PreK12 Reopen Recommendations
PreK12 Reopen Recommendations
PreK12 Reopen Recommendations
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INTRODUCTION
Friday, March 13, 2020, was a historic day for Floridians. It was on that afternoon when
on a conference call with school district superintendents around the state that Gov. Ron
DeSantis made his strong recommendation for an “extended Spring Break” for all of
Florida’s school districts. Soon enough the extended break turned into distance-learning
for the remainder of the school year.
Florida was touted as a national model of success for the way its students, parents,
educators and entire communities came together and over the course of just a week
completely transformed how teachers taught and how students learned. Educators
should rightfully be praised for the work they did to ensure that instruction continued
and that students’ basics needs including meals ─ continued to be met while school
campuses were closed.
However, in the rapid change to distance learning, we must also be cognizant of those
who despite all the best efforts fell through the cracks. Students who were already
homeless, students without consistent and reliable Internet access or devices to access
the Internet were impacted especially hard during this transition. So were students who
are English language learners and students with intellectual and/or physical disabilities.
It was with a lens towards ensuring equity and providing a place for diverse voices to
be heard that the Florida Education Association convened its Reopening Schools Task
Force. This group of 24 people with decades of public service represents Florida’s
diversity as well the public education workforce.
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There are over 4,000 public schools in Florida. The largest school, Cypress Bay High
School in Broward County, has an average daily attendance of over 4,500 students. That
one school has almost four times the entire student population of Franklin County.
Given information like this, it did not make sense for this committee to delve into the
minutia of school reopening. What works for Franklin County Schools will necessarily
look different from what works at Cypress Bay. Instead, our intent is to lay a framework
─ a set of expectations that each school district and each school incorporate into their
own plan.
It is our hope that school districts around the state will make productive use of the
summer and convene stakeholder groups of their own to focus on the specific needs for
their schools and communities and that this framework can serve as a guide for such
discussions.
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COMMITTEE MEMBERS
Hannah Ard Middle/high school science teacher
Rep. Kamia Brown Florida House of Representatives, District 45
Pat Barber Manatee Education Association President
Andrew Burk Teacher
Carol Cleaver** Teacher
Sen. Janet Cruz Florida Senate, District 18
Al Culp** Science teacher
Angie Gallo Orange County School Board member
Carole Gauronskas FEA Secretary/Treasurer
Rev. James T. Golden Pastors for Florida’s Children
Fedrick Ingram* FEA President
Linda Kearschner Florida PTA President
Johanna Lopez Executive Director of Voces Unidas
Dr. Suzanne Minor** MD, FAAFP
Adora Obi Nweze NAACP State President
Curtis Richardson Tallahassee City Commissioner
David Richardson** Miami Beach City Commissioner
Quinetta Ryal** School counselor
Pura Scott Parent
Andrew Spar FEA Vice President
Liz Snowden Small business owner
Liliana Vera Parent
Sheila Watson Prekindergarten teacher
Jairus Williams FAMU student and Student FEA President
Rosanne Wood Leon County School Board member
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RECOMMENDATIONS
Any plan to reopen schools must be comprehensive enough to consider the needs of all
education stakeholders while simultaneously being responsive the needs of each of
Florida’s 67 counties which have all been impacted differently by COVID-19 and are
experiencing vastly different levels of community spread.
To best accomplish those goals, our recommendations are broken down into five (5)
categories. What follows is a brief description of each category, then specific
recommendations by category as determined by the respective workgroups of the
Reopening Schools Committee:
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Priorities and Recommendations:
Fair, clear and consistent expectations across districts, particularly on physical
distancing and health and safety measures.
Provide school leaders with clear guidance to establish procedures if
students or staff become unwell. Guidance should include monitoring
student and staff health, maintaining regular contact with local health
authorities and updating emergency plans and contact lists.
Best recommendations are for students not to move and for teachers to
move. Teachers would need to clean their new workspace and continue to
observe hygiene recommendations including avoiding touching one’s
face.
Risk mitigation must be an essential guiding principle in a safe return to
schools with a focus to bring back students, teachers and staff while
maintaining physical distancing measures to prevent community
transmission.
Classrooms and workspaces must be reconfigured to ensure physical
distancing.
Positions critical to ongoing operations should be prioritized according to
the following criteria:
Campus safety
Preparing for further reopening of the school
Work that cannot be effectively completed from home
Employees who self-disclose a vulnerability associated with COVID-19
should continue to work remotely.
Maintain widespread, accurate testing and contact tracing.
