GoofGoof
Premium Member
There’s no excuse for a district not having a virtual plan. My district started working on it in March and continued all summer. I think in some places (especially where the politics highly favored a return to physical school no matter what) districts buried their heads in the sand and didn’t make a plan. Learning will suffer and maybe that’s the point. Make virtual learning so bad that it proves the point that physical learning would have been better.I was writing out explanations for what could be considered point by point on above. But I stopped and deleted what I wrote. Because it’s really pointless. When places will little to no transmission cannot figure it out..When some districts cannot even get a virtual model running...it shows this has not been taken seriously. And when we have not taken this seriously with the level of priority it should have been given, excuses on why it is hard ring hollow.
On the flip side I can’t really say why some districts in areas with low community spread decided to go virtual. I laid out why my district made their call. Some districts near me are still planning a hybrid start to the year. Many schools in the part of NJ near me are going hybrid as well. I know NYC is going to try physical school too. The point is it’s not like there are no places with low spread opening for physical learning. It’s a mix. Each district has its own unique situations too so hard to say they should or shouldn’t open. It really needs to be a local decision.