‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات school. إظهار كافة الرسائل
‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات school. إظهار كافة الرسائل

LAWRENCE JONES: America's children are facing 'unprecedented challenges' as new school year begins

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Fox News host Lawrence Jones broke down the challenges facing America's education system on "Cross Country."

LAWRENCE JONES: We're taking a hard look at the state of our education in this nation. The students in our lives are facing unprecedented challenges as this school year begins.  EX-FAIRFAX COUNTY TEACHER ON GENDER TRANSITION TRAINING: "PARENTS RIGHT ARE BEING OBSTRUCTED LEFT AND RIGHT"

School districts are offering incentives and pay raises to get more teachers into the classroom before August.   
School districts are offering incentives and pay raises to get more teachers into the classroom before August.    (FNC)

We see the consequences of the pandemic in the form of massive learning lapses. We have a youth mental health crisis now deemed a national emergency, but COVID emergency funds approved for education back in 2021 are still sitting unspent. Not to mention, we're in the midst of a nationwide teacher shortage. We know the struggles, but what about the solution? CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

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#LAWRENCE #JONES #Americas #children #facing #unprecedented #challenges #school #year #begins https://www.globalcourant.com/lawrence-jones-americas-children-are-facing-unprecedented-challenges-as-new-school-year-begins/?feed_id=16826&_unique_id=630af427d22fb

Texas high school hazing incident with hot sauce, lap dances sends student to emergency room

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An alleged hazing incident at a Texas high school that sent one football player to the hospital with burn injuries has resulted in 21 students being suspended.

The Alamo Heights Police Department is investigating after 21 students were suspended at Alamo Heights High School in San Antonio, Texas stemming from a hazing incident that sent one student to the emergency room with skin burns to his lower body, KENS-TV reported this week.  The football players were reportedly initiating new players onto the varsity team as part of a school tradition that involved hot sauce, cookies, and lap dances. "The senior boys did an initiation, where they went out to the baseball fields and made the younger players put cookies dipped in hot sauce between their butt cheeks," a source told KENS-TV. "Then, they had to race each other, and if any of the cookies fell out the person would have to eat it. They made them do this in an open space completely naked." BOY, 5, DIES AFTER BEING LEFT IN HOT CAR OUTSIDE TEXAS ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DURING TRIPLE-DIGIT TEMPERATURES

Alamo Heights High School in San Antonio, Texas
Alamo Heights High School in San Antonio, Texas (Google Maps)

The source added that some players had hot sauce thrown at them and that some of the freshman were forced to strip down to their boxers and give lap dances to cheerleaders at the party. "Last week, the District received multiple messages through our anonymous tip line regarding safety concerns and allegations of misconduct by some players on the football team," Alamo Heights ISD director of communications Julie Ann Matonis said in a statement. "The alleged incident did not take place on AHISD property nor was it during school hours. District administrators and coaches had no knowledge of any allegations prior to receiving the reports. The District immediately investigated the matter thoroughly and took appropriate action. Because of student confidentiality laws, the District is prohibited from sharing any additional information." BEDRIDDEN TEXAS MOTHER FOUND IN ‘DEPLORABLE’ HEALTH, OPEN BED SORES AND MOLD ON BODY; ADULT CHILDREN ARRESTED Local sports talk radio host Mike Taylor said on Wednesday that "almost the entire" team was punished for the incident receiving two game suspensions, in-house suspensions, and community service. According to KENS-TV, some victims of the hazing incident will also be suspended.  "Nobody would ever want this to happen to their child," Kara Van De Kieft, a parent of junior high students in the district, told the outlet. "It is something that is a concern to me as a parent of somebody who will be going to the high school next year." The Alamo Heights Independent School District did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.

Alamo Heights High School

Alamo Heights High School (Google Maps)

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The Alamo Heights football team opened their season on Friday night with a 42-39 loss to San Antonio’s Seguin High School. 


