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Montgomery County schools to move grades 7-12 to remote learning until 2021 due to substitute shortage

In response to a substitute shortage tied to COVID-19 cases, the Montgomery County School Board made the decision to move a portion of students to remote learning.

Students in grades 7-12 will switch to virtual instruction starting Monday, Dec. 21, until Thursday, Jan. 21.

Montgomery County is facing a significant substitute shortage among teachers and aides due to staff being out of school in connection to COVID-19.

On Thursday, there were 145 vacancies and 118 substitutes needed and only 82 vacancies were filled, leaving 36 staff members without substitutes. Meanwhile, Friday saw 185 vacancies and 144 substitutes needed, leading to 83 vacancies filled and 61 unfilled.

[Montgomery County Public Schools to offer remote learning for remainder of 2020-2021 school year]

Superintendent Mark Miear proposed what the district refers to as “Phase 3, Level 1,” which will begin Monday, Dec. 14 through Dec. 18 and will resume until the end of the semester from Jan. 4 through Jan. 21.

This is what the proposed phase entails:

School board member Sue Kass would like to see the school district go all remote but understands the issues that come with it.

Meanwhile, board member Mark Cherbaka would like to see a bigger reduction and thinks the first week or two back from break should have most, if not all, students remotely learning.

School Board Chair Gunin Kiran says the parents want to see their kids in school. She said she would like to make this move this week and have the ability to change moving forward.

The plan passed five votes to two votes with Franklin and Kass in opposition.


Source: WSLS News 10

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