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Ordinarily, I’d add these new articles and videos to The Best Posts Predicting (& Showing) What Schools Look Like During The Pandemic. However, that list is just getting too massive. So, in the future, if you want to find these in one place, click here:
12 Oakland schools closed as 500 teachers out amid sickout, omicron surge https://t.co/wldqnUo93q
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) January 8, 2022
Canceled buses and a superintendent in the classroom: How omicron has thrown schools into crisis https://t.co/fQ3ATQm2OQ
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) January 8, 2022
One key issue this @winterjessica piece highlights is how little choice the current system provides. By and large, schools are either open or closed. Parents and teachers don't get to choose for themselves what works for them or their families. https://t.co/IPd5735MR7
— Alexander (@alexanderrusso) January 7, 2022
New: NYC schools stayed open this week, but @cveiga and I found that on many campuses, students aren't learning much and educators are facing difficult decisions about how to teach w/ so many absenceshttps://t.co/KaX0YSEE8z
— Alex Zimmerman (@AGZimmerman) January 7, 2022
Hospitalizations of U.S. children under 5 with COVID-19 have soared in recent weeks to their highest level since the pandemic began, according to government data released on the only age group not yet eligible for the vaccine. https://t.co/nd9tmsFaht
— The Associated Press (@AP) January 7, 2022
charter schools — which are predominately non-union — were more likely to offer virtual learning last school year than traditional public schoolshttps://t.co/dPTOIR8kxY
— Rachel Cohen (@rmc031) January 7, 2022
Thanks to the educators from all over the country who told me what it's like to be running in-person school during a surge. 1/ https://t.co/N2ezw7FHtK
— Anya Kamenetz (@anya1anya) January 7, 2022
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