WASHINGTON – Public Schools in Washington, D.C., will partially reopen their buildings to select students beginning Nov. 9 in a multi-pronged approach as the nation's capital struggles to return to normalcy amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Bowser said Monday there was “a real urgency” to get students back to school buildings safely.
D.C. Public Schools Chancellor Lewis Ferebee said students in sixth grade and above would continue with full-time distance learning until the next school term, which starts in early 2021.
Instead of the original two-day-a-week hybrid model, students will be in school all five weekdays, with Wednesday as a half-day.
About a dozen public charters, which are largely independent and educate about 46 percent of public school students, have been bringing in select groups of students using similar criteria for in-person instruction.