About two weeks into the school year, Caroline Hood got a pair of dreaded e-mails from Kenny Community School in Minneapolis: Both her kindergartner and her first-grader had been exposed to COVID-19, triggering a 14-day quarantine required by Minneapolis Public Schools.
"I kind of lost my mind," Hood said. "It's really frustrating."
The start of school this fall amid a rise in COVID-19 cases has brought fresh challenges for families and educators trying to keep students from falling behind academically as they cycle in and out of quarantine. Districts' policies for how long students must isolate after a COVID exposure vary, and so do the approaches to keeping them plugged into schoolwork.
Distance learning, a default option for many districts last year, isn't offered in many districts this fall. So the burden often falls on parents — many of them also scrambling for child care — or individual teachers who make packets of school work to send home with students or arrange online activities students can access on their own.
"Having this now be the third academic year impacted by COVID is just unimaginable," said Denise Specht, the president of Education Minnesota, the state teachers union. "We again have to talk about what's working and not working for the students and the educators."
In St. Paul, teachers are encouraged to use a "blended learning" model, meaning the students in the classroom and in quarantine complete the same independent assignments on their iPad.
"That started off shaky, but we're learning," said John Bjoraker, principal of St. Paul's Farnsworth Aerospace School's PreK-4 campus. He recently held a training with the staff about how to better prepare for student quarantines and communicate with families. "We're really stressing that the purpose is that students maintain that connectedness to their class. We want to provide as many opportunities to participate in that same schoolwork as possible."
Requiring teachers to simultaneously instruct in-person students and students in distance learning — as some schools did last year — exhausted teachers and disrupted learning for all the students, Specht said. "That's one thing that districts are agreeing on."