
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A 7-year-old boy with no preexisting conditions died today in Georgia.
https://www.wsbtv.com/news/local/7-year-old-georgia-boy-dies-coronavirus-officials-confirm/BF3NAT2NOREVJKPND6SR32HYWQ/
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& that is one child too many.
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Yesterday morning, Wednesday, I went out early to shop after 14 days in isolation at home. The COSTCO where I shop in California requires masks or you are not allowed inside the store. There’s even a new sign outside the entrance that clearly says something about California requiring masks or you can get fined. I didn’t bother to read all of the print on the sign.
I was wearing one of my masks. While I was inside that Costco for an hour or so, I did see a few bare noses with masks only covering mouths.
Then there was a family of five. Mom, dad, and three young grade school-aged children. There were all wearing masks with mouths and noses covered.
The only reason I mention them is the mother turned to her oldest son and asked him what he wanted for lunch when he started school so he could eat what he wanted.
It was obvious, that family was sending their children back to school.
Is it possible to wear a mask and eat at the same time?
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We will end our first week tomorrow, trying to pair virtual students with sitting students. I have three classes with nearly 30. No social distance here. Beam me up.
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This is insane. I wonder who is patient one for the idea that a teacher can teach on line and to live students simultaneously. It can’t be anyone who has spent time in a classroom.
The same nonsense is the plan for re-opening in Boston, as well as a “hopscotch” plan where half the class comes in real life two days a week and the other half zooms in from home. Then they switch. Hopscotch refers to a graphic demonstrating the A group sits in one set of desks and the B group in a different set.
Of course, it’s been pointed out that the teacher will have to teach to all as if they are online, so what is the point at all?
Oh, and since we don’t have (or won’t pay for) extra buses to carry students with appropriate distancing, the walk-to-school zone has been raised from one mile to one and a half miles – for kids in grades 1-5. Kids from 7-12 take public transit to school, where they’ll cross paths with the some 170,000 college students about to arrive in the city.
Meantime, the state education Commissioner in a meeting organized by the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce (!) is pushing for in person reopening and threatening to withold funds from local school districts which refuse.
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Where do you teach, Roy? (If I may ask)
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There has to be something wrong with the air in Georgia to have such ignorant administrators. Worry about the ‘IMAGE’ of the school but don’t worry about kids and any adults in the school getting sick. Wearing a mask is NOT a choice…unless you don’t care about the lives who will be destroyed. [There is no fixing stupid.]
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Georgia teens shared photos of maskless students in crowded hallways. Now they’re suspended.
August 6, 2020
At least two North Paulding High School students have been suspended after sharing images of a school hallway jammed with their mostly maskless peers, and the principal has warned other students against doing the same.
North Paulding High School in Dallas, Ga., about an hour’s drive from Atlanta, was thrust into the national spotlight this week when pictures and videos surfaced of its crowded interior on the first and second days of its first week back in session. The images, which showed a sea of teens clustered together with no face coverings, raised concerns among online commenters and parents over how the district is handling reopening schools during the novel coronavirus pandemic.
Facing a fierce online backlash, Paulding County Schools Superintendent Brian Otott told parents and guardians in a letter that the images “didn’t look good.” But he argued that they lacked context about the 2,000-plus student school, where masks are a “personal choice.”…
https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2020/08/06/georgia-teens-shared-photos-maskless-students-crowded-hallways-now-theyre-suspended/
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I am so tired of this “personal choice” crap. Why is it that other people should have the personal right to potentially expose me to the virus? Are people really that selfish, or are they just willfully stupid?
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I wish there were the Will in Washington to say what you said. We are in the midst of a global pandemic. No one should have the “right” to spread the disease.
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The maskless ones are both stupid and selfish.
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So districts are putting children and adults in danger and are working to ensure that they get no compensation if they get sick or die. Disgusting!!!! This a Republican goal.
