Upper elementary students can return to Philadelphia’s public schools later this month

Students with backpacks outside school
Students waiting to enter Juniata Park Academy on the first day back to in-person school March 8 (Dale Mezzacappa / Chalkbeat)

Philadelphia students in upper elementary grades can return to in-person classes starting April 26, district officials announced Monday. 

The Philadelphia Federation of Teachers has cleared as safe for occupancy 23 additional buildings required for this part of the reopening.

Students in third through fifth grade who opt for hybrid learning will be able to attend two days a week, along with students with complex needs in sixth through eighth grade, in the district’s Phase II rollout of in-person learning. Families can select hybrid learning as part of a survey that opens Tuesday and closes April 13. Students whose guardians don’t respond to the survey will remain remote full time.

Staff members involved in the latest phase of reopening are scheduled to return to buildings April 12. Families who choose to return will be notified of next steps April 19.

Students in prekindergarten through second grade began returning to buildings March 8 in a three-week rollout that ultimately included more than 150 buildings. Of more than 20,000 eligible students in pre-K through second grade, about 30% opted for hybrid, the district said. Under the model, half the students attend on Monday and Tuesday and the other half on Thursday and Friday, with Wednesday being all-virtual. 

The March opening was the district’s fourth try to return students to classrooms as the hybrid plan was repeatedly delayed due to parents and teachers’ concerns about whether schools were safe. As a result of a negotiated mediation process, the union conducted a thorough review of conditions in all buildings and classrooms, especially around the adequacy of ventilation. 

Since the reopening, two schools have been temporarily closed due to cases of COVID-19. The district and the Philadelphia Department of Health have promised a dashboard tracking all the positive coronavirus cases recorded in schools, but have not yet provided one. The Caucus of Working Educators and Parents United for Public Schools have created an unofficial dashboard tracking cases based on communications from principals to staff and families.   

The list of 23 newly cleared schools for Phase II are: AMY at James Martin, AMY Northwest Middle School, Baldi Middle School, Roberto Clemente Middle School, Russell H. Conwell Middle School, Carver Engineering & Science High School, Crossroads Accelerated Academy, Crossroads Academy at Hunting Park, Feltonville Arts & Sciences Middle School, Feltonville Intermediate School, Girard Academic Music Program (GAMP), Warren G. Harding Middle School, Hill-Freedman World Academy, Julia R. Masterman middle and high school, Middle Years Alternative (MYA), Penn Treaty middle and high school, Philadelphia Learning Academy - North, Philadelphia Juvenile Justice Service Center, Science Leadership Academy at Beeber, Tilden Middle School, General Louis Wagner Middle School, Grover Washington Jr. Middle School, and Woodrow Wilson Middle School.

The district’s website  provides more information on school opening protocols.

 

The Latest

Many feared FAFSA delays and glitches would translate to fewer college students, especially those from lower-income backgrounds. But more students than expected showed up this fall.

CPS CEO Pedro Martinez said he has been asking for the city to contribute more Tax Increment Financing funds to CPS in order to stabilize its budget.

Weisberg, the department’s second in command, oversees a sprawling portfolio. Can he keep the system steady in the wake of Banks’ sudden resignation and chaos at City Hall?

The delay comes as this year’s fifth graders will be able to apply widely to middle schools across the city for the first time, instead of largely being limited to their home zone or district.

Unraveling education protections for newcomer students would put millions of children at risk.

La eliminación de las protecciones educativas para los estudiantes recién llegados al país pondría en riesgo a millones de niños.