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California Schools Unlikely To Reopen This Academic Year

Student athletes run past a scoreboard at Hoover High School in San Diego's City Heights neighborhood, Feb. 21, 2017.
Tarryn Mento
Student athletes run past a scoreboard at Hoover High School in San Diego's City Heights neighborhood, Feb. 21, 2017.

California schools should plan on teaching from afar for the rest of the academic year because it's unlikely the coronavirus will allow them to reopen before summer, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Wednesday.

“The right thing to do for our children, the right thing to do for the parents, for households, for the community which they reside, is to make sure that we are preparing today to set our school system up where we are increasing class time, but increasing it at home,” Newsom said.

That means, he said, “fulfilling obligations through distance learning and other mechanisms to make sure that we're educating our kids, but not doing so physically on the school sites.”

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His comments follow guidance to districts Tuesday night from state Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond. It's not a mandate, but it will give school districts the cover to do what many already felt was necessary, said Troy Flint, spokesman for the California School Boards Association.

Flint said Thurmond's letter gives districts the "security they feel they need to make a decision and explain that to their communities.”

RELATED: California Governor: Most Schools Likely Out Until The Fall

Still, many districts, teachers and students are struggling to adapt to at-home learning, particularly in California's rural areas where access to wireless internet can be sparse. Google announced Wednesday it will give free Wi-Fi to 100,000 rural households and provide 4,000 Chromebooks to students in need. The Wi-Fi will be delivered through mobile hot spots provided by T-Mobile.

Linda Darling-Hammond, president of California's State Board of Education, said roughly 20% of California students lacked internet access at home when schools closed several weeks ago. Districts have found resources to cut that by half.

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“We need more Googles,” Newsom said. “We still have a little bit more coverage that we're going to need in some of the more remote parts of the state.”

California Republican U.S. Rep. Devin Nunes interpreted Thurmond's letter as tantamount to a statewide closure order. He said such a move is unnecessary. A rural school of fewer than 100 children in Nunes' Central Valley district remains open.

"The schools were just canceled out here in California, which is way overkill," Nunes said in an interview on Fox News. “It's possible kids could have gone back to school in two weeks to four weeks, but they just canceled the rest of the schools.”

Virginia, Kansas and Arizona already closed schools for the rest of the year. California, the nation's most populous state, has more than 6 million students across 10,000 schools.

Californians are under a statewide stay-at-home order that requires most people to stay inside except for essential activities such as grocery shopping or going for a walk.

Newsom, the father of four children 10 and under, thanked women — moms and teachers, in particular — for bearing the brunt of coping with the new reality of children being at home rather than at school.

“There's a gender reality connected to this, and I just want to go deeply to express an appreciation to all of the moms, all those teachers, all those caregivers. I know how stressful this is. Trust me, I know,” he said.

The California Federation of Teachers, one of the state's unions, supports the recommendation that schools close for the academic year, said president Jeff Freitas. Looking ahead, teachers need more access to professional development as well as guidance on online learning, grading and teaching students with special needs from afar, he said.