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Declaring that Delaware schools were not a serious coronavirus risk for students and staff, Gov. John Carney “strongly” urged educators to return to hybrid learning on January 11.
“The risk of contracting the virus in school is low compared to the risks students face not being in school,’’ Carney wrote in a letter also signed by state public health director Dr. Karyl Rattay and education secretary Susan Bunting.
Carney’s letter also noted that the American Academy of Pediatrics and others “have repeatedly pointed to the negative effects on children – especially our most vulnerable children – when they aren’t able to attend school in person. In addition to the more robust and engaging instruction that in-person learning allows, many students rely on schools for meals, counseling, and social and emotional support.”
Carney’s push to have schools implement the hybrid model — a mix of online and in-school education — represents a shift from his previous position that schools should choose whether to go online only or use hybrid learning to balance the needs of teaching students and protecting them from the coronavirus.
He wants schools that have only been remote to move to hybrid on the same day he plans to lift his nearly monthlong stay-at-home advisory.
Since K-12 classes began in early September, a total of 579 of the approximately 161,000 Delaware students in public and private schools have tested positive, according to an enhanced COVID-19 contagion website the state just launched. In addition, 546 staff members have tested positive.
“Data from our epidemiologists shows that the vast majority of cases affecting students and staff originated outside of the school building,’’ the governor’s letter said. “The few cases thought to result from in-school spread are frequently observed to be in settings where mask wearing was not consistently practiced.”