S.F. schools offer limited remote learning opportunities in the fall
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Vaneni Vardanyan tries to reach for the laptop of her daughter, Vardeni Vardanyan, 8, a second-grader at Marshall Elementary School, to close it for the evening at their Mission Bay apartment in San Francisco, Calif. on Tuesday, Feb 2, 2021.Marlena Sloss/Special to The Chronicle
San Francisco schools will offer “extremely limited” remote learning opportunities this fall.
In a message sent to families Thursday evening, the district wrote that they are preparing for a full school reopening, 5 days a week. And, while the district said that in-person learning will best serve the majority of students, “certain students may be medically fragile or would face specific health risks by in-person instruction due to COVID-19,” the letter read.
SFUSD accused of exploiting loophole to receive reopening funds without reopening
SFUSD accused of exploiting loophole to receive reopening funds without reopening
With $12-million in school funding on the line, a group of state legislators is calling out the San Francisco Unified School District. They say the district took advantage of reopening dollars, without actually reopening in-person learning to enough students.
SAN FRANCISCO - With $12-million in school funding on the line, a group of state legislators is calling out the San Francisco Unified School District. They say the district took advantage of reopening dollars, without actually reopening in-person learning to enough students.
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Here s what S.F. parents think about the deal to bring some students back to the classroom in April
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Nate, 5, and sister Bayla, 7, climb a wall as mother Erica Kajdasz watches.Paul Kuroda / Special to The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less
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Nate, 5, is chased by sister Bayla, 7, with mom Erica Kajdasz in the hallway.Paul Kuroda / Special to The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less
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Nate Kajdasz, 5, with sister Bayla, 7, at home in San Francisco.Paul Kuroda / Special to The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less
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Nate Kajdasz and his sister Bayla check out an educational website while their mother, Erica Kajdasz, looks on. Nate’s school isn’t scheduled to reopen.Paul Kuroda / Special to The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less