Colorado Politics

Denver to offer more in-person learning at middle and high schools next month

Middle and high school students in Denver will have more opportunities to attend class in person after spring break, district officials said Thursday. 

All middle and K-8 schools will offer five days of in-person learning by April 19, Denver Public Schools Deputy Superintendent Mike Ramirez told the school board.

High schools won’t be required to offer five days of in-person learning, but students will have more chances to attend class in person, especially high school seniors and students who are struggling, Ramirez said.

All students will still have the option to learn entirely remotely.

Interim Superintendent Dwight Jones cited decreasing COVID-19 cases and increasing teacher vaccinations as factors that make it easier to boost in-person learning. The majority of school-based staff is already fully vaccinated and the district is on track to reach its goal of full vaccination of all staff by spring break, according to a district presentation.

“All of these things are positive signs that put us in a better position to do more and invite more in-person [learning],” Jones said.

The district will continue to allow each district-run secondary school to set its own in-person learning schedule. Independent charter schools can also set their own schedules.

The majority of district-run middle and K-8 schools already offer in-person learning five days per week. But eight schools are currently offering less than that, with most of those schools operating on a hybrid schedule that combines in-person with remote learning.

By contrast, most district-run high schools are currently operating on hybrid schedules. The district has given high schools several options for boosting the amount of in-person learning, ranging from offering five days of in-person learning to all students to keeping a hybrid schedule but prioritizing certain students to attend more than they do now.

Because limiting the number of students who interact with each other proved more difficult at the secondary level, Denver middle and high school students have had less in-person learning this school year than elementary students, who spend the majority of their day in a single classroom with the same teacher. Secondary students began gradually returning to classrooms in late January for the first time since school buildings shuttered last March.

Chalkbeat is a nonprofit news site covering educational change in public schools.

Schools cancel field trips in Colorado Springs because of a bus driver shortage. The labor shortage has Denver’s RTD canceling light rail trips. Construction worker shortages make housing expensive and scarce. Meanwhile, Senate candidate John Hickenlooper defends decisions by able-bodied adults to avoid taking jobs. (Getty Images photo)
Getty Images
Tags denver

PREV

PREVIOUS

COURT CRAWL | Decisions, vacancies and announcements from the judicial branch

Welcome to Court Crawl, Colorado Politics’ roundup of news from the third branch of government. Find highlights of the major court decisions, announcements of vacancies and appointments and other intriguing news about the legal system. Help wanted: Federal judge > Colorado’s two U.S. senators are looking to fill an upcoming vacancy on the seven-member federal […]

NEXT

NEXT UP

CDC director warns of 'avoidable surge' in pandemic

The United States is poised for another “avoidable” surge in new COVID-19 cases unless the public follows social distancing protocols, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Rochelle Walensky warned Monday. “We are at a critical point in this pandemic, a fork in the road, where we as a country must decide which path we […]


Welcome Back.

Streak: 9 days i

Stories you've missed since your last login:

Stories you've saved for later:

Recommended stories based on your interests:

Edit my interests