One of my biggest gripes about teaching has always been how so much of the general public thinks they understand what goes into it: “Well hey, I went to school! I did the worksheets and used the flash cards and watched the filmstrips! I saw what those teachers did all day!” And so on. I think this past spring brought an awakening to a lot of people when they took on distance learning for their children, and perhaps speculated what it would be like to do that with twenty-nine other kids at the same time.
But now it’s summer. It seems much of that perspective, and the grateful sentiment that came with it, has evaporated. The stir-crazy feelings of sheltering at home became too much for some. States began opening with the virus still in circulation. People were irresponsibly encouraged to go back out and act like things were normal. Some decided the risk was worth taking, just so they could “feel like it’s summer.” Ignoring social distancing guidelines and refusing to wear masks became a divisive political issue. Anyone with a passing awareness of how COVID-19 has been progressing knows these decisions have only made both the spread of the virus and the negativity of the social climate even worse.
Which brings us up to now, when planning for a return to school in the coming weeks has emerged as the newest national argument. Now, I wouldn't claim to be an expert on education, but I know a few things about it. I’m about to begin my 29th year in the elementary classroom. I’ve earned a masters degree and an additional sixty credits beyond that. I’ve taught in four different grades, I’ve held building leadership positions, I’ve worked under more extra service agreements than I would want to take the time to tally. I’ve tutored students at home when they were too sick or injured to attend school. I’ve written curriculum. I’ve delivered professional development, more than once. Heck, I’ve even won an award. Because of all this, I think it’s fair to say I know as much as anyone about what would need to be considered for schools to open safely during these times. I’m not claiming to present any solutions here, but only sharing my insights with some of the issues I’ve been thinking about.
Full disclosure: I absolutely believe schools should return to distance learning this fall. I’m hoping to live long enough to see at least another Thanksgiving, and another birthday, and not have to worry about who will take care of my dog if I die. I’ve already given my life to education, metaphorically. I’d rather not do it literally as well.
So, breaking the issues into categories, here are some of things that would need to be considered:
School Atmosphere:
As a teacher, my top priority has always been that each student feels safe when they’re in my classroom. Coming back to a school with social distancing mandates where everyone is wearing masks and everything about the familiar routine of the school day has been reimagined will not make them feel safe, even if that’s the intent. It’s going to feel at least slightly dystopian. Even if they have enough time to get used to their new school normal before the first round of distance learning inevitably begins, they’ll never be completely at ease, which will make it harder to learn. They won’t have the chance to be themselves. Plus, since I’m calling this category “atmosphere,” let’s also briefly acknowledge how the current air circulation systems in even the newest school buildings likely aren’t engineered to prevent the spread of a virus we didn’t even know existed a year ago.
Long Term Goals and Standards:
One common refrain these days is how we don’t want the kids to fall behind. My question: Fall behind what? What’s more important here? To preserve the social order of the agrarian calendar education has traditionally followed for over a century, or to keep people alive?
Grade level standards don’t even align between all of the states. Content isn’t delivered with the same fidelity between districts, or even buildings, or classrooms. All teachers try, but we have different approaches, different strengths, and different weaknesses. Here’s a thought experiment for you: What would happen if all three school options — full open, hybrid open, or distance learning — were all set aside because the pandemic raged undeniably out of control, and every citizen of the United States was completely on board with closing schools for an entire academic year? Would anyone technically be behind anyone else, or would they all still be at the same level as others their age? Would kids learn less if they ultimately graduated at nineteen instead of eighteen for a generation? Wouldn’t such an event be a perfect chance for schools to look at alternative schedules, and even working through the summer as several locations around the country already are? Maybe once we were safely to the other side, all kids would take a placement test to determine which grade they should be in as things start back up. What really could be a better reason to enact such a drastic step then a lethal virus spreading through the population? I’m not advocating this plan, but just pointing out there is no hard deadline on when learning ends, or any one educational model that has to be followed.
