Disrupted schooling will deepen inequality for American students
Learning and the pandemic
THE FIRST meeting between teachers in Montpelier, Vermont, before the start of the autumn term is usually festive—hugging over breakfast and coffee. This year they had to make do with an online videoconference. After a scramble in the spring (to set up online learning, pack lunches for poor pupils who relied on them and ship computers to those without them), the district plans to let younger pupils return for in-person learning on September 8th. High school will remain partly online because the building is too small to allow social distancing. The young pupils who can return will need to wear masks, keep their distance and have temperature checks before entering school buses or buildings.
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Learning and covid”
United States August 29th 2020
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- QAnon conspiracy theorists could prove awkward for Republicans
- Meet Guo Wengui, Steve Bannon's Chinese-exile friend
- Wisconsin’s summer of fury
- The Kennedy name no longer assures victory, even in Massachusetts
- Disrupted schooling will deepen inequality for American students
- Other countries show that schools need not be pandemic hotspots
- Hail to the king
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