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Showing posts from March, 2021

Spring Back...

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Just over a full calendar year later, schools throughout the country are poising to return students back to in-person learning opportunities five days per week. For some students/families, this is a much awaited time and comes with tremendous joy. For others, this increases anxiety, concern, and stress. As we have learned throughout this entire situation, there is no solution that solves the issue for everyone and there is nothing that can be done that can help everyone feel comfortable. Nonetheless, following the Spring break next week, the Rome City School District will reopen for full-time in-person instruction on Monday, April 12, 2021. In the coming week, as we all prepare for students to come back to school full-time, there will be questions that arise and concerns that need to be addressed. Currently, the most common question we continue to receive are: Can my student continue with remote learning for the rest of this year?  The answer to this question is yes. Remote learning ca

So Now What...

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Well, it is safe to say that the last week has flooded public schools with information and left most people asking someone (if not themselves), "Now What?". Between adjustments to the CDC guidance on public schools to the Oneida County strategies on what they call "ideal" situations, there is a lot of valid questions being raised by all parties. The CDC guidance is certainly the most promising bit of new information that we have seen in a long time. While there is a lot to read in totality, the CDC's summary of recent changes to their Operational Strategies includes: Revised physical distancing recommendations to reflectat least 3 feet in classrooms between students and provide clearer guidance when greater distance (such as 6 feet) is recommended. Clarified that ventilation is a component of strategies to clean and maintain healthy facilities. Removed recommendation for plastic barriers. Clarified the role of community transmission in decision-making. Added gui

Inching Closer...

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Over the past few weeks, the conversations around returning students to a full in-person learning experience have intensified throughout the country and the state. Infection rates are down, vaccines are available, the CDC has issued new guidance, elected officials are making statements that kids need to be in school, and all signs are pointing in a good direction. However, there has also been no new official direction from the New York State Health Department and/or the State Education Department. We are told not to expect any changes from their August 2020 guidance, despite the fact that we all know that a lot has changed. So, where does that leave us? While it may leave us slightly in limbo, we do know that there are options to bring more students back to school. The largest hurdles continue to be social distancing requirements and transportation, but many agencies are claiming that you can reduce the 6-foot distance by adding a barrier between students. If all students in Rome were

One Year Later...

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It is odd to sit here and realize that the end of this week will mark one full year since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. This last year has brought more challenges than most anyone could have ever expected to encounter. It has also brought some successes as we have seen what can happen when people work together and think differently in the interest of kids. A year ago, no one realized what we were about to engage in. No one knew how or if this COVID-19 thing would affect our personal lives. The entire region shut down and turned into a ghost town. I can remember driving to work through the months of March and April last year and enjoying seeing another car on the road. It was surreal. In that same moment of people not knowing the dangers, or not knowing what to expect, people answered the challenge of finding a way to help our kids learn. I can remember our first administrators' meeting of the pandemic that occurred on a Sunday, lasted roughly 3 hours, and the administrators h