How Trump's Push to Reopen Schools Backfired
In June, with the coronavirus crisis appearing to hit a lull in the United States, teachers and parents around the country finally began feeling optimistic about reopening schools in the fall. Going back into the classroom seemed possible. Districts started to pull together plans. Then came a tweet.
SCHOOLS MUST OPEN IN THE FALL!!! President Trump declared on July 6, voicing a mantra he would repeat again and again in the coming weeks, with varying degrees of threat, as he sought to jump-start the nations flagging economy.
Around the same time, caseloads in much of the country started to climb again. In the weeks since, hundreds of districts including nearly all of the nations largest school systems, along with scores of rural and suburban districts have reversed course and decided to start the school year with remote instruction.
By some estimates, at least half of the nations children will now spend a significant portion of the fall, or longer, learning in front of their laptops.
Rising infection rates were clearly the major driver of the move to continue remote learning. But Mr. Trumps aggressive, often bellicose demands for reopening classrooms helped to harden the views of many educators that it would be unsafe and give their powerful unions fodder to demand stronger safety measures or to resist efforts to physically reopen.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/how-trumps-push-to-reopen-schools-backfired/ar-BB17UA17?li=BBnb7Kz