#Texas #high #school #hazing #incident #hot #sauce #lap #dances #sends #student #emergency #room https://www.globalcourant.com/texas-high-school-hazing-incident-with-hot-sauce-lap-dances-sends-student-to-emergency-room/?feed_id=16686&_unique_id=630a74dc605e3

Psychologist: School shooter didn't get consistent treatment

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. -- A psychologist who treated Florida school shooter Nikolas Cruz when he was 8 years old testified Wednesday that Cruz was a “peculiar child” who had many behavioral and developmental issues but his widowed mother seemed overwhelmed and wasn’t consistent in her discipline or in getting him treatment.

Frederick Kravitz said he began treating Cruz in 2007 on a referral from Cruz's psychiatrist with Lynda Cruz telling him her adopted son suffered from anxiety and nervousness and had trouble controlling his temper. But she also said he was friendly and got along fine with his peers — claims that a neighbor, preschool teachers and an elementary school special education counselor have testified were not true.

Kravitz said that while he suggested weekly sessions for Cruz, his mother only brought him 15 times over a 13-month span, a decade before he murdered 17 people at Parkland's Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb. 14, 2018.

He said that was a major issue — Lynda Cruz would agree that her son needed more consistent treatment and she needed to be more consistent in her discipline of him and his younger half-brother, Zachary, but did not follow through. She was 57, depressed from her husband's sudden 2003 death and dealing with two “tumultuous” young children, he said.

They would yell, throw tantrums and break furnishings, he said.

“They raised it to an art form," Kravitz said. “Nikolas was easily set off and Zachary seemed to derive some pleasure from pushing Nikolas’ buttons.”

That would set off their mother, something both boys seemed to enjoy.

“She lost her cool frequently and backed down to the boys frequently, which only made the problems worse," he said. He said he tried to work with her, but she felt embarrassed by her sons' behavior and felt people were judging her.

Cruz's attorneys are in Day 3 of their defense, hoping to persuade his jury to sentence him to life without parole instead of death. Cruz, 23, pleaded guilty in October to 17 counts of first-degree murder and the trial, which began July 18, is only to determine his sentence.

The defense is trying to overcome the prosecution’s case, which featured surveillance video of Cruz, then 19, mowing down students and staff with an AR-15-style semiautomatic rifle as he stalked a three-story building for seven minutes, photos of the aftermath and a jury visit to the building.

For Cruz to receive a death sentence, the jury must be unanimous. If one juror votes for life, that will be his sentence.

The defense has focused on the mental and emotional problems Cruz exhibited from his earliest days. Testimony has shown that his birth mother was a street prostitute who abused cocaine and alcohol and as a toddler he was developmentally delayed, often violent towards other children and teased and bullied for his small stature, unusual appearance and odd behavior. When he was 8, he acted like a 6-year-old, at best, Kravitz said.

“He stood out like a sore thumb," he said.

Steven Schusler, who lived across the street from the Cruzes from 2009 to 2015, said that when Nikolas Cruz was 10, his landlord called Cruz “the weird one” to his face, causing the boy “to curl up” like a salted snail. He once saw Cruz running around the house with an air gun, his limbs flailing wildly — a move he demonstrated for the jury.

Kravitz said Cruz had a fear of abandonment because of his father's death and his adoption and had an active “bad imagination.”

“He was extremely fearful his mother would forget to pick him up (at school) and he would be stuck there,” Kravitz said, even though that never happened.

He said Cruz had some signs of obsessive-compulsive disorder — for example, he always had to have exactly eight chicken nuggets.

He said he asked Cruz what his three wishes would be.

“Pokemon, a dog and more Pokemon,” Kravitz said.

Lynda Cruz died in November 2017, about four months before the shooting.

Under cross-examination, Kravitz conceded that Cruz's mother did get him further psychiatric and psychological treatment and might have been reluctant to keep her son's appointments with him because of the $87 per visit copay her insurance required.

