A virtual meeting was a fitting way for Denair Unified School District trustees to formally adopt a school reopening plan Thursday night in which students and teachers will begin classes next month under a distance learning format because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Denair’s five school board trustees have met in person – albeit with plenty of social distancing in place – until Thursday night, when they called a special meeting held via Zoom video conferencing. The primary item on the agenda was to hear about, then discuss and pass a plan to resume classes Aug. 12 using distance learning.
Superintendent Terry Metzger explained that Denair Unified – like all other public and private schools in Stanislaus County – had no choice when it came to beginning school under a distance learning format. The county is on the state’s “watch list” because of rising COVID-19 cases locally. Until the county is off the list for 14 days in a row, in-person classes are not an option, Metzger said.
It was the same message Metzger delivered to more than 100 parents earlier this week in back-to-back video meetings held in English and Spanish. Parents who would like to listen to either information meeting can go to the district’s website and click on the link to “Community Information Session Recordings.” The website also includes answers in English and Spanish to Frequently Asked Questions.
Thursday night, Metzger shared some sobering statistics about Stanislaus County. Nearly 7,000 residents have tested positive. There have been 77 deaths and 266 people are hospitalized, 55 of them in intensive care.
All of which underscores why distance learning will be in place until students and staff can safely return.
Trustee Ray Prock Jr. – whose wife is a teacher at Denair Elementary Charter Academy and whose daughter is a senior at Denair High School – encouraged the district to return to in-person instruction “as soon as legally allowed.”
“We are Denair. This is what we do,” Prock said.
Metzger assured him that she shares that feeling, but the district must follow the recommendations from state and county health officials.
“Nobody wants students back on campus more than us, but we’ve got to do it in a thoughtful, responsible way,” she said.
Trustee Carmen Wilson worried about the impact on long-term distance learning not just on students, but also their parents – many of whom have jobs that make it difficult to be a home with their children during the day.
“From an economic perspective, parents rely on instruction so they can go to work. Not just as a babysitter, but so they can work,” Wilson said.
As she did in her virtual meeting with parents, Metzger went over some key differences between the distance learning that occurred for two months in the spring when the pandemic closed schools and what will happen beginning next. “That was crisis learning,” she said. “Now, we’ve had time to formulate a plan.”
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