However, assemblies would be allowed to take place outdoors, with physical distancing in place. Protocols for health and physical education classes were still being developed by the TDSB, however, provincial guidelines dictate that swimming pools, gymnasiums, changing rooms and indoor weight rooms can reopen with physical distancing in place. Under TDSB guidelines, singing classes can take place indoors with masks worn and outdoors without masks, with cohorts maintained in both instances.
Guidelines for musical instruments had not yet been finalized, but are allowed under provincial rules. School buses can operate at full capacity, with masks worn at all times, assigned seating and the seat behind the driver left empty.
Students must wear masks indoors at all times. Staff must also wear masks, and eye protection as well if students have removed their masks. Virtual classes at both secondary and elementary schools will be conducted by dedicated teachers. If numbers are too small at a given school, virtual classrooms will be created from a cluster of schools.
Students may opt to change between in-person and virtual learning just once, in February The TDSB emailed selection forms to more than , parents and guardians in early August, to choose whether their children will go back to in-person or virtual learning.
On Tuesday, the province announced it would open up appointments for any children turning 12 this year, when appointments were previously limited in many health units to age 12 and older. Kieran Moore, said Tuesday at a press conference that the province is implementing a vaccination policy for teachers along with other public employees to prepare for a possible fall surge in COVID cases.
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All rights reserved. To order copies of Toronto Star articles, please go to: www. Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first. While there are 21 schools in Toronto with active COVID outbreaks two or more confirmed cases linked to school settings within 14 days and at least one of the cases likely acquired the infection at a school setting , officials said this is the first recent whole-school dismissal. In addition to the nearly two dozen outbreaks, public health staff reported there are also 30 active investigations in educational settings.
All students will be moving to remote learning during this time. World Canada Local. Students in underutilized schools might lose access to some programming and overcrowded schools lead to more dangerous conditions during the COVID pandemic.
The other problem, says Pilkey, is that even if the TDSB could get access to EDCs, they can only be used to purchase land, not spend on the board's repair backlog. That's why the TDSB, Progress Toronto and other advocacy groups are asking the province to allow boards to spend EDCs on repairs, renovations and the construction of new schools.
The TDSB lost a court fight against the province in June; the board argued not being able to collect EDCs was against the "fundamental purpose" of the legislation. In the decision, Justice Michael Penny acknowledged a few reasons why the TDSB has excess capacity, specifically most secondary schools were built with the assumption that the majority of students would attend public high schools. Also, the abolition of Grade 13 added to the problem," he wrote.
Pilkey says more money would be available for repairs if the TDSB could consolidate and close schools with low enrolment and then sell the buildings and land. Instead, she says, the board is spending money on repairs at schools that would be cheaper to tear down and build anew rather than complete all the repairs.
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