Student Behavior:
I work in elementary, but this is true for all K-12 students: They’re kids, and they will not always do what’s expected of them. It’s their nature. They are still learning about the world. They are never as well-behaved as the kids you might see in a back-to-school commercial, trying to get parents to buy new shoes and backpacks with choreographed dances and singing Kidz Bop knock-offs of old Whitesnake songs. How many kindergarteners would wear masks all day long without playing with them, or trading with their friends, or getting frustrated enough to throw them away? How many fifth graders will find creative things to do with their masks to get a laugh? Which students will refuse to wear their mask as a willful act of defiance? I mean, come on. You’ve probably seen some of the videos circulating online of the tantrums adults are throwing if a cashier politely asks them to mask up. Swearing, throwing things, intentionally spitting and coughing on people? Again, these are ADULTS. Now think about the seven-year-old who has yet to learn self-control, or the twelve-year-old carrying so much emotional trauma they don’t have the skills to process how they feel. How will they react when they reach breaking points?
Supporting Student Needs:
People tend to think of school as primarily what happens in the classroom. We have speech students. We have English Language Learners. We have students receiving reading and math support. We have social workers, psychologists, and clinical therapists. How will all of that be managed? Most, if not all, schools will have students dealing with homelessness, or poverty, or enduring more kinds of abuse and neglect than you care to imagine. There have been several years when I’ve seen kids spending their first day of summer vacation riding their bikes in the school parking lot, because it lets them be near the place they feel safest. I’d argue these are the kids who need to be in school more than anyone else. Right now, a lot of these service providers are lucky to have a semi-private table to use, which they use several times each day, and will have to repeatedly disinfect. How will social distancing work with that?
Socializing:
One of the most common reasons people say they want kids back in a normal school environment is so they can be with other kids. Yes, this is a powerful reason. The most common thing I heard on video chats with my students in the spring was how they were bored and wanted to see their friends. However, keep in mind: In this vaguely dystopian hybrid education model, even socializing is going to look different. How many kids would be allowed to sit at a cafeteria table? They’d likely all sit on one side, if they went to the cafeteria at all. How many would have “bathroom emergencies” to squeeze in a few minutes of chatting with friends from other classes? (And yeah, of course they’ve learned to coordinate these times.) Soccer, football, tag at recess? I honestly don’t know what recess would even look like. Everyone standing in a marked-off square, six feet on a side? This would be like walking past the windows of the bakery: They could see the donuts through the glass, but wouldn’t even get to smell them. They won’t get to work in small groups or play games with partners, unless they do it online.
Shared Materials:
Textbooks. Paper. Clay. Notebooks. Sticky notes. Meter sticks. Omnifix cubes. Markers. Library books. Gymnastics mats. Crayons. Glue. Lunch trays. Tape. Science trays. Jump ropes. Paint and paint brushes. Calculators. Maps. Chromebooks. Drinking fountains. Hockey sticks. Tissue boxes. Silverware. Notecards. Chairs. Basketballs. Game cards. Puzzles. Bowling pins. Pencil sharpeners. Game pieces. Plastic bins. Terrariums. Containers full of condiment packages. Scissors. Paper towel dispensers. Highlighters. Pencils, for crying out loud. This is a partial list of the things students share daily. You might be thinking, “But what about that list of supplies families buy at the beginning of the year?” 1) Not every family buys everything. 2) Supplies run out, more quickly for some kids than others. 3) Things break and get lost.
A lot of kids learn best and are most engaged when they work with their hands. If there are not necessary materials in the classroom to work with, someone will miss out on a chance to do their best learning, and might feel a little ostracized every time they need to get out their calculator and they’re one of the few who does not have one. There are already a boatload of issues that come with trying to manage common materials without being vigilant about keeping them disinfected. Those issues will inevitably compound each other.
Transportation:
A typical bus holds about seventy kids, if they sit three to a seat. Most bus routes won’t fill a bus to capacity, but will still be over half full. Social distancing? Impossible. For that we’re talking one kid to a seat, with each seat separated by an empty one, in a best case scenario. How many more bus routes will this require? How much longer will some of these bus rides be? How many more buses will be needed, not to mention the drivers needed? And how much fuel? Transportation costs will be five times higher. How could these changes affect the length of the school day? How many times daily will the buses need to be disinfected? Take everything that would make this more difficult, and double it. At least.
