Some Virginia Black Children Have Restricted Access to In-Person Learning — But It’s Complicated


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3 responses to “Some Virginia Black Children Have Restricted Access to In-Person Learning — But It’s Complicated”

  1. DJRippert Avatar
    DJRippert

    The issue in Northern Virginia is simple – the teachers like working remotely because it eliminates often long commutes through snarled traffic. The impact on children in general and minority children in particular is far less of a priority than teaching from home and avoiding the traffic.

    If Glenn Younkin has any political aptitude at all, this will be a major issue through the summer and into next fall. Northern Virginia could look a lot less blue this November if Younkin forces McAuliffe to publicly support Northam’s idiotic school policies.

  2. CJBova Avatar

    This took a massive amount of work to produce. Thank you.

    One factor that won’t be in VDOE reports is how many school boards were influenced against in-person by teachers active in their unions.

  3. Baconator with extra cheese Avatar
    Baconator with extra cheese

    I love that future Sec Ed Kamras is in a league all his own.
    RVA is armed with 2 US Teachers of the Year leading the charge and this is what the students get.

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