Prosecutor Jeff Marcus asked Kravitz is there was anything about Cruz when he was 8 that would have indicated he would eventually commit mass murder. He said no.

“I've worked with some other very damaged kids and certainly to the best of my knowledge none of them have ever acted out like this,” Kravitz said.


#Psychologist #School #shooter #didnt #consistent #treatment https://www.globalcourant.com/psychologist-school-shooter-didnt-get-consistent-treatment/?feed_id=15342&_unique_id=6306775e6e8cd

Former Planned Parenthood president explains why she will not be masking her kids this school year

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In a major about-face, former Planned Parenthood president Dr. Leana S. Wen explained in a Tuesday piece for The Washington Post that she and her family have moved past severe COVID-19 restrictions.

Last fall on CNN, Wen was still saying that masks serve as a "very powerful layer of protection" and until every student is vaccinated and other external measures are in place, the U.S. was "nowhere near" ready to allow children to learn mask-free. Now, as schools begin to reopen again, she said, "I accept the risk that my kids will probably contract covid-19 this school year, just as they could contract the flu, respiratory syncytial virus and other contagious diseases." She noted that with the current variant, "covid in our family will almost certainly be mild" and that "we’ve made the decision that following precautions strict enough to prevent the highly contagious BA.5 will be very challenging."  She illustrated how harsh restrictions have ultimately had their own consequences.

The debate on COVID-era masks has polarized the nation. 
The debate on COVID-era masks has polarized the nation.  (iStock)

FAIRFAX COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD CRITICIZED FOR ‘BAFFLING,’ ‘ANTI-SCIENCE MEMO’ ON MASKING "Masking has harmed our son’s language development, and limiting both kids’ extracurriculars and social interactions would negatively affect their childhood and hinder my and my husband’s ability to work," she explained. Wen recounted that after taking a great many cautionary measures earlier in the pandemic, "it wasn’t easy to change my mind-set to accept covid-19 as a recurring risk. But the high transmissibility of new variants meant that we would have to pay an increasingly high price if our goal was to keep avoiding the virus." She acknowledged that dealing with some level of risk is ultimately part of living a normal life.  "I began trying to think of the coronavirus as I do other everyday risks, such as falls, car accidents or drowning," she noted. "Of course I want to shield my children from injuries, and I take precautions, such as using car seats and teaching them how to swim. By the same logic, I vaccinated them against the coronavirus. But I won’t put their childhood on hold in an effort to eliminate all risk."

FILE PHOTO: A child wears a face mask on the first day of New York City schools, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in Brooklyn, New York, U.S. September 13, 2021. 

FILE PHOTO: A child wears a face mask on the first day of New York City schools, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in Brooklyn, New York, U.S. September 13, 2021.  (REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo)

PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICTS IMPLEMENTING COVID RESTRICTIONS MEET FEROCIOUS COMMUNITY PUSHBACK As a result, she stated that her family has "eased back on our precautions," noting that "We see other families indoors, without masks or testing, and have resumed traveling and attending events." Her kids in particular, who have spent chunks of their youth in a pandemic, will be returning to normal their lives, "Now that they are fully vaccinated, we do not plan to limit their activities, and — like most parents in their school — will not be masking them in the classroom." Yet she acknowledged that what works for her family is not necessarily what should be prescribed for everyone. "To be clear, my family’s decision not to mask our kids should not be mislabeled as being antimask; we would never stigmatize other parents and caregivers for the difficult choices they must make," she explained. "Rather, my approach to this school year reflects the evolution of the pandemic and the acknowledgment that avoiding covid-19 cannot be the singular metric of people’s overall health and well-being." Wen previously came under fire last July when she suggested life needs to be made "hard"for Americans who were not vaccinated, and that those who refused to get the shots should face weekly testing.

Boy and his teddy bear both in protective medical masks sits on windowsill and looks out window. 