Health Services:
I’ve heard some of the more ignorant officials in the federal government say it wouldn’t be such an undertaking to take the temperature of each student as they arrive. Are you kidding me? How many thermometers will be needed to get that done with expediency? Will temperatures be taken more than once a day? Will we need extra nurses or paras fully PPE’d up to float around the building for temperature checks, who would then escort sick kids to the health office so they don’t cough on the several dozen lockers and classroom doors and drinking fountains they’ll pass on the way there? What happens if we find ourselves in the beginning of a spike? The health office in my school has two cots. We can’t always rely on parents being able to pick up their children right away. Also, let’s not forget about all the other normal reasons the health office stays so consistently busy each school day to start with. What happens to the ones with strep throat? Lice? Pink eye?
Sanitation:
First, let’s frame this topic by highlighting how an elementary school is the kind of place where, while infrequent, it’s not completely out of the ordinary for someone to sneak off to the bathroom and take a crap on the floor just because. I’ve seen random pants left in the hallway. I’ve had students leave small plastic containers of ranch dressing in their desks for so long that they grew into something unrecognizable. I’ve had students cough into my mouth at such close range I could taste it. I’ve seen a boy walk past a bank of twenty lockers in an empty hallway, plant his tongue firmly on the first, and lick each one in succession. Schools are big-time disease vectors already.
Each night my classroom is swept, the wastebasket (which is usually spilling over by the end of the day) is emptied, and the recycling bin is dumped out if it’s more than half full. If I have an extra mess to deal with, I email the building supervisor and tell the night custodian, then cross my fingers he’ll have enough time that night along with everything else he has to do for it to be addressed. Will the plan be to disinfect every surface in the building that could have been touched by someone that day? Will that job become yet another expectation for the teachers? A lot of teachers probably will do extra cleaning on their own out of self-preservation — I know I would. What else would teachers be asked to do to keep their rooms clean, and how much longer will it keep them in the hot zone of their classroom? Or how many extra cleaning staff will need to be hired just for the daily disinfecting alone?
Nutrition:
There are kids who will not have the chance to eat healthy meals if they don’t get them at school. At our school we serve breakfast, we allow for snack time in the schedule, and we serve lunch. Our social worker will provide snacks for students who are unable to bring them from home themselves, and he goes through a LOT. I know our school district has a program in place to make grab and go meals available throughout the summer. Yes, this is a big reason to get the kids back to school, but there’s a reason why so many restaurants are at 25% seating capacity, or closed from indoor dining completely. If we get kids back in the building, how is lunch going to work? In the classroom? Shorter shifts than the already have? A menu with less variety? Something will have to change.
Drills:
Each school is required to run a certain number of fire drills / severe weather drills / active shooter lockdown drills during an academic year. How will these work? Everything done normally will take longer. How will that happen with distancing? If the call was made to say it just isn’t practical to run the drills, then why are we doing them in the first place? How do I get my whole class into the safest corner of the room during a lockdown when they have to be spaced? How do we get everyone out of the school as fast as possible when they can’t be near each other?
Lockers:
They are all right next to each other. In some schools, they’re literally on top of each other. If we opened and managed to stay open into the winter because things were improving so much regarding the pandemic (AH HA HAA AHA), our students are expected to have jackets, snow pants, boots, hats, and gloves to go outside. Lockers are not six feet apart. Where do they keep this stuff? How much learning time is lost at the beginning and the end of the day, not to mention before and after recess, when they have to take turns putting stuff on over three different shifts on the hallway to make sure they’re distant enough from each other?
Substitutes:
As ambitious as I was during the year I worked as a substitute teacher back in the Jurassic period, even I wouldn’t have taken a day job in a building where there could be a virus that might kill me. A need for subs doesn’t end with teachers, though. Don’t forget the paraprofessionals, cafeteria staff, custodians…the number of people needed to make the system work goes on and on.
With that being my list, you might have noticed: I didn’t even touch the challenges that would come with the actual teaching and learning in any of these scenarios. It’s easy to break down the available opening options into three general categories, and calling something a hybrid model could literally mean one hundred different things. From my point of view, if all options end up being equally flawed, why not go with the choice that will keep the most people alive?
I’ve bought a school yearbook every year I’ve taught. Occasionally I’ll dig them out and look them over. Most memories are good. Not all, but most. I would never want to see a yearbook for the 20-21 school year including a memorial page that lists the names of the staff and students taken by COVID-19 because we went back too soon or unprepared. I’m afraid that scenario is far too possible.

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