Manitoba students will head back to classes on Sept. 8 - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba students will head back to classes on Sept. 8

Education Minister Kelvin Goertzentook to Twitter on Monday to announced thatteachers and staff will be asked to return to schools on Sept.2and students will follow about a week later.

Teachers and staff will report a week earlier on Sept. 2, education minister says

A blue plastic cup, filled with coloured pencils, sits on a desk in a classroom. In the background, there are empty chairs at a desk, and books in cubby holes.
Classes were indefinitely cancelled in Manitoba on March 31 but learning continued online for those who chose to participate. (David Donnelly/CBC)

Students in Manitoba will return to classes on Sept. 8 nearly six months after they last had a regular school day.

Education Minister Kelvin Goertzentook to Twitter on Monday to announcethatteachers and staff will be asked to return to schools on Sept.2and students will follow about a week later.

The earlier return for staff will provide them with time to get their heads around new health protocols and to prepare spaces with proper distancing. It will also enable them to come up withways to help those students who need some learning recovery, Goertzen said.

"As expected, the experience with at home learning has been difficult for many. While there will be a need for supplemental learning opportunities for many students in the next school year, the desire was that it be accommodated within the school year," he posted.

Brian O'Leary, superintendent of Seven Oaks School Division in Winnipeg, said it's welcome news.

"Schools aren't schools without kids," he said. "I think lots of parents, lots of kids and lots of teachers are kind of Zoomed out at this point."

WATCH | Back to class on Sept. 8:

Back to class on Sept. 8

4 years ago
Duration 1:06
Students in Manitoba will return to classes on Sept. 8 nearly six months after they last had a regular school day.

In anonline statement, the president James Bedford of the Manitoba Teachers Society said the union is pleased for a post-Labour day return, but also frustrated that teachers will be losing out on mandated non-instructional days.

Bedford said teachers and staff will be expected to report to work for three non-instructional daysto prepare for the school year, which reduces the number of remaining professional development or administrative days from ten to seven.

"If there ever was a year where the importance of professional development days is crucial it is this one," he said.

"This move devalues teachers and is very disappointing."

The NDPCritic for Education Nello Altomaresaid the uncertainty of returning to classrooms has caused stress for teachers, parents and students.

Altomare criticized the premier and education minister of refusing to offer support to teachers and educators by laying off thousands of workers and slashing professional development time and other resources for them.

Radean Carter, a spokesperson for the Winnipeg School Division said while the news comes as a relief, there are still many details to be worked outbased on how COVID-19 rates evolveover the next few months.

"We are looking at a number of different scenarios that might play out for September," she said.

"It could be all in class, truly it could be all home learning, it could be a combination," she said. "It's like a big jigsaw puzzle that we're working on."

Students walked out of their schools on March 23, when the government initially suspended classes a week ahead of the scheduled start of spring break. The holiday was also extended for another week beyond its original scheduled ending. At the time, Goertzensaid he hoped it would help against the spread of the COVID-19, as governments were beginning to shut down places that supportedlarge gatherings.

When it became clear that COVID-19 was going to last much longer, in-class learning was cancelled indefinitely by March 31.Teachers continued to assign work, conduct assessments and engage with students online.

But not everyone had the ability to do that from home, so the province said no one's grades would decrease from wherethey were when classes were suspended. Students who wanted and were able to continue with school could use the opportunity to improve their grades.

Premier Brian Pallister had hinted earlier this year thatschools could potentially reopen to resume in-class learning as early as Aug. 31. Togauge thecomfort level of parents and guardians in sending their children back to class, the province undertookan online surveythat covered arange of scenarios including the use of masks, hand sanitizer and bus transportation.

It was based on that feedback that the province decided to reopen classes as they traditionallyhave, after the Labour Day long weekend, Goertzen tweeted.

Schools were allowed to reopen as of June 1 but it was on an extremely restricted basis. Appointments had to be made for one-on-one instruction, assessments, counselling or other limited programming requested by a student.

O'Leary said the return of students on a limited basis this June has been smooth and there have been no cases of virus-transmission among staff or students.

It's his hope all students can return full-time in the fall but he expects there may still be components of remote learning, particularly for older students, he said.

"We're looking at being maybe not quite normal, but a lot closer to normal, in Septemberand we thinkkids need that and we think our schools are going to be ready for that," he said.

Both O'Leary and Carteradded bus transportation is one item that still needs to be worked out, as buses cannot currently run at full capacity.

More details on the full school reopening plan will be announced soon, Goertzen posted.

With files from Jill Coubrough