Advocate for worker safety and protections.
Daily sanitization of all school facilities and implementing mitigation
infrastructure such as no-touch hand-washing stations throughout the buildings
with sanitation breaks during the day.
In addition to having the equipment/supplies, there must be sufficient
training and clear guidelines for students and staff on how and when to
use them safely and properly. Training must also include specifics on
handwashing.
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Students with disabilities present an even greater challenge; they may
have difficulty with understanding and adhering to social distancing and
the changing hygiene recommendations.
Follow available guidance from the CDC on maximum gathering sizes and
personal protective equipment.
Ensure that reliable, widespread COVID-19 testing, effective tracing and social
distancing strategies have been used in the communities that are considering re-
opening their public schools for face-to-face learning.
Provide teachers and staff access to personal protective equipment and
disinfectant items as well as training on proper usage.
The state must maintain sufficient supplies for all schools.
An inventory of what the specific needs are will be necessary for
this to happen effectively.
PPE can provide a false sense of security. If and/or when they are used,
there must be training on safe usage.
Leverage labor management collaboratives to co-create reopening plans that
ensure the safety of students, educators and communities.
Screening of students and staff that appear symptomatic and separate them from
the school population for testing.
Expand school clinic capabilities with triage and isolation areas for students that
present with symptoms while they await parent pick up.
Provide school leaders with clear guidance to establish procedures if students or
staff become unwell. Guidance should include monitoring student and staff
health, maintaining regular contact with local health authorities and updating
emergency plans and contact lists.
Work with the county health departments to set up contact tracing when there is
a reemergence of COVID-19 at a school.
Ongoing, open communication with all stakeholders must continue.
Student Success
The mobilization of Florida’s teaching force to distance learning with almost no
notice was a remarkable accomplishment. The tremendous work of Florida’s
educators and their students has rightfully been lauded as an example for the rest of
the nation to follow.
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However, despite this great work the learning conditions for Florida’s students in
the final quarter of the school year were suboptimal. The negative impacts of these
conditions are felt even more strongly for students without consistent and reliable
Internet connections or students as well as students with learning disabilities and
those for whom English is not their first language.
As school campuses reopen, addressing the “COVID-19 Slide” and its disparate
impact on students in poverty and those with learning disabilities will be
paramount.
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Equity
One to one device policy for each student.
Access to internet.
Training on how to deliver instruction digitally; and for parents and students on
how to access that instruction.
Continue school feeding program.
Flexible assignments, deadlines and encourage wraparound services.
Engaging the homeless population.
Students with Special Needs (including students with ESE, ELL, 504 plans)
Deliver accommodations digitally ─ school districts must provide clear guidance
for education specialists and teachers.
Incorporate small groups of ESE students in before other students, in order to
give them extra attention and time (aspirational).
Utilize technology for OT and speech through distance learning or other
mechanisms if available.
Allow amendments to the IEP through distance learning plans.
o Provide extra pay for ESE teachers to create these plans before the start of
school.
Reduce the amount of work required for students who are easily overwhelmed.
Design all online learning so that it is accessible to students who may need larger
font, more explanations etc. i.e. Universally Designed Learning. This will ensure
success for all students, not just those with disabilities.
Equal provisions and protections for all schools, ex. accommodations for deaf
students who usually read lips.
Prolonged physical distancing, death and illness in our families and communities
and economic dislocations, will leave many students and faculty with ongoing
trauma and mental health issues and it is incumbent on us to meet their needs now
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more than ever. We know from brain science that lack of psychological safety and
the impact of adverse childhood experiences impede and even prevent learning.
These impacts will be widespread. This will require additional staff with expertise in
mental health, to provide trauma and sensitivity training for all staff, students and
parents. All staff should be trained on how to identify students struggling with
trauma and refer them to mental health professionals for additional support.
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Track the long-term effects of the pandemic on the students: changes in grades,
test scores, graduation rates, absenteeism, etc.
Provide teachers will all the possible support they need for students to have
equity.
Educators have made it clear they desire nothing more than to return to schools and
be with their students in person again, but doing so means that there must be
safeguards in place to ensure that the simple act of returning to work does not
jeopardize their health.
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Staggered schedules for both teachers and students.
Ensure enforcement of health guidelines for students and employees in a fair and
equitable manner.
Publication of state, district and school plans in time for teachers to prepare
adequately.
Assess teacher and staff workload (ensure teachers aren’t doing double work
online and in school).
Prioritize stress counseling.
Expand district based virtual programs first to retain students in the district.
