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2 Montgomery County School Districts To Require Masks Again Due To County’s COVID-19 Level

May 19, 2022 by philadelphia.cbslocal.com Leave a Comment

MONTGOMERY COUNTY, Pa. (CBS) — Masks are coming back for at least two suburban Philadelphia county school districts. Both the Lower Merion School District and Cheltenham School District said Thursday night masks will now be required in all district schools and on buses beginning Friday.

The school districts cited the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention COVID-19 level for Montgomery County.

Due to change in CDC COVID level for Montco, masks will be required in LMSD schools/on buses starting tomorrow, Friday, May 20, 2022. pic.twitter.com/ny52syonmP

— Lower Merion SD (@LowerMerionSD) May 20, 2022

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“Please remember to send your child to school with a mask. If your child doesn’t have a mask, they are available in the nurse’s suite. Once the county has returned to ‘medium’ on the data tracker, the district will pivot back to ‘mask recommended.’ We are still offering Test to Stay and Mask to Stay for eligible students and staff,” Cheltenham Superintendent of Schools Dr. Brian Scriven said in a letter sent to parents.

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Montgomery County’s community COVID-19 level is listed as high , according to the CDC.

(Credit: CDC)

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The county has a 281.26 case rate per 100,000 population and 10.4 new COVID-19 admissions per 100,000 population.

Filed Under: coronavirus lower merion school district, covid-19, coronavirus, covid, masks, mask mandates, mask..., 2018-19 montgomery county school calendar, clarksville montgomery county school calendar, clarksville montgomery county schools jobs, clarksville montgomery county schools pay scale, clarksville montgomery county school system jobs, clarksville montgomery county schools employment, clarksville montgomery county schools fall break, clarksville montgomery county schools grading scale, clarksville montgomery county schools human resources, is clarksville montgomery county schools closed

Boulder Valley School District Moves Some Graduation Ceremonies Inside Due To Snow, Cold

May 19, 2022 by denver.cbslocal.com Leave a Comment

BOULDER, Colo. (CBS4) – Boulder Valley School District is moving some of its graduation ceremonies inside due to the forecasted snow and cold. CBS4’s First Alert Meteorologists have called for a First Alert Weather Day on Friday due to the rapid drop in temperatures, along with a Winter Storm Warning calling for snow and rain.

(credit: iStock/Getty)

According to BVSD, Centaurus and Peak to Peak high schools have changed locations, moving to the 1ST Bank Center, at their regularly scheduled date and time; Broomfield and Monarch high schools have changed location, date and time, moving up to Friday and to the 1ST Bank Center; Boulder High School moved date and time to Sunday morning, but they will remain at Recht Field.

(credit: CBS)

Here is a listing of the following BVSD school graduation locations and times for this weekend:

Fairview High School

Boulder Prep

Broomfield High School

Monarch High School

Centaurus High School

Peak to Peak

Boulder High School

Nederland High School

Boulder Universal

Arapahoe Ridge High School

Justice High School

New Vista High School

Filed Under: Uncategorized home page, links & info, local, news, syndicated local, weather blog, boulder news, boulder valley school district jobs, boulder valley school district calendar, open enrollment boulder valley school district

This elite Bay Area private high school is going remote as COVID infections rise

May 19, 2022 by www.sfchronicle.com Leave a Comment

An elite private high school in Oakland will go remote for the last week of classes, a precaution to stave off rising COVID-19 infections among the student body, administrators said Thursday.

Beginning Thursday morning, teachers at The College Preparatory School held classes online, hoping that the school’s 372 students would return to campus for finals on May 27, followed by in-person events to celebrate graduation.

“We’re just trying to be prudent,” Sara Sackner, the school’s director of advancement, told the Chronicle. With cases rising in the Bay Area , fueled by new, infectious variants that relentlessly spawn every four to six months, Sackner and other staff saw an opportune moment to shut down and beat back the surge.

By the middle of May health officials were reporting 2,500 coronavirus cases a day across the Bay Area — an underestimate, some experts said, because people are testing themselves at home or not getting tested at all.

Sadly, Sackner said, online education “is a skill we have had to acquire.”

She noted that although classes have shifted to computer screens, the school’s campus remains open. Sackner and other faculty worked there on Thursday.

