More St. Louis-area high school students will have the opportunity after the Christmas break to learn from inside a classroom instead of their homes.
That鈥檚 if plans from school leaders hold over the next several weeks. Administrators stress that all plans are tentative when trying to run a school district during a pandemic.
Several school districts in the region told 漏 2024 外网天堂 they plan to add or resume in-person learning options for middle and high school students in January, in most cases after an all-virtual buffer week following the holidays.
The biggest change will be for high school students. They've had to endure virtual learning the longest as educators prioritized getting younger children, who struggled the most with distance learning, back in classrooms first. District officials said they didn鈥檛 have the staffing necessary to get all grades open.
鈥淚n order to keep our elementary schools open, we decided to marshal our resources,鈥 Wentzville Superintendent Curtis Cain said. 鈥淪o we have literally deployed middle and high school staff throughout our elementary to keep them open.鈥
Wentzville is one of several districts, along with Parkway, Jennings and Mehlville, that plan to reopen high schools after closing them in the fall. All but one school district in St. Louis County started the year virtually. A drive to bring students back to school that began in August with young children hit a roadblock shortly after Halloween.
In Mehlville, staff shortages also made it too difficult to keep all grade levels open. Superintendent Chris Gaines said he was able to find substitute teachers for fewer than half the open classrooms some weeks, so he made the decision to close high schools again after reopening them just three weeks prior, to consolidate staff.
鈥淲e thought that was going to be the best group to push back to remote learning. That way, we can keep the little guys in as long as we could,鈥 he said.
Mehlville has hired about two dozen more subs, Gaines said, after the human resources department 鈥渟hook the trees.鈥 He鈥檚 optimistic high schools will reopen in January as planned, but the final decision won鈥檛 be made for a few more weeks.
Some districts, including Wentzville, have taken advantage of a change in quarantine rules the in November.
Elsewhere in St. Louis County, Ritenour and Ladue school districts plan to open high schools next month for the first time this school year. Ladue Superintendent Jim Wipke said he planned to reopen the high school after Thanksgiving until the virus surged and more staff members were quarantined.
So Wipke delayed the high school reopening. 鈥淎nd then we'll start back with a fresh semester,鈥 he said.
High school students who choose to return to classrooms will likely do so for two or three days per week and attend virtually the rest of the time.
University City will add in-person learning for seventh and eighth grade in January. Meanwhile, some districts 鈥 including Hazelwood, Ferguson-Florissant and Maplewood Richmond Heights 鈥 have no set plans to reopen for any grade levels.
Many middle and high school students in St. Louis will have an in-person option for the first time in the new year. St. Louis Public Schools, Lift For Life Academy, Confluence Academies and KIPP St. Louis charter schools are among school systems planning to reopen middle and high schools in January for students who want to return.
SLPS families were split nearly 50-50 on whether they鈥檇 keep their children virtual or send them to school in the third quarter, a district official said.
High school students report a waning amount of motivation to get schoolwork done and and depression. Grades have dropped for high schoolers around the country.
鈥淏ecause your teachers aren't in front of you every day, you don't get to see your peers. So not seeing that every day really puts a heavy toll on your brain,鈥 said Aldo Estrada, a senior at McCluer High School in Florissant. 鈥淎nd psychologically, it doesn't allow you to have the same motivation you had when you physically went to school. All you have to do is turn on your laptop, which isn't that exciting.鈥
Teachers and district staff are also feeling the strain. Wentzville Superintendent Curtis Cain said many of his employees feel like they鈥檝e already worked a full school year at the halfway point. The winter recess will be extra important this year for staff to have the energy to make it through the spring term.
鈥淚 think we need to meter ourselves out a little bit differently,鈥 he said.
Optimism varies among school leaders about whether the spring will go more smoothly than the fall and students will stay in school once they return. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 just the conundrum,鈥 Mehville鈥檚 Gaines said.
In Wentzville, Superintendent Cain said he鈥檒l take his lessons from 2020: 鈥淚 just think we need to walk in with the mindset that we didn't control everything in the fall.鈥
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