Sarah Guay, a Kailua parent of three, needs to be extra cautious these days. The human resources professional, who works from home, recently went through chemotherapy for an aggressive form of cancer and will soon start radiation.
Told by her doctor she would need to take extra precautions due to the threat of coronavirus, Guay does not leave the house except for the occasional trip to the grocery store.
Still, the 46-year-old Guay is adamant that her two youngest children, a first-grader and fourth-grader at a Hawaii Department of Education elementary school, return for face-to-face instruction for their own social, emotional and academic well-being.
鈥淓ven in this situation, I feel there鈥檚 an opportunity to have a safe plan for them to return,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 that committed to that possibility. If I believe there鈥檚 a way to do this, there has got to be a way.鈥
That even someone in Guay鈥檚 current circumstance is so keen on seeing her kids return to school she would be willing to relax strict personal safeguards is a reflection of how desperately some parents in Hawaii want to see their kids back in class.
It鈥檚 been almost three months since the start of the school year for DOE schools. They have stuck mostly to distance learning for most of the state’s 174,000 public school students.
Many private schools in Hawaii have brought back students, if only on a staggered or alternating basis. Some DOE schools are gradually bringing back their lowest grades this month though others have notified parents they won鈥檛 return to in-person instruction until at least January.
In some cases, like Kalani High, it’s the older kids who are returning first, starting with seniors on Nov. 23 on an alternating twice-a-week schedule.
Hawaii, according to based on the U.S. Census Bureau鈥檚 , showed the least change from May to September when it came to school closures and reliance on distance learning.
In other words, the data shows that while many states returned to in-person learning by the fall, Hawaii as a whole has been among the slowest to return.
across the Aloha State begs the question of what a safe classroom or campus does or should look like in the current environment. Is it possible to bring students back safely right now?
“That’s a really complicated question,” said Michael Ching, a pediatrician and president of the . “It requires making sure those risk mitigation strategies are in place. COVID-19 is not evenly distributed in our population 鈥 there are communities that are more affected and communities that are less affected.”
By now, from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the state health department and public health officials has produced a generally accepted line-up of baseline safety measures: keep masks on during the day, wash hands vigorously and often, keep kids contained in small groups, make sure to have students and staff stay home if sick or someone in their household is exposed to the virus.
But some schools are interpreting what’s safest for their students in different ways.
The , for instance, is intent on securing desk shields through a school-wide fundraising effort.
Tom Jackson, head of the PTO, said the board decided to launch the effort 鈥渙ut of necessity and in an attempt to put returning students, parents and faculty members at ease.鈥
鈥淭he idea came from seeing these desk shields spotlighted through other various media outlets,鈥 he said in an email. 鈥淭eachers should not have to pay out of pocket for school supplies.鈥
The Hawaii DOE has supplied to schools such as face masks, gloves, isolation gowns, disposable shoe coverings, hand sanitizer, thermometers, bleach, disinfectant spray, wipes and pump bottles.
The DOE ordered a three-month supply of PPE beginning on Sept. 9 through the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency, covered by $3 million of CARES Act money allocated to HI-EMA by the Legislature.
This order can satisfy DOE’s PPE needs through at least February, according to Bruce Ellerman, coordinator at the DOE Office of Facilities and Operations. The department has set aside $4 million to assume PPE costs for the rest of the school year when the HI-EMA supply runs out.
To put the $3 million cost of a three-month supply of PPE into context, that鈥檚 the total amount spent by Punahou so far to bolster its COVID-19 .
At the K-12 Oahu private school, which charges $27,000 in yearly tuition, kindergarteners through the fifth grade are now back in school each day, while middle schoolers are alternating one week on, one week off. 鈥淎cademy鈥 students, or high schoolers, returned to campus Oct. 13.
The school has imposed strict safety protocols, including providing K-8 classes with desk partitions and grouping students into smaller class sizes and cohorts.
One key to ensuring a safe return is keeping the virus at bay through open communication with families, said , director of analytics and planning and co-chair of Punahou鈥檚 Pandemic Response Team.
鈥淥ne thing we鈥檝e really tried to pay attention to and the most important way to reduce risk is to keep sick people off campus,” said Loo, a 1992 Punahou graduate. “If we don鈥檛 have infected people on campus, we can have the same kind of operation as we did on campus.鈥
Punahou also maintains and updates a on the latest COVID-19 cases in the community and a weekly summary of what they鈥檙e seeing as far as any elevated temperatures among the school community.
Evolving School Guidance
The Hawaii Department of Health’s relies on a seven-day average of daily COVID-19 cases and percent positivity rate as thresholds to determine when it’s safe for kids to come back.
Some researchers contend such things like case incidence and test positivity thresholds are no longer the most pressing questions for school leaders.
, an epidemiologist with Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, said such numbers are not necessarily representative of the level of risk to a school community since an outbreak in a long-term care setting or other sequestered community could artificially inflate those numbers.
“It can give a perception of rising risk in the community, when in fact the rising cases are happening in a location that doesn’t necessarily raise risk to the average member of the community,” she said.
According to an on safely reopening schools by , schools should offer “clear instructions for families” and also staff up school nurses, promote flu vaccine education and consider holding classes in outdoor spaces or larger spaces like the cafeteria or auditorium rather than small classrooms.
“I think what’s important to remember is, (school reopenings) can be done and it can be done well, it just takes a lot of commitment by the families, kids and staff,” Coffin said.
Here in Hawaii, there鈥檚 been little need for total school closures, mostly because so few schools have reopened completely. Lanai High & Elementary recently had to close due to a COVID-19 outbreak on the island and Kapolei High also shuttered for a week when several staff members tested positive within a few days of each other.
The Hawaii State Teachers Association, the union that represents 13,500 public school teachers, is still wary of bringing students back right now.
“Do I believe Oahu is safe? No, I do not,” said HSTA President Corey Rosenlee. “Do I believe neighbor island schools could potentially go back? If metrics are met and other DOH standards (are) met.”
, a K-12 school in Manoa Valley that has brought back all students so far but its high schoolers, has recorded only one positive case among auxiliary staff, according to Leigh Fitzgerald, VP of academic affairs.
The school has hired people to monitor study halls before and after school so students have a place to hang out in a socially distanced way and don鈥檛 cluster together in hallways. It also brought on 40 additional in-house substitute teachers to allow for smaller class sizes and cut the standard eight periods in a day to four longer periods so students don鈥檛 move around as much.
鈥淚 think schools can be creative with new purposing,鈥 Fitzgerald said. 鈥淲e removed everything from classrooms that weren鈥檛 imperative to make room for kids and desks.鈥
One key piece of advice she offers is to 鈥済o slow鈥 and 鈥渄on鈥檛 rush things鈥 when it comes to reopening a school.
Guay, the Kailua parent, said her children鈥檚 school, Kainalu Elementary, is planning to bring back its youngest students in phases.
Her first-grade son will soon be going back to school twice a week, where he will be placed in a small group. The school has also built outdoor learning spaces and benches. Her fourth-grade daughter may not return until January.
鈥淚t is better than nothing,鈥 Guay said.
鈥淚 think we鈥檙e all doing our own calculus around safety and what we鈥檙e willing to accept from a risk perspective,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e thought long and hard about it and decided there are ways to mitigate the risk.鈥
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