This week, I watched my three daughters head off for school after a long and frustrating five months away from their classrooms.
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This week, I watched my three daughters head off for school after a long and frustrating five months away from their classrooms.
Like any parent, I felt a mixture of pride and apprehension as they went out the door.
My children are among the 10 percent of school-age Illinois youngsters who will be attending school in-person 5-days a week.
That number in itself is stunning. COVID-19 has so altered our society that 90 percent of the state’s pupils are learning in a different setting than they were just a year ago.
According to the Illinois State Board of Education, most public school students, 59 percent, will be beginning the school year in a remote-learning setting, usually over a computer. The remaining 31 percent will be learning in a blended environment where some days they are being taught remotely and other days they are in a classroom.
After months of studying the different educational paths, I have to concede that they all have drawbacks.
I don’t want my children – or anyone’s – to contract a virus.
On the other hand, I believe the ideal environment for youngsters to learn is in school with a teacher present.
That’s not such a radical notion. It is how students have been taught for centuries.
Before choosing to send my kids back to school, I reviewed their schools’ COVID-19 safety plans. Mask wearing and social distancing will be strictly enforced in the Catholic schools they attend. Desks will be disinfected between students. Hand washing augmented with hand sanitizing will occur multiple times during the school day.