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When students return to campuses in coming months, they’ll be carrying their backpacks, notebooks, and a host of shortfalls and deficits accrued over a year’s worth of remote learning.
Some will come back with losses in reading, math or other subjects that they couldn’t master over Zoom classes. Others will show up nervous about meeting classmates they haven’t seen this year, and teachers they know only from screens. Kindergarteners may have missed the building blocks of early literacy, and basic steps in social development. High school seniors, meanwhile, will transition to young adulthood, jobs and college without most of the milestones the senior year usually promises.
On the agenda, Feb 21 sandiegouniontribune.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sandiegouniontribune.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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High school sports could find their way back to fields, diamonds and courts across California. “It’s really about every kid that plays every sport in California now,” said Ron Gladnick, one of the voices behind the Let Them Play movement. Gladnick is also the head football coach at Torrey Pines High School in San Diego. “We believe we’re on.
High school sports could find their way back to fields, diamonds and courts across California. “It’s really about every kid that plays every sport in California now,” said Ron Gladnick, one of the voices behind the Let Them Play movement. Gladnick is also the head football coach at Torrey Pines High School in San Diego. “We believe we’re on.