Waivers on required drills that will compromise social distancing and CDC
guidelines as well as any consequences for noncompliance.
However, all of this rests on the fundamental belief that without a reliable vaccine,
we must be incredibly thoughtful and deliberate in how we map out our new
normal, which must include: some elements of physical distancing; infrastructure
for testing, tracing and isolation; deploying public health interventions in our
schools and workplaces and aligning them with the necessary educational supports.
There must also be an open mind and a flexibility to deal with unforeseen and novel
circumstances that will inevitably arise as we try and return to this new normal. If
we have learned from the past as recessionary forces grow, we must face the crisis
with our best foot forward rather than limping in or reverting to the status quo.
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Identify response and recovery financing for immediate investments in school
water, sanitation and hygiene.
Direct education funding to schools hit hardest by the crisis, for example
through formula-based funding that prioritizes the most marginalized.
PPE costs should be taken into consideration for economic purposes as
well as cleaning products, relevant training, protocols and staffing.
Allocations to help close the technological divide to provide as many electronic
resources to all of our students.
Waive school fees and other costs wherever possible and eliminate other barriers
to entry to maximize re-enrollment rates.
Ensure that all educators have professional pay and healthcare benefits and fight
against privatization of educators’ jobs particularly in the education support
professionals’ space.
Rapid response for testing – partnerships with health departments, nurses in
each school.
Establish a mechanism to get in contact with non-English speaking parents and
provide more access to these individuals.
Increase investment in ESE student accommodations - IEPs, 504 plans, etc.
Convene a special session for the allocations of CARES act funds.
Maintain the Mental Health and School Safety allocations in the 2020-21 budget
without cuts and investigate the possibility to increase funding because of the
pandemic.
Consider costs related to reduction of class sizes and necessary infrastructure
that may be required such as portables, etc.
Suspend all state funding of private schools that do not meet public school
guidelines for safe and effective delivery of instruction.
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CONCLUSION
The Florida Education Association would like to acknowledge and thank all of those
who contributed their time and expertise to the Reopening Schools Committee. It is our
hope that this document serves as a guideline for safely returning students, faculty and
staff to school campuses. We realize that Florida is a diverse state and that what makes
sense for one community might not make sense for another.
This document is not meant to be a static one. New information is being learned about
the Coronavirus daily and as our knowledge of the virus grows, the knowledge gained
should be incorporated into any plans to reopen school campuses.
As plans for schools continue to evolve, we firmly believe that the path forward must be
centered around the shared goals of physical health and safety, student success, social
and emotional well-being, safe working and learning conditions and an enduring
investment in public education.
There is still much that is unknown and concrete answers to some very important
questions remain elusive. But what we know beyond a shadow of a doubt is that public
schools remain the bedrock of their communities. Together, students, parents and
educators can work to expand horizons, to ensure that Florida’s public schools don’t
just “return to normal” but come out of this crisis even stronger and with a greater
sense of connection to the families they serve as well as the larger community.
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APPENDIX AND FURTHER READING
• American Federation of Teachers: A Plan to Safely Reopen America’s Schools
and Communities
• National Education Association: Initial Member Brainstorm on Schools’ Re-
Opening for In-Person Learning
• Education International: Guidance to Reopen Schools and Education Institutions
• Joint Statement of National Education and Civil Rights Leaders on COVID-19
School Closure
• Florida School Boards Association Recommendations for Re-opening Florida’s
Public Schools
• Centers for Disease Control: Draft Reopening Guidance (Pages 4-6 are school
related)
• Centers for Disease Control: School Reopening Decision Tree (updated May 15)
• Centers for Disease Control: School and Child Care Programs Guidance
(updated May 15)
• UNICEF: Framework for Reopening Schools
• Great Lakes Center: Education in the Time of COVID-19: Remote learning Part 1
• McKinsey & Company: Perspectives for Opening Schools
• Education Resource Services: Financial Implications of COVID-19
• Education Next: A Blueprint for Back to School
• How to Reopen Schools: A 10-Point Plan for Keeping Equity at the Center
• Gov. DeSantis: May 4 Executive Order
• Re-Open Florida Task Force’s Report to Gov. DeSantis
• WHO Guide for Reopening
• WHO Guidance for schools, workplaces and institutions
• FIU Reopening report
• Washington Choir CDC report on dangers of band/chorus/theatre
• An easier to read article about it: CDC report on toilet plumes
• Minnesota Report shows 3 likely possible projection models
• NIH Report on how long coronavirus lives on surfaces
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