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Here are new additions to THE BEST POSTS PREDICTING (& SHOWING) WHAT SCHOOLS LOOK LIKE DURING THE PANDEMIC (you might also be interested in SCHOOLS WENT REMOTE A YEAR AGO – HERE ARE MY CHOICES FOR THE BEST PIECES WRITTEN ABOUT SCHOOL REOPENING SINCE THEN):
How many high school students will come back in the fall? Dismal return rate raises alarms is from The L.A. Times.
We recently began concurrent teaching. All my classes r either ELL students who I've had before or IB Diploma students or non-Diploma students who I specifically recruited. They r academically motivated, & I barely make it thru day. I feel 4 colleagues w/more challenging classes.
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) May 11, 2021
Open schools meant thousands more riding public transportation, meant not just school staff but also more parents going into their workplaces (a stated goal of politicians) and more people just going socially around society (as this new Texas study suggests families did) /2
— Rachel Cohen (@rmc031) May 11, 2021
Important thread https://t.co/ADK62UHdIi
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) May 11, 2021
I think this is correct. When we think about say college and restaurants openings triggering surges, I don't think we're just referring to transmission within college classrooms or restaurants but the broader effects. https://t.co/M5RpluE4ug
— Matt Barnum (@matt_barnum) May 11, 2021
And in a sense it cuts at the heart of educational policy and politics: should we make decisions about schools based on an isolated look at in-school factors and effects on student, or should we consider them in their social and material context?
— Jeremy Singer (@jeremylsinger) May 11, 2021
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