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Grade 7 to 12 students in Calgary’s public and Catholic schools have been granted an extension to online learning for another two weeks, the Alberta government said Wednesday.
In a statement on the Calgary Board of Education’s website, the CBE said Alberta Education approved the request to extend the at-home learning until May 17, “to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on our schools.”
“We are still seeing high numbers of daily COVID-19 cases in our community, and thousands of students and staff continue to isolate,” the board said.
Alberta Education has approved the CBE’s request to have students in Grades 7-12 continue to learn from home for an additional 2 weeks to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on our schools. Classes are now scheduled to resume on Mon, May 17.https://t.co/VEuzFyonN2#yycbe#WeAreCBEpic.twitter.com/vnoQyBB1Cx
Classes are still proceeding normally for students in kindergarten to Grade 6, as well as students participating in Hub online learning or specialized classes that weren’t moved online earlier this month.
“We would all like to see students return to in-person learning as soon as possible,” CBE chief superintendent Christopher Usih said in the statement.
“This was a difficult decision that was made only after reviewing all of the factors that are contributing to significant disruptions in learning.”
Both school boards made requests roughly two weeks ago to have classes move online due to operational challenges with continuing in-person teaching. Specifically, the Calgary school boards were experiencing a chronic shortage of substitute teachers.
In an emailed statement Wednesday, Alberta Education said the extension starts Monday and runs for two weeks.
“At the request of the school boards, Alberta Education has approved an extension for students in grades 7 to 12 in Calgary Public Schools and Calgary Catholic Schools to continue with at-home learning for two additional weeks, starting May 3,” press secretary Nicole Sparrow said.
“We know in-classroom learning has significant benefits, and that this is difficult news to many students, parents and teachers. However, due to continued operational concerns, this exemption is necessary to ensure learning can continue.”
Alberta Education has four key criteria that factor into the approval of a board to shift a school, or a portion of its student population, to online learning, which include:
A chronic substitute teacher shortage
A significant number of students and staff in quarantine or isolation
Recent requests from the board for short-term shifts for schools
Substantial COVID-19 cases in the community
Alberta Health spokesperson Tom McMillan said the restriction around school sports is also in effect as long as students are learning online.
Global News has reached out to the Calgary Catholic School District for more information. This story will be updated once a response is received.
The CBE said that in light of the move to online learning, Calgary Transit would allow students with April transit passes to use those passes throughout the month of May, and May passes that have already been bought can be refunded.
On April 20, Edmonton school boards also moved their Grade 7 to 12 students to online learning.