Denair Officials Discuss Scenarios in Which More Students can Return to Campus; Expansion Likely After Spring Break

There was a strong consensus at Thursday’s Denair Unified School District board meeting about returning all students to the classroom as soon as is safely possible. The operative question – the one with no clear answer — was, “When?”

In a discussion that last more than a third of their three-hour meeting, trustees heard not only an update on the district’s COVID-related plans from Denair Superintendent Terry Metzger, but also emotional pleas via Zoom from two mothers who urged the district to bring students back to campus.

Like school districts all across the country, Denair pivoted to distance learning a year ago when the pandemic was declared. In November, small “learning cohorts” of students needing specific academic or emotional support were allowed to return from one to five days at Denair’s campuses. And then on March 1, more students were brought back part time with parental permission.

At Denair High School, for instance, about 70% of seniors were organized into small groups that receive in-person as well as online instruction on campus five days a week. At Denair Elementary Charter Academy, nearly 350 students have returned two days a week. At Denair Middle School, the number is  89. All told, about half of the district’s 1,300 students are back on campus at least part of the week. The rest remain 100% on distance learning, based on their parents’ preference.

Now, the challenge for Denair is how to expand face-to-face instruction while maintaining critical health safeguards for students and staff.

Metzger told trustees that the district expects to add more students on campus when classes resume April 12 after spring break. School days also are likely to lengthen for what would be the final seven weeks of this school year.

“The intent is to expand,” Metzger pledged, even as she acknowledged that half-days in class don’t always mesh with the schedules of working parents and that important services like busing and after-school care still will not be available.

Trustees encouraged district officials to do all they can to open campuses to as many students as possible. That came after two mothers shared the experiences of their children.

“Our kids are struggling. They’re hurting. They’re drowning,” said Leslie Van Gaalen, who transferred her elementary-age daughter to another district because her grades had suffered while on distance learning. “It’s time to get our kids back in school five days a week. Enough is enough.”

Andrea Bennett, whose son is a first-grader in DECA’s Dual Immersion Language program, said the past year has “taken a toll” on students and parents. She questioned why the district is poised to spend money on COVID tests so high school football games can be played “but is not spending money to put our kids in schools.”

“For those of us who want our kids back in school, we have no reasonable or sustainable options,” Bennett said. “All I hear are excuses about why we can’t. I need to hear why we can.”

Van Gaalen and Bennett were the first parents to address trustees at their monthly meeting since the district shut down campuses in March 2020.

“I empathize,” said Trustee Ray Prock Jr., who thanked the two women for speaking. “We’re doing everything we can to figure this out logistically to get more students in seats.”

Metzger said there are many barriers the district must overcome to expand face-to-face instruction for all students whose parents want it. Based on multiple surveys, that’s about 55% of the total student population.

Space is an issue, especially at DECA. Some of its smaller, older classrooms only have room for eight students because desks must be spaced at least 6 feet apart. Even on the other campuses, the largest classrooms can only accommodate about half the students in a normal class.

“There are some classrooms that will not hold more than 11 children,” Metzger said. “If we have 20 children and we can only hold 11, where do you put the other nine?”

Adding plexiglass shields between desks – similar to what has been done in school offices — is one possibility that could allow more students to be grouped together, Metzger said.

Staffing is another concern. Most teachers now must lead in-person as well as online classes – which divides their days and requires more preparation. If more students return to the classroom full time, some teachers will have to be reassigned to teach only online classes.

“If the board wants us to go full time, five days a week, it will require us to hire teachers for distance learning,” Metzger said.

Denair expects to receive an estimated $3.5 million in COVID relief funds — about $2.1 million from the feds and $1.4 million from the state — to help pay for various pandemic-related expenses. Only about $1.1 million has arrived so far, Chief Business Official Linda Covello told trustees. She expects the rest of the money to reach the district by September.

The district has spent about $640,000 so far, including $308,944 for 585 Chromebook computers so each student could have one and for 233 mobile hotspots to enable children to connect with teachers from home. More money was devoted to buying masks, face shields, plexiglass screens, hand sanitizer, cleaning supplies and other items.

On Thursday, trustees earmarked $392,000 for a project with Climatec to update ventilation systems and equipment on all four Denair campuses to improve air flow in classrooms and other buildings. More money will be set aside to pay for biweekly or more frequent testing of all students and staff, which Covello estimated will cost between $80,000 and $150,000 for the rest of this school year. The rapid tests range from $5 to $10 each; if one turns up positive, then a more expensive PCR test is required.