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Learn at your own risk? Indiana schools hope to avoid lawsuits as they reopen
By Emma Kate Fittes Aug 6, 2020, 7:24pm EDT
A student in a classroom uses a laptop computer at a private high school in Indianapolis, Indiana.
Indiana officials aren’t shutting down schools, even though teachers and students have tested positive for the coronavirus on several campuses. Alan Petersime/Chalkbeat
Within the first week of reopening schools and welcoming back students and staff, several Indiana districts reported their first coronavirus cases.
In Central Indiana alone at least half a dozen districts saw a teacher or student test positive for the virus last week — a reality the state’s top health official said is unavoidable. State officials aren’t shutting down schools, but insist they may safely remain open but critical for them to take action to avoid a larger outbreak.
But if schools choose to reopen knowing the potential health risk, it raises an important question: How liable are school districts if a student or teacher contracts COVID-19?
Schools have a legal obligation to provide a safe environment for students, said Julie Slavens, senior counsel for the Indiana School Boards Association. That opens the door for lawsuits from families or staff if they feel like the district didn’t do enough to protect them.
But it doesn’t mean schools are more liable now than before, she said. Prior to coronavirus, administrators could never promise an entirely risk-free experience, even if the risk was simply catching the flu. And proving both negligence on the behalf of school leaders and that the virus was contracted in a school could be difficult, Slavens said.
Last month, Gov. Eric Holcomb called on the federal government to protect both schools and businesses from coronavirus-related lawsuits, which at a minimum could be time consuming and costly. He and 21 other Republican governors wrote a letter asking for “common sense” measures that would shield employers who meet an appropriate standard of care.
The proposed coronavirus relief bill, unveiled by Senate Republicans this week, would answer the call by making it harder for workers to sue their employers. The Wall Street Journal reported it would cap punitive damages, raise the requirements for filing personal-injury cases, and push these cases into federal court. Some companies, including Walmart and Tyson Foods, already have been sued. The bill, if passed, would apply to schools as well as businesses.
Indiana’s two teachers unions have pushed back against shielding school districts, calling on them to either ensure classrooms are safe or to go to virtual learning. Both the Indiana State Teachers Association and American Federation of Teachers have instructed teachers not to sign any waivers or an “acknowledgement of risk” document before school starts.
“Members of AFT Indiana will not be signing any documents, any waivers to that matter,” said President GlenEva Dunham during a press conference earlier this week. They will also consider protesting or striking against districts they feel are reopening unsafely.
Slavens said those signed waivers aren’t legally binding and couldn’t stop an employee or family from filing a lawsuit. But, if sued, a district may point to that document when laying out the precautions it took.
Jay County Schools is among the districts asking families to sign an acknowledgment of risk. In general, the documents state that individuals assume all risk of injury or death by entering school property and agree to abide by the rules and precautions of the school.
Superintendent Jeremy Gulley said the waiver is an attempt to be honest and transparent with parents, and is not motivated by concerns of a lawsuit, he said. Teachers were not asked to sign one.
“My focus is on getting our kids back safely,” Gulley said. “At the end of the day anyone can sue anyone. … A lawsuit is not driving our consideration of how we take care of our people.”
Fort Wayne Community Schools required families to sign a waiver to participate in extracurriculars, but didn’t require one for teachers or students to attend in-person classes. The document says parents who sign “voluntarily assume all risks” and agree not to hold the schools or staff liable for any injuries or expenses that result from COVID-19.
“If you’re playing football … ultimately there’s no way to maintain social distancing,” said district spokesperson Krista Stockman. “With school, students are entitled to a free public education, and so we need to put in all the safety procedures that we can to make sure that they can have as safe a learning environment as we can create.”
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I find it abominable that teachers, who make lousy salaries in Indiana, are being forced to go to work under hazardous conditions. Fortunately, the unions are standing up for the teachers.
Many teachers had to work 2-3 jobs last year to survive. Now those jobs aren’t available.
It is unbelievable how badly teachers, and all people who work in education, are being treated.
