Digging through the piles and piles of stuff in our master bedroom / home office, we came across a few photos that we’d missed earlier in the year.
First, we found William’s class photo for kindergarten, which seems like a relic from another time. The photo was taken in February, and it was just about a month later that William walked out of Mrs. Herrera’s kindergarten class for the last time, not knowing that he would never return. Fortunately, he’s young and full of spunk, so he was fine. But it’s still strange to think about how things turned out.
Second, we discovered a pair of photos from our abbreviated visit to the San Diego Zoo that I’d forgotten to include when I first uploaded the set from our trip. They’re silly posed shots from the entrance to the zoo, but they’re fun and they also feel like they were taken a million years ago.
On the topic of school, plans for next year seem to be coalescing at last. San José Unified School District initially released a proposal last month that was plainly infeasible from the start: it called for the school year to begin with full, in-person instruction without any accomodations to enable social distancing, such as split classes. Their fallback plan was to divide students into two cohorts based on need: one group of children would always attend class in-person, and the other group would never attend class live. I’m not sure you could design a more problematic strategy if you tried.
Fortunately, the school district avoided having to implement their terrible plan thanks to a couple of entirely predictable obstacles. First, they apparently hadn’t run the proposal by the teachers, who understandably objected to being put on the front lines of reopening campuses without the strategies and tools necessary to do so safely. Second, it was clear even at the time the plan was announced that community transmission in our area was probably too high to behave as though nothing had changed. The final nail in the plan’s coffin came when the governor announced that counties on the state’s watch list—including Santa Clara county—would not be allowed to begin in-class instruction until they were taken off the list and remained so for fourteen consecutive days.
So, William will be starting first grade at home, with the possibility of returning to the classroom in October. We’re hoping the district will have a better, more coherent strategy with respect to distance learning than they did last spring, though the fact that they were floating silly ideas about reopening until just a couple weeks ago makes me a little nervous. We’re fortunate in that William is unlikely to miss out on much in terms of academic development and he doesn’t have any special needs that we can’t take care of at home (not to mention the fact we have the ability to stay home with him). But he does miss his friends and being able to run around with them on the playground.




