Already, a Denair High student tested positive, resulting in that student and eight others, including their teacher, being quarantined for 10 days, Metzger said.

Though vaccinations are not mandatory, she said about 70 of Denair’s 200 employees have received at least one COVID shot.

With Stanislaus County still in the state’s purple tier – reflecting widespread COVID transmission – Denair remains committed to returning students to in-person instruction in a way that protects the children and the staff.

“We want to get as many kids on campuses with the resources we have,” said Trustee Crystal Sousa. “We know how devastating the past year has been on the kids and the teachers.”

About Half of Denair Unified’s Students are Back on Campus

Nearly half of Denair Unified’s 1,300 K-12 students spent time on the district’s four campuses last week – another encouraging sign as the district moves to safely and responsibly restore in-person instruction.

Like most other public school districts in California, Denair’s teachers have been educating the majority of students via computer since March 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic was declared. Last November, however, some elementary, middle school and high students needing academic and emotional support were allowed to return to their campuses to receive face-to-face instruction in “learning cohorts.”

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Denair High Athletes Beginning to Play and Practice Again

It won’t look anything like normal thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic, but Denair High athletes are looking forward to limited opportunities to compete in some of their favorite sports between now and early June.

Players on the boys and girls golf teams already have had two matches. The lone member of the cross country team – junior Logan Prescott – has run in one race. Football and softball have begun conditioning drills and tightly controlled practices in hopes of kicking off their seasons later this month. Baseball, track and soccer are set to start in mid-April. On hold are boys and girls basketball and volleyball, which may be forced outdoors this spring because of health restrictions.

If it sounds confusing, imagine what Athletic Director Melissa Treadwell, her coaches and their athletes must feel. The only certainty is uncertainty, at least so far.

Still, escaping the yearlong routine of attending classes primarily via Zoom is enough to motivate many young athletes.

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Seniors to return to Denair High; elementary students to DECA

A few dozen Denair High School seniors will return to campus full time Monday for the first time in nearly a year, an important step in completing their high school careers by being able to interact in small groups with their teachers and friends.

Denair Elementary Charter Academy, meanwhile, expects as many as 327 of its 550 kindergarten through fifth-graders to be on campus for two days beginning next week. Some will come to school Monday and Tuesday; others on Thursday and Friday. All will remain on distance learning the other three days. In-person classes will run from 8 to 11:30 a.m.

At Denair Middle School, more sixth-graders will be added next week to the on-campus “learning cohorts” that have been in place since November to help students needing academic and emotional support. The goal is to allow additional seventh- and eighth-graders to return by mid-March.

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Denair Targets March 1 as a Time for More Students to Return to Campus, if Local Health Conditions Allow

The Denair Unified School District continues to cautiously explore ways to return more of its 1,300 students to campus, possibly as soon as March 1.

At Thursday night’s Board of Trustees meeting, Superintendent Terry Metzger sketched out scenarios in which about half the district’s elementary students and a portion of its high school seniors could receive in face-to-face instruction for the first time in nearly a year because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

A final decision on moving to Phase 2 of the district’s hybrid learning plan likely won’t be made until at least Feb. 22, Metzger explained, and will be guided by health statistics in Stanislaus County. While the number of local COVID cases, hospitalizations and patient deaths have declined recently, the county still has one of the highest rates of infection per capita in California and remains in the state’s most restrictive purple tier.

The county’s COVID dashboard shows than 53,600 residents have been sickened by the coronavirus and 888 have died. Equally as important, Metzger told trustees, is that there have been about 1,600 COVID cases in the southern portion of the county in the past month, underscoring the need to remain cautious about reopening schools.

“January was a terrible month (for COVID cases), but things are getting better,” she said.

Like many school districts, Denair closed its campuses last March and moved all its students to distance learning. In November, as part of its Phase 1 hybrid plan, small numbers of students at all grade levels were allowed to return as part of “learning cohorts,” with priority going to youngsters needing academic and emotional support.

Phase 2, Metzger told trustees, could include as many as 300 of Denair Elementary Charter Academy’s 550 kindergarten through fifth-graders. Some would come to campus Monday and Tuesday; others on Thursday and Friday. All would remain on distance learning the other three days. Siblings would attend class the same days to make it easier for parents to coordinate schedules. In-person classes would run from 8 to 11:30 a.m.

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