Boy and his teddy bear both in protective medical masks sits on windowsill and looks out window.  (iStock)

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP When the CDC relaxed mask guidance for the vaccinated in May 2021, Wen worried that an "honor system" for enforcing it would allow unvaccinated people to lie about their status and put the vulnerable at risk.

In early 2022, however, Wen's statements began to soften when she supported states dropping school mask mandates claiming, "The science has changed."


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/former-planned-parenthood-president-explains-why-she-will-not-be-masking-her-kids-this-school-year/?feed_id=14957&_unique_id=63057bde408a5

Tim Ryan supports Ohio teachers for going on strike, not going to school over 'learning conditions'

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Senate candidate Tim Ryan supports teachers in Columbus, Ohio, going on strike for the first few days of the school year after not being able to reach an agreement with the school board over "learning conditions."

According to The Columbus Education Association (CEA) website, the union filed a notice of intent to strike earlier this month, threatening to not show up to school until they could reach an agreement on their contract with the school board. Democrat Senate candidate Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio., supports the teacher's decision to strike, telling Fox News Digital, "With our kids losing so much ground over the last few years, it’s clear we need them back in the classroom – but that should not come at the expense of their health and safety with no air conditioning, leaky buildings and overcrowding." "I support our teachers standing up for the well-being of their students and urge Columbus City Schools to come back to the bargaining table," Ryan concluded. PUBLIC SCHOOL DISTRICTS IMPLEMENTING COVID RESTRICTIONS MEET FEROCIOUS COMMUNITY PUSHBACK

Rep. Tim Ryan is standing with the teachers in Columbus, Ohio, who are on strike.
Rep. Tim Ryan is standing with the teachers in Columbus, Ohio, who are on strike. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty, File)

A press release from the association stated the reasons for the strike: "At issue is disagreement over learning conditions such as smaller class sizes, full-time Art, Music, and P.E. teachers at the elementary level, and functional heating and air-conditioning in classrooms, as well as adequate planning time, a cap on the number of class periods during the school day, outsourcing positions to private, for-profit corporations from outside the community, and recruiting and retaining the best educators for Columbus students." WISCONSIN SCHOOL BOARD VOTES TO BAN PRIDE, BLM FLAGS FROM CLASSROOMS CEA represents around 4,500 teachers, nurses, psychologists, and several other education professionals in the school district. The teachers plan on remaining on strike until an agreement with the school board is made. 

CEA represents around 4,500 teachers, nurses, psychologists, and several other education professionals in the school district.

CEA represents around 4,500 teachers, nurses, psychologists, and several other education professionals in the school district. (Reuters/Jim Vondruska)

"CEA has consistently maintained that we are fighting not just for CEA members, but for our students and community.  That is why CEA will continue that fight until a fair agreement is reached for the schools Columbus Students Deserve," spokesperson for CEA Regina Fuentes wrote in the release. 

GOP nominee JD Vance is the Trump-backed candidate competing against Rep. Tim Ryan for the open Senate seat.

GOP nominee JD Vance is the Trump-backed candidate competing against Rep. Tim Ryan for the open Senate seat. (LM Otero/AP )

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With no incumbents in the Ohio Senate race, Ryan, who is currently representing Ohio's 13th Congressional District, is running for Senate against Trump-endorsed GOP nominee JD Vance.


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/tim-ryan-supports-ohio-teachers-for-going-on-strike-not-going-to-school-over-learning-conditions/?feed_id=14824&_unique_id=6305185d87968

Uvalde parents demand financial transparency over school security grants

During Monday night's school board meeting, Uvalde citizens demanded financial transparency regarding the millions of dollars in grants announced last week aimed at strengthening school security before children return to the classroom this September.

"We just saw lump sum $100,000 here, $500,000 here," one community member said during the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District meeting. "Now what I would like to see is further breakdown. OK, who is that money going to?"