GLAD I’M RETIRED!! I can’t imagine working knowing that the administrators don’t care anything about my health and would want me to sign some type of wavier to not hold the school responsible if I get sick or die.
Last month, Gov. Eric Holcomb called on the federal government to protect both schools and businesses from coronavirus-related lawsuits, which at a minimum could be time consuming and costly.
Holcomb is a weak__________________________!!!!!!
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Last month, Governor Holcomb [R-IN] called on the federal government to protect both schools and businesses from coronavirus-related lawsuits which at a minimum could be time consuming and costly. This statement indicates how much Holcomb cares about the health of educators and students in Indiana. Sounding good doesn’t work when you have no action to match it. Hypocrite!
Thank You Indiana Educators for All of Your Hard Work
INStateHealthDept
Students in all 92 counties across our state are continuing to connect & learn during the #COVID19 pandemic. Thank you to all the dedicated educators that are ensuring a bright future for Hoosiers for years to come.
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It gets worse everyday in Indiana. Unbelievable.
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Indiana schools could lose state funding if they don’t open for in-person instruction, top lawmaker warns
By Stephanie Wang Aug 7, 2020, 9:26am EDT
The stance puts pressure on districts that have started the year remotely.
Indiana schools could lose state funding if they don’t open for in-person instruction this year, the state Senate leader warned school leaders in a letter Thursday.
State leaders have “a strong appetite” for making sure schools offering different options remain fully funded, Senate President Pro Tem Rodric Bray wrote. “However, there is no guarantee such an exception will be made for schools that don’t give families the option of in-person instruction in a school building,” he added.
Districts operating completely remotely would only be eligible for 85% of per-pupil state funding, under current state law that gives reduced support for full-time virtual learning, Bray said.
That puts pressure on districts such as Indianapolis Public Schools and Washington Township schools, which chose to start the school year remotely after teachers and families raised concerns over returning to classrooms amid rising coronavirus cases in Indiana.
With the state offering about $5,700 in base funding for each student, IPS likely stands to lose in excess of $20 million through a 15% cut. The district did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
It could push those districts to open their doors by Sept. 18, the fall enrollment count day that typically determines state funding. About 30 districts have started the school year online, state officials have said.
The stance is also contrary to what Indiana’s top education official told schools they could expect earlier this summer. State Superintendent Jennifer McCormick said in a statement late Thursday that she was “extremely disappointed” and urged lawmakers to convene in a special session to ensure schools won’t lose funding.
“Penalizing districts who cannot offer onsite instruction leads to dangerous decision making,” McCormick said.
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In Memphis, schools start 3 weeks late and online. This is despite the mayor’s direction who wanted to open schools for face to face.
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carolmalaysia: We are able to get PBS Lakeshore, which is Gary, here in our north ‘burb near Chicago. I watch Democracy Now!, & right before that show, there was a sickening “commercial” or “PSA” from the Indiana government showing happy children & teachers in school, all bright-eyed & bushy-tailed, all eager learners & teachers happy to be there.
Kids socializing, commercial emphasizing that the American Academy of Pediatrics* recommended that children be in school, for the sake of their mental health & socialization needs.
Guess what this commercial depicted? Schooling in the days of yore: it didn’t show children & teachers wearing masks; it didn’t show desks 6′ apart; it didn’t show partitioned desks, or smaller #s in classrooms. Indiana was selling nostalgia…fantasy.
REALLY “fake news.”
I am feeling incredibly sad for the citizens of Indiana.
*And SHAME on the A.A.P.!!! Wait for it…
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fake commercial – not fake news
If you want fake news, you have to tune into Fox, Sinclar or One America News Network, because they report what Trump wants to hear: crap, lies, hate talk, conspiracy theories, and Trumpish propaganda.
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Thanks for the correction, Lloyd. That is a distinction to be made.
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You are welcome.
Have you seen this fake news ad from Trump’s campaign?
No wonder, Trump keeps attacking CNN and other media news as fake news because the real news media like CNN reveals Trump’s lies.
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