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Are states giving schools enough reopening guidance?

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States recommendations for reopening schools, though they cover aspects of student health and well-being, lack specificity for supporting the “whole child” post-COVID, a new report says.

Education and health agencies must coordinate to support students across a range of physical and mental health needs, says , a nonprofit research organization.

Child Trends used the Centers for Disease Control’s to analyze school reopening plans in all 50 states.

Those include physical education, nutrition, health education, social and emotional learning, counseling, employee wellness, community involvement and family engagement.


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“Districts may need guidance for all phases of reopening so they are prepared to provide services to students in all learning settings, particularly if shifts in the COVID-19 pandemic require sudden school closures or openings,” the authors of the report write.

The analysis paid particular attention to whether states are offering detailed guidance on phased reopenings as schools move from entirely remote settings to hybrid learning to in-person.

The report rated each plan based on how many competents of the CDC model were included. For example, six statesAlabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Massachusetts, Maryland and Nebraskaaddressed all 10 of the CDC’s whole-child benchmarks in their reopening plans.

Most states provided guidance on a majority of the model’s 10 components, with 46 states covering at least seven.

Here are more highlights from the report’s findings:

  • Social and emotional climate is the component addressed the least in state reopening plans, with 12 states not covering the topic at all.
  • Physical environmentsuch as cleaning, masking and social distancingis the component most often addressed.
  • Most state plans do not provide comprehensive guidance specific to each phase of reopening.
  • While 41 states provide general guidance related to health services, only 14 states provide this guidance specifically for in-person learning.
  • State plans do not often cover different options for service delivery. For instance, 36 states address nutrition generally but only 14 include specific guidance for providing school meals and nutrition services in entirely remote learning scenarios.

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Matt Zalaznick
Matt Zalaznick
Matt Zalaznick is the managing editor of District 91心頭istration and a life-long journalist. Prior to writing for District 91心頭istration he worked in daily news all over the country, from the NYC suburbs to the Rocky Mountains, Silicon Valley and the U.S. Virgin Islands. He's also in a band.

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