Sunday, October 10, 2021

Plan For Opening School for Term 4

 Like a lot of people, I imagine, I've done some grieving about our Covid situation. However, since the movement from 4 to 3 and the further relaxing of the restrictions I've comforted myself with the view that even if we'd stayed in Level 4 or not relaxed the Level 3 conditions we'd still be in almost exactly the same position.

What I've been grieving about the most is the return to school. I felt we had done a good job on maintaining learning during lockdown. Our focus on wellbeing and connection first seemed to maintain a good enough level of engagement. I was truly feeling that with a return to school in Term 4, with exams delayed and Learning Recognition Credits, that we would be able to support our students to have qualification success.

Right now, I don't think schools should be fully opening up on October 18th because too many of our population, especially the most vulnerable, are not vaccinated. I fear schools will become super spreader environments.

So what can we do? We need a plan that supports graduating students to gain their qualification while maintaining a school environment that is safe for students and teachers.

I have a plan that I believe would work for our school, and with a little mindshift, it should work elsewhere. It requires a couple of starting points in the way we think about qualifications for 2021.

  • we need to focus on only those students who are graduating this year
  • we need to temporarily (if you must) suspend the acceptance of calendar year qualifications
    • any student in Year 12 who is returning next year does not need to gain Level 2 in 2021. They will pick it up in 2022 as they begin their journey towards Level 3. If a school has NCEA Level 2 credits as a prerequisite for Level 3 they need to throw that out and have teacher judgement on a student's ability to cope with Level 3 as the only prerequisite.
School Opening Plan Term 4

Schools open on October 18th only for students who are graduating at the end of the year (all Year 13s and some Year 12s). We have already surveyed our students in Year 12 as to who will be or may be leaving (very small group).

Schools create a timetable for those students and the affected staff only.

  • I suggest Monday Subject 1 all day, Tuesday Subject 2 all day etc. The advantages of such a timetable are:
    • sustained time for students and teachers to identify where learners are at and to create next steps forward
    • easier student/teacher bubble management to keep people safer. Teachers coming in for one or two full days, rather than chopping and changing blocks and periods throughout the week seems safer to me.
Classes for Years 9 -12 (we don't do NCEA Level 1) would continue on-line as they have been operating for most of Term 3.

Of course, all appropriate health and safety measures which are required for Alert Level 3 (apart from bubble size and composition) would be in place.

Keen to hear what you think.

6 comments:

Unknown said...

I find this very reassuring. School back as usual on Oct 18th is just not a safe option. Your plan to support those that NEED to get back to school is a sound one. The fish hooks I can see are rooted in the societal perception that teachers are "babysitters". I wonder if the suggestion for schools to open for term 4 is more about releasing parents back to the workplace rather than getting getting students back to learning. The whole day in one subject space is also a powerful mechanism where by a teacher can be present one day a week to focus and support the "in school" students, with the other days of the week for the continuing online learning for other students.

Thanks for giving this thought and pulling together the words that have allowed me to BREATHE - I have been very anxious at the prospect of returning to school before our vax rates are robust enough to protect our vulnerable. Did I ever tell you how happy I am that if we had to do covid years - I am SO happy I am doing it at HPSS.

Anonymous said...

I look forward to hearing how the one day per subject is received. Sounds like a great idea going forward. Imagine once a term having something like this where for example, the maths department can run a day. Teachers can move around and assist students. Some fun activities, presentations, bit of physical energising.

owelle said...

This is so clever! Hope the govt sees sense.

Chris Allen said...

Hi Maurie. I think this idea has real merit. With the numbers of infections trending upwards, I think there would be some real anxiety out in the community if you just opened all the doors on Oct 18.
Just thinking of some practicalities for our context: I am not sure we'd be able to do a day per subject as we have over 25 subjects in L3 BUT, can see doing it by option lines. And that would make the TT easier too. Just tinkering with this idea - not sure that we could sustain a whole day of one subject but might consider half days. This would get through every subject much sooner but be in a big enough period of time to make some real impact.
Thanks for providing more food for thought.

Patrica said...

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