It wasn’t immediately clear whether College Preparatory School’s decision would be a bellweather for other districts. Spokespeople for Oakland and San Francisco Unified School Districts were not immediately available for comment Thursday afternoon.

Rachel Swan is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: [email protected] Twitter: @rachelswan

Filed Under: Uncategorized Sara Sackner, Rachel Swan, Bay Area, Oakland, College Preparatory School, San Francisco Chronicle, San Francisco Unified School Districts, Chronicle, COVID-19, ..., summer programs for high school students bay area, summer programs for high school students in bay area, high school internships bay area, high school internship bay area, bay area high school internships

No Extra Days To Be Added At End Of School Year After Sacramento Teacher Strike, District Says

May 19, 2022 by sacramento.cbslocal.com Leave a Comment

SACRAMENTO (CBS13) – No extra days are being added to the school year, the Sacramento City Unified School District announced on Thursday.

The decision comes after uncertainty over the eight days of instruction that were lost when teachers went on strike.

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Sac City Unified says they were not able to reach an agreement with the teachers union over making up the lost days.

“After two years in which students missed significant classroom time due to COVID, we owe them more learning time, not less,” the district said in a statement.

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CBS13 is reaching out to the Sacramento City Teachers’ Association for comment.

Instead of adding days at the end of the 2021-22 year, Sac City Unified says they’re now working on a plan to add a total of 16 days of instruction over the next two years.

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The district says the 2022-23 school year is still scheduled to start on Sept. 1.

Filed Under: Uncategorized sacramento, teacher strike, sac city unified, school year, end of teachers strike, wv teacher strike end, arizona teacher strike end, az teacher strike end, did teacher strike end, end of year for teachers, school teachers strike, school teachers strike 2018, end of year teacher to teacher gifts, teacher strike ending

Teachers speak out about frustrations with unions slow-walking school reopenings: ‘Politics seems to rule’

February 25, 2021 by www.foxnews.com Leave a Comment

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White House confirms teacher vaccinations not needed to reopen schools Video

White House confirms teacher vaccinations not needed to reopen schools

FOX News medical contributor Dr. Marc Siegel joins ‘America Reports’ with the latest

NEW You can now listen to Fox News articles!

President Biden’s plan to reopen schools within 100 days has faced opposition from teachers unions due to coronavirus safety concerns, leaving other teachers frustrated.

“For the past year, there has essentially been a national teachers union strike that has left tens of millions of families without access to an adequate education,” said Tommy Schultz, vice president of the American Federation for Children, a nonprofit supporting school choice programs.

Schultz cited numbers from October 2020 showing that roughly 3 million children haven’t had a day of education since last March , “completely falling through the cracks.”

“This will haunt our country for decades to come, and the teachers unions’ blatant refusal to disregard science in the name of political extortion is outright shameful,” he said.

Rebecca Friedrichs, who was an elementary school teacher in California for 28 years, echoed Schultz’s concerns for U.S. children and the state of their education.

TEACHERS UNION HEAD ‘DEBUNKS’ RUMOR THAT IT DOESN’T WANT REOPENING, DODGES ON WHETHER KIDS BACK THIS YEAR

“Most good teachers are deeply troubled by the strikes,” she said. “We never want to deny the children even one day of learning, and we understand that we are servant leaders to those children.”

Chicago Teachers Union leadership list their demands and leave a box of coal outside the entrance of City Hall following a car caravan where teachers and supporters demanded a safe and equitable return to in-person learning during the COVID-19 pandemic in Chicago on Dec. 12, 2020. (Photo by Max Herman/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Chicago Teachers Union leadership list their demands and leave a box of coal outside the entrance of City Hall following a car caravan where teachers and supporters demanded a safe and equitable return to in-person learning during the COVID-19 pandemic in Chicago on Dec. 12, 2020. (Photo by Max Herman/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Friedrichs is also a former union representative and was the lead plaintiff in the 2016 Supreme Court Case, Friedrichs v CTA , the case against the National Education Association and the California Teachers Association, which sought to give teachers and other public employees the right to decide for themselves whether or not to fund unions. The case lost after the U.S. Supreme Court deadlocked in a 4-4 decision and the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ultimately ruled against it.

