Remote Learning Should Continue This Fall
Remote Learning Should Continue This Fall in Tennessee
A growing body of evidence makes it increasingly clear that opening Tennessee schools this Fall represents an unwise and irresponsible political decision that will endanger staff, faculty, students, and students’ families. With a sophomore grandson chomping at the bit to get back with his friends and teachers at the L&N STEM Academy, I do not come to this conclusion lightly. But I have to listen to the facts.
We know, in fact, that pediatricians agree that schools offer intellectual and social development opportunities that healthy kids require. Even so, a spokesman for the American Academy of Pediatrics told Congress on July 23 that schools “really can’t open” in communities where Covid-19 remains widespread . Presently, the Washington Post ranks Tennessee 5th in the nation for new Covid infections per capita.
The facts tell us, too, that many working parents with elementary-aged children are stuck between a rock and a hard place when it comes to making sure their children are properly cared for during the work day. Too, there is ample pressure to re-open schools in hopes of producing good economic numbers in the fall that might resuscitate November election prospects for Trumpsters who have failed to provide the leadership required to manage the pandemic.
Sadly, any short term economic and political gain from forced early re-opening is sure to further delay sustained economic recovery beyond November. After all, the health of the economy is dependent upon the good health of its workers. Opening CONTINUE READING: Schools Matter: Remote Learning Should Continue This Fall