PHOTO: A meeting of the School Board is held in Uvalde, Texas, Aug. 15, 2022.

A meeting of the School Board is held in Uvalde, Texas, Aug. 15, 2022.

Uvalde CISD vua YouTube

The school board announced last week that it plans to spend more than $3.5 million on projects such as replacing locks, installing fences and hiring more counselors. The school district received grants from the state of Texas, the Department of Justice and the Las Vegas Raiders football team to fund these projects.

Uvalde:365 is a continuing ABC News series reported from Uvalde and focused on the Texas community and how it forges on in the shadow of tragedy.

The district also outlined its plan to offer remote classes this year in response to parents' concerns that their children do not feel comfortable returning to school in person.

Becky Reinhardt, the administrator for virtual learning, said there would not be a limit on the number of students who can be virtual, and that students could switch back to in-person learning whenever they wanted.

PHOTO: A makeshift memorial site to victims stands outside the Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, Aug. 8, 2022.

A makeshift memorial site to victims stands outside the Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, Aug. 8, 2022.

Nick Wagner/Xinhua via Newscom

For their part, the school board members did not speak much about the massacre that killed 21 people in May. They did not answer when asked about the progress of fence-building at the other schools, the likelihood they would conduct their own investigation or the timing of Police Chief Pete Arredondo's termination hearing, which has been delayed twice.

The board will meet next Monday to hear community grievances.


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/uvalde-parents-demand-financial-transparency-over-school-security-grants/?feed_id=11504&_unique_id=62fb325e17e49

Arizona parents arrested trying to get in locked-down school

PHOENIX -- Police arrested three Arizona parents, shocking two of them with stun guns, as they tried to force their way into a school that police locked down Friday after an armed man was seen trying to get on campus, authorities said.

The parents were arrested as they tried to get to their children to protect them, authorities said. Officers in the Phoenix suburb of El Mirage used a Taser to stop two of them as they tried to help a man whose own handgun fell to the ground while he was being taken into custody, authorities said.

The scene at Thompson Ranch Elementary School developed nearly three months after hundreds of law enforcement officers in the small Texas city of Uvalde failed to act for more than an hour as a gunman killed two teachers and 19 students.

No shots were fired at Thompson Ranch, the school wasn't breached and no one was hurt, other than a woman taken to a hospital with Taser injuries from officers who say they were trying to stop her from attacking them.

By the time the confrontations with the upset parents began, police had already confirmed that there was no longer a threat, removed a suspicious package and were planning to begin reuniting parents with the children, El Mirage police Lt. Jimmy Chavez said.

But the school was still on lockdown, meaning no one would be allowed on campus, according to the protocols police and the school district have set up. That's when upset parents demanded to be allowed into the school so they could find their children and began confronting police, authorities said.

“Several parents continued with their agitation, made several statements that they were going to come on campus to help protect their kids,” Chavez said. “As a parent I understand that philosophy. However, there are procedures that law enforcement and the school were following.”

Chavez said a man began pushing to get past officers and as police were arresting him, a man and a woman who had also been confronting officers came to his aid. Officers used a Taser to subdue them and they too were arrested. As the first man was being taken into custody, a gun fell to the ground.

The armed parent will face a weapons charge — guns are not allowed on school grounds — and a disorderly conduct charge. The two parents who were stunned with the Taser will face unspecified charges. The woman was taken by ambulance to a hospital, Chavez said. None were immediately identified.

The incident began at about 10:30 a.m. Friday when school officials called police to report that a man, possibly armed with a gun, was trying to get into a locked school building. He could not get in and was chased off by staff before police from El Mirage and two other agencies arrived at the school, Chavez said.

Officers searching the school to ensure it was safe found a suspicious package and called a bomb squad, Chavez said, and moved some children to another part of the campus.

That's when parents began arriving and the confrontations with officers began, with parents "forcefully pushing on the officers trying to get on to campus."