Friedrichs said unions are using strikes to “push their muscle,” and essentially pressure communities into meeting their demands, sometimes at the expense of children’s education.

“Unions use these tactics on good teachers and threaten their jobs and peace on the job,” she said. “So most teachers participate in strikes only to ‘go along to get along.'”

Lisa Disbrow, an elementary school teacher in California with 34 years of experience, agreed, saying that teachers stay in the union because they’re afraid of the union response to them leaving.

CHICAGO TEACHERS UNION AGREES TO REOPENING DEAL FOR IN-PERSON LEARNING

“They’ve been told that no one else will take care of them, no one else will protect them,” she said. “They’re surrounded by people pushing in on them and trying to undermine a focus on academics, quality classroom management and a pursuit of real academic growth as the whole spectrum of agendas and indoctrination platforms swoop in. It’s very politicized.”

Teachers and PSC CUNY union members hold signs during a strike outside Hunter Campus High School in New York, U.S., on Wednesday, Sept. 16, 2020. (Photo: Paul Frangipane/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Teachers and PSC CUNY union members hold signs during a strike outside Hunter Campus High School in New York, U.S., on Wednesday, Sept. 16, 2020. (Photo: Paul Frangipane/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Willie Preston is the father of six children who all attend public schools in Chicago. He said said his children’s teachers and Chicago public school teachers in general are “very afraid” to speak out publicly because the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) is a “very unforgiving organization.”

“I don’t know if a CTU member even those against what’s going on would be willing to publicly speak out,” he said. “CTU has teachers reaching out directly to parents for making social media statuses that don’t align with their views. These teachers won’t be saying anything.”

Karen Cuen, an elementary music teacher for over 25 years in the Chino Valley Unified School District in California, believes other teachers are frustrated with their unions too, because schools need to reopen.

“Teachers unions are never correct to strike,” she said. “Teaching is not just a job, it’s a calling. Our ‘clients’ are precious children who deserve to have their teachers teaching them, not walking a picket line.”

Cuen said she understands workplace issues and the need for bargaining power, but said that some union demands to reopen schools “are often not even related to education.”

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“We have been told to ‘follow the science,’ which increasingly points to opening schools, yet politics seems to rule at every turn,” she said.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has said that schools can open for in-person learning without teacher vaccines “even in areas of the highest community spread” with proper safety precautions.

“We have a consensus among non-political medical experts, including top CDC leaders who wrote in the top medical journal, JAMA, three weeks ago that schools do not contribute to transmission — a position that contradicted the official CDC guidelines,” said Dr. Marty Makary, a physician and professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University, as well as a Fox News Contributor.

Dr. Janette Nesheiwat, a family and emergency medicine doctor and Director of CityMD and Fox News contributor, agreed.

FILE - In this Jan. 11, 2021, file photo, pre-kindergarten teacher Sarah McCarthy works with a student at Dawes Elementary in Chicago. (Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Chicago Sun-Times via AP, Pool, File)

FILE – In this Jan. 11, 2021, file photo, pre-kindergarten teacher Sarah McCarthy works with a student at Dawes Elementary in Chicago. (Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Chicago Sun-Times via AP, Pool, File) ((Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Chicago Sun-Times via AP, Pool, File))

“I understand the fear teachers may have,” she said, “however let’s look at the data, and the science which shows transmission of COVID-19 in the classroom is less than that in the community. I think we need to support our teachers and allow them to have access to vaccinations so that they feel safe returning to the classroom.”

“The CDC already issued school guidance in September. The Biden administration’s call for another updated set of guidance stalled the reopening of schools and resulted in more pediatric suicide, worsened the child hunger crisis and created other health problems in children,” he said. “The overly onerous requirements for schools in the CDC’s guidance has further stalled school reopenings and further harmed children. Time is lives.”

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Preston said he wants his six children to be able to return to school in Chicago for multiple reasons, but principally that “the science from the CDC and others says schools can reopen safely as long as mitigation policies are put in place, which the Chicago Public School system has done.”

“In fact, CPS spent nearly $100 million to set CPS classrooms up to be safe,” he said.

Preston believes it is possible for Biden to achieve his goal of reopening schools in his first 100 days if he stands behind science and “stands up for American children and their families, and does not allow education to become a political fight.”

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