A very different classroom: B.C. schools seek new normal as school year starts - Action News
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British Columbia

A very different classroom: B.C. schools seek new normal as school year starts

It is the first week of school forB.C. students, but the classroom they walk will be vastly different from the classroom they walked out of in the spring.

Overhalf a millionchildren, teachers, educators and support workers, head back to class

It's not yet knownexactly how many children will walk through the doors of their schools on Thursday, though Education Minister Rob Fleming has said districts are expecting 85 to 90 per cent of students to attend school in person. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

It's the first week of school forB.C. students, but the classroom they walk intowill be vastly different from the classroom they walked out of when schools closed in March.

Instead of crowded assemblies, casually swapped lunch snacks, carpooling and lapsing into hugs on the bleachers, school in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic will include frequent hand-washing, increased spacing from teachers and classmates, staggered start times, learning cohorts, and an adjusted schedule that might compress a year-long subject into a mere 10 weeks.

"People are thinking of the school that they left in March. It is different now," Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said in August in an attempt to assuage fears.

"Yes, you can make a classroom safe."

A physical distancing sign is pictured in the hallway of Bridgeview elementary in Surrey in late August. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Health officials announced the first case of the novel coronavirus in the province on Jan.28. It was unclear then how the virus would upend daily life. In the months to follow, a whole new system of unprecedented measures the shutdown of the border and non-essential travel, closure of restaurants, quarantine measures for travellers were put in place to stop the spread of therespiratory illness as cases ticked upwards.

And school the central institution for overhalf a millionB.C. children and tens and thousands of teachers, educators and support workers was no exception.

Across the country, in Ontario and Quebec, cases spiked after spring break as families returned from travels abroad, bringing the virus with them. The two provinces took the step of shutting down schools completely on March 12 and March 14, respectively. The closures were initially for two weeks, but schools would remain closed for the rest of the school year.

Fleming speaks to Jacob Cunliffe, 13, left, and his brother Joshua as they wash their hands following an update on the part-time return to classes in June. (Chad Hipolito/The Canadian Press)

B.C. familieswaited anxiously to hear from officials whether or not schools would shut down, as the province'sspring breakwas scheduled later than the eastern provinces.

On the Tuesday of spring break, March 17, Education Minister Rob Fleming announced that yes, B.C. would also take the unprecedented step ofsuspendingschoolto stop the spread of COVID-19.

Officials started looking for online schooling options in the meantime to fill the gap.

"That was a very difficult decision to make," said Health Minister Adrian Dix months later. "It was a decision that had other consequences, health and otherwise."

One of the positive consequences was that the timing of B.C.'s spring breakandsubsequent school suspension was credited by Henryas one of the reasons that B.C. so effectively flattened the curve in early months.

But for some families and educators, what to do about school has been an uneasyand frustrating dilemma.

In April and May, the province's newly constructedonline education system elicitedmixed response. Parents struggled with having their kids at home all day, keeping them engaged in their learning as studentsfought off boredom, tedium and loneliness. Others had little access to the resources internet, a computer required for virtual school.

Then, in June, with COVID-19 cases low, the province introduced a voluntary return-to-school, one ofthe only provinces to do so after the March closures. Over 30 per cent of students returned, but many parents continued to keep their childrenhome until the end of the school year.

Dr. Bonnie Henry said the closure of schools had many unintended consequences. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

In July, government announced its back-to-school plans, later bolstered by extra provincial and federal funding.

In-class instruction was the priority for the majority students across the province, and Henry explained that different "layers of protection" would be used to prevent COVID-19 transmission. She also emphasized that months of evidence suggestedtransmission among school-aged children was less likely.

Henry said the cost of keeping schools closed is too high.

"For many children in this province, being at school is where they get health care. It's a safe place for them. It's a place where they can get psychological support, where they might get a meal,"said Henry.

But the proposed school roll-out received criticism especially as cases started spiking in the province.Some parents and teachers called for mandatory maskpolicies and smaller class sizes to allow for physical distancing,others asked for more online options to transition students, and two parents evenheadedto court saying the back-to-school plan endangered the public.

Even teachers and educators who were not opposed to the reopening plan have expressed confusion and doubt at exactly how all the public health measures would work.

Teachers and educators have been preparing their classrooms to welcome back students this week. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Still, theyprepped theirclassrooms and opened up school facilities this weekfor their new arrivals, equally excited and apprehensive,bringing usto Sept. 10 and the start of the 2020-2021 school year.

It's not yet knownexactly how many children will walk through the doors of their schools on Thursday, though Education Minister Rob Fleming has said districts are expecting 85 to 90 per cent of students to attend school in person.

Henry stressed Tuesday that reopening schoolsis a crucial test.

"If we do not put our priority as a community on getting children back into the school setting and getting their education, their learning, their social interactions back together, we will have long-term, generational downsides to that.''

With these high stakes, it's a test the provincehopes to pass with flying colours.

With files from the Canadian Press