“The parents need to understand that when the school is on lockdown and law enforcement is on scene, nobody is going to be allowed on campus,” Chavez said.

Chavez said the school lockdown procedures between the school district and law enforced “worked to a T.”

Police later located the man who had triggered the lockdown. He was being evaluated late Friday by mental health professionals and a police statement said charges were pending.,

Efforts to reach El Mirage Police Saturday to get additional information were not immediately successful.


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/arizona-parents-arrested-trying-to-get-in-locked-down-school/?feed_id=10594&_unique_id=62f865bf042a9

Oklahoma parents protest explicit books in public school libraries

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Oklahoma parents on Tuesday night spoke out against explicit library books at a school board meeting. 

Stillwater Public Schools, which serves more than 8,300 students, says their library is selected by professional Library Media Specialists in a statement released to the media. The district said that there is a process by which parents may call for material to be reviewed, and they have not received any such requests recently.

The parents were summoned to speak as their names were called to address matters on the meeting's agenda. 

"You guys probably are aware that TPS [Tulsa Public Schools] and Mustang Schools are going through some accreditation problems via House Bill 1775," said Riley Flack, a parent that spoke at the podium while holding a book. 

Flack went on to say, "[Stillwater] is going to have the same issue if you don't clean it up. And I'm going to find it and I've got some connections that I've made over the last couple of years battling [Stillwater]. I'll bring that to bear."

Flack called out a book titled "It Feels Good to Be Yourself," which he said was in two elementary schools and is about "gender identity." 

"It teaches the kids whether the doctor is guessing whether it was a boy or a girl," he said.

SOUTHWEST FLORIDA SCHOOL DISTRICT PLACES WARNING LABELS ON OVER 100 BOOKS

Protesters and activists hold signs as they stand outside a Loudoun County Public Schools board meeting in Ashburn, Virginia, on Oct. 12, 2021. 

Protesters and activists hold signs as they stand outside a Loudoun County Public Schools board meeting in Ashburn, Virginia, on Oct. 12, 2021.  (ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS/AFP via Getty Images)

Doubling down on the explicit material in the books, a woman named Karen Flack, who lived in the Stillwater community for "35 years," highlighted books at the public library that alarmed her. 

Among the books she flagged at the school board meeting are "The Truth About Alice," a story involving "abortion," and "Perfect," which contains "sexual activities, including sexual assault, profanity, racial commentary, self-harm" and other "high concerns on what the subject matter is."

She said that there is no need for the content in the libraries and compared the books to "video pornography" and criticized it as "not appropriate."

"This is just not appropriate. To me, it's like if you had a section of pornography, video pornography, for kids to check out," said Flack. 

One parent seemed to agree with the inclusion of the controversial material. A woman named Robin, who said she is a former elementary teacher, came to the podium to say that "if we never give our children a broad array of perspectives, we're doing them a disservice and setting them up to struggle when they go out into the wider world."

"But, books that are recommended for the age range that is well reviewed by professionals or award-winning must remain available for our children. I'll quickly add that the addition of new voices doesn't mean the expulsion of others," she said.

"Since books that face challenges are often books that offer diverse perspectives, choosing not to add those voices to our classrooms can perpetuate existing inequities." 

RHODE ISLAND MOM SUES AFTER DISCOVERING ‘SECRET’ ‘ANTIRACIST’ MEETINGS HELD IN DISTRICT

Stillwater Public Schools released a statement in response to the tumultuous school board meeting.

"In every situation, we take parent concerns seriously and hope to partner with them to find a solution that's right for their child. If a child is assigned a book to which the parents object for a class, we ask that they start at that level; alternative texts can be provided for students by their teacher. If there's a book they don't want their child to have access to, we ask that they have a conversation with their school so that their wishes for their child's library access can be honored," Stillwater Public Schools said.

