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Hamilton

HWDSB undergoing another 'massive' reorganization in elementary schools

Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board is set to undergo a "massive reorganization" in elementary schools after learning there are 1,700 fewer students enrolled in classes than previously calculated,about half of whom are turning to homeschooling.

HWDSB says 1,700 fewer kids are attending school than previously calculated, with about 50% homeschooling

HWDSB said 1,700 fewer students are attending class during the COVID-19 pandemic. (Maja Hitij/Getty Images)

Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board is set to undergo a "massive reorganization" in elementary schools after learning there are 1,700 fewer students enrolled in classes than previously calculated,about half of whom are turning to homeschooling.

To put that number into perspective,HWDSB'sprediction about fall enrolmentmight be off by 100 or 200 studentsin a normal year, says director Manny Figueiredo. Adifference of 1,700 students, he said, is "unprecedented."

About half of those studentsare in kindergarten, Figueiredosaid. The other half is mostly made up offamiliesacross Grades 1 to 8 who are opting for home schooling instead of in-person or online learning. There are also some who still think it's too early to have kids return to school.

The change in numberswill force classes to converge with each other, he said.It also meanssome full-time educators will be declared surplus from their current roles and moveto different classes or schools.

It will alsolead to the roughly190 part-time educators hired using reserve funds to return to the occasional teachers list, he said.

Ultimately, students and families will need to re-adjust once again during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Hamilton's Catholic board has between 275 and 300 fewer students enrolled than was anticipated, according to board chair Pat Daly.

The school board normally does reorganization in late September or early October, he said. But this year, it willfinalize changes by Nov.3 because of the constant reorganization that took place throughout most of September.

In an email to educatorson Wednesday,Figueiredo called the past eight months the "most challenging in my 25 years of education."

There's another factor to considerby Nov. 3, he told CBC News in an interview Thursday.The board will need to accommodate the number ofstudents who have decided to switch between in-person and online learning.

"I don't like for kids that they develop relationships in their class or with their educator, and some of those will have to change as we reallocate our resources ... this is the COVID-19 factor that we have to adjust,"Figueiredo said.

"I've been surprised by how resilient the students have been. I was worried about how they'll wear masks, how they'll get through the day, but I've been so impressed by how parents have prepared them for school."

Parent didn't want to take risks

Megan Turner, a mother of four HWDSB students, said she pulled her kids out of in-person learning as she watched the number ofCOVID-19 casesin local schools and across the province climb.

"My son has bad asthma, I have a low immune system and we have a two-year-old, so I didn't want to take the chance," she said.

Megan Turner took her kids out of in-person learning because more Hamilton schools began seeing COVID-19 cases appear. (Submitted by Megan Turner)

But she pulled them out beforethe board offered parents time to switch between in-person and online classes. Three of her kids haven't been able to re-enrol into HWDSBfor online learning, which has made trying to teach them at home stressful.

One of her kids is still technically an HWDSBstudent learning online, but Turner hasn't been able to access the board's Parent Portal to help get her other children school resources.

"The school board just got me completely frustrated."

Figueiredosaid HWDSB has been reaching out to familiesto figure out why they aren't attending classes.

Unions have questions about reorganization

The main priority throughout all of this,headded, is to ensurestudents' safety.

Despite some classes converging, students will still be spacedone metre apart. Figueiredosaid the average number of students per class 21 is also unlikely tochange.

While Figueiredo is confident in that assertion, Jeff Sorensen, president of the Hamilton-Wentworth Elementary Teachers' Local union, said every educator he has spoken has said their classes are larger than they were before.

"I don't see how that can't occur without the same number of students being in fewer locations classes will be more crowded than they were before," he said.

"We've heard of some schools losing seven classes."

Sorensen also said it destroys the notion of student cohorting in schools.

"When classes are reorganized, all the students are going to be mixed up All the cohorts that existed from September to October have the potential of not existing anymore."

A row of desks in a class.
HWDSB classes will have to change once again due to another reorganization. (Bobby Hristova/CBC)

It will also disrupt educators' routines.

But Susan Lucek, president of the Canadian Office and Professional EmployeesUnion (COPE) Local527, which mainly represents education assistants, said her members still have no idea how reorganization will affect them.

"The teachers and designated early childhood educators have already heard who has been surplussedand they have to make their choices by 4 p.m. We have heard nothing, other than there have been surplusses ...we don't know where [we'll go], we don't know when," she said in a phone interview on Thursday.

"We're the front-line workers. We work with the most vulnerable students and it seems like we're always an after thought... These students [with special needs] are also being missed out on," she said in a phone interview.

Despite the unknowns, Sorensendoesn't blame HWDSB for all the changes.

"This all could have been avoided if Doug Ford properly funded education back before the school year started," Sorensen said.

"I don't know how anything that happened between Doug Ford's first announcement [and now] is ever going to result in kids or staff being safer It's a cruel joke."