Recently, a southwest Florida school district placed warning labels on over 100 books that related to race or the LGBTQ community, deeming them "unsuitable for students." The district started adding the labels in February based on a "Porn in Schools Report" issued by a conservative group.

Parents all over the country have been speaking out against coronavirus-related mandates in schools and progressive curriculums that have been associated with critical race theory or gender theory. 

Parents and community members attend a Loudoun County School Board meeting, just 40 minutes from Fairfax, Virginia.

Parents and community members attend a Loudoun County School Board meeting, just 40 minutes from Fairfax, Virginia. (REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein)

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Education advocates have highlighted CRT curriculum in schools and opposed COVID-19 related mandates and lockdowns, with these issues leading to protests and recalls of school boards across the nation.

Republican elected officials in several states have sought to ban discussion of gender ideology and critical race theory in classrooms, particularly for young students.


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/oklahoma-parents-protest-explicit-books-in-public-school-libraries/?feed_id=10538&_unique_id=62f835ea79ec1

Philadelphia school district mandates masks for first 10 days of school year, pre-k must mask up all year

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The School District of Philadelphia is mandating that students and staff wear masks for the first 10 days of the school year, and is requiring that pre-kindergarten attendees mask-up all year.

Officials from the school district and city made the announcement in a letter to parents on Friday, stating that after the first 10 days of the school year, from Aug. 29 through Sept. 9, most schools will go mask-optional.

The letter states that when the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention COVID-19 community transmission level is high, students and staff will be required to wear masks in schools. When the level is medium, masking is "strongly recommended."

Students and staff at the district's Pre-K Head Start program, the district's income-driven pre-kindergarten program for ages 3-5, will be required to wear a mask for the entire 2022-2023 school year, according to the announcement.

FOX NEWS POLL: MORE CONCERN OVER CORONAVIRUS THAN MONKEYPOX

Students play outside at recess as coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions are lifted in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Students play outside at recess as coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions are lifted in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Reuters/Hannah Beier)

"For the first 10 days of the new school year – from August 29 through September 9 – all students and staff will be required to wear masks while in school, regardless of the COVID-19 Community Level," the announcement reads. "Students and staff at PreK Head Start programs are still required to wear masks at all times, regardless of the Community Level."

There are also instances when an isolated mask requirement might be implemented, such as a school-wide or classroom COVID-19 outbreaks, or when returning from extended breaks and holidays. 

The district is also implementing a "mask to stay" program, stating that students and staff who have been exposed to COVID-19 can stay in school but must wear a mask for 10 days.

CREIGHTON UNIVERSITY STUDENTS' COVID-19 VACCINE MANDATE APPEAL DISMISSED

Students return to school as coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions are lifted in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Students return to school as coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions are lifted in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Reuters/Hannah Beier)

If a student tests positive for COVID-19, they are required to isolate at home for at least five days, but can return to school afterward if they're symptom-free "but must wear a high-quality (N95 or KN95) mask for an additional 5 days and must eat in a designated area," the announcement reads.

Dr. Marc Siegel, Fox News medical analyst and professor of medicine at New York University Langone Medical Center, said there's "no public health value" in making students and staff mask-up for the first 10 days of the school year.

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A student reflects her lunch bag on a wall in a hallway as coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions are lifted in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

A student reflects her lunch bag on a wall in a hallway as coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions are lifted in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Reuters/Hannah Beier)

"The whole thing is, mandates aren't working at all. So, you know, they just obscure the question about whether there's any public health value in actually doing any of this. I mean, I think if you're at a high risk, there is. So if I was in an area with a lot of spread, and I was at high risk, I might choose to wear a mask indoors. But there's no evidence that these mandates doing anything.

Siegel added that "mandates for ten days are like a sign of hypocrisy."


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/philadelphia-school-district-mandates-masks-for-first-10-days-of-school-year-pre-k-must-mask-up-all-year/?feed_id=10188&_unique_id=62f7048ca06ba