34 THE QUEENS COURIER • KIDS & EDUCATION • MAY 27, 2021  FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
 34 k TiHdE QsU E&EN Se CdOUuRIcERa • tMiAoY 2n7, 2021  FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM 
 QCC students help 10K New Yorkers get vaccinated 
 BY JENNA BAGCAL 
 jbagcal@schnepsmedia.com 
 @jenna_bagcal 
 Students  at  a  Bayside  college  have  
 helped in the process to administer nearly  
 10,000 doses of the Pfi zer COVID-19  
 vaccine, just a month aft er the school  
 opened as a vaccination center. 
 Since April 21, patients have gotten  
 vaccinated at Queensborough College’s  
 Robert F. Kennedy Hall. Th  e site is operated  
 Report: Over a 1/4 of NYC families worried about sending children back into classrooms 
 BY ALEJANDRA O’CONNELLDOMENECH 
 adomenech@schnepsmedia.com 
 @AODNewz 
 A new study conducted by Councilman  
 Brad Lander and City Council candidate  
 Justin Krebsfound over a quarter of New  
 York  City  public  school  families  with  
 children  enrolled  in  fully  remote  learning  
 are “unsure” about sending their children  
 back  into  physical  classrooms  this  
 fall  or  will  “most  likely”  not  send  them  
 back into schools. 
 Over  100  families  with  at  least  one  
 child  enrolled  in  fully  remote  learning  
 across the fi ve  boroughs  participated  in  
 the study, released last week, which was  
 conducted  via  phone  over  four  days  by  
 members  of  the  candidate’s  campaigns.  
 Although  the  number  of  survey  participants  
 is small, the report provides insight  
 on how some public school families feel  
 about the possibility of returning to classrooms  
 this fall. 
 Th  e purpose of the survey — according  
 to Krebs and Lander, who’s running  
 for  city  comptroller  —  was  to  fi nd  out  
 why  families  chose  to  keep  their  children  
 in fully remote classes and what it  
 would  take  for  them  to  come  back  into  
 classrooms this upcoming school year,  
 according to a statement from the current  
 and hopefully elected offi  cials. 
 Most  of  the  families  that  took  part  in  
 the survey, 64 percent, said they were  
 “very” or “somewhat” likely to send their  
 children back to in-person classes this  
 fall.  A  little  over  20  percent  of  families  
 said  they  were  “still  uncertain”  about  
 their  plans,  while  15  percent  said  they  
 were “very or somewhat unlikely” to send  
 their children back into school buildings. 
 Out  of  the  111  families  that  participated, 
   52  percent  said  nobody  from  the  
 Department  of  Education  had  reached  
 out in regard to their child’s return to inperson  
 classes next year. 
 Families  reported  the  health  and  safety  
 measures that gave them the most  
 confi dence  about  sending  children  back  
 into schools were if students and family  
 members were vaccinated, if students  
 and  teachers  were  still  required  to  wear  
 masks and maintain social distance, and  
 if schools maintained smaller class sizes,  
 according to the survey. 
 Th  e  bulk  of  participating  families  told  
 survey  takers  they  are  unhappy  with  
 remote  learning  and  want  their  children  
 to go back to in-person classes but  
 that “they just want to know it’ll be safe,”  
 according to release. 
 Th  ere remains just over a month left   
 in the current school year, but offi  cials  
 have been reticent about what next year  
 will look like for students. Mayor Bill de  
 Blasio has said the city working to bring  
 back every child to school for in-person  
 classes for fi ve days a week. 
 But  many  questions  about  logistics  
 remain unanswered such as distancing  
 requirements, how many teachers will  
 instruct their classes in person or if there  
 will be a fully remote option available for  
 students. Krebs, who is running to represent  
 Brooklyn’s 39th City Council district  
 and is a father of three in public schools,  
 worries that the city is still operating too  
 much on a crisis mentality. 
 If the mayor does not publicly announce  
 a central vision for school reopenings, “it  
 will lead to what we had last summer  
 which was chaos and rumors and secondguessing,” 
  he told amNewYork Metro. 
 “Th  e science and data show our schools  
 are safe and we are planning for every  
 child to be back in school full-time, fi ve  
 days a week in the fall,” said DOE spokesperson  
 Danielle Filson. 
 Filson added Chancellor Porter is now  
 taking  part  in  fi ve  borough-wide  “family  
 engagement  forums  to  answer  questions  
 and make sure everyone feels comfortable  
 and  excited  for  what  will  be  a  
 welcoming, engaging and pivotal school  
 year.” 
 Filson added the DOE has for months  
 been  hosting  weekly  “Reopening  
 Community  Roundtable  meetings  with  
 internal and external stakeholders who  
 advise  and  partner  with  us  on  the  planning  
 and implementation for fall reopening. 
  Schools have also been doing outreach, 
  and we will be working with them  
 over the coming weeks and months in  
 supporting our families as we prepare for  
 full reopening in the fall.” 
 by the New York City Department of  
 Health and the Hospital for Special  
 Surgery.  
 According to the school,  
 dozens  of  nursing  and  
 emergency medical technician  
 students  work  
 one eight-hour shift  per  
 week, assisting a team  
 of  physician  assistants, 
   nurses  and  
 nurse practitioners. 
 “We  help  with  
 the workfl ow, check  
 in patients, direct  
 some  traffi  c  
 and observe  
 p e opl e  
 for  side  
 e f f e c t s  
 after  they  
 have  their  vaccination,”  said  Veronica  
 Javellana,  a  fi rst-year  nursing  student  
 from Sydney, Australia. 
 Back in Australia, Javellana worked as  
 a certifi ed midwife but switched  
 to nursing once she moved to  
 the States. 
 “My  specialist  qualifi cation  
 was  not  transferable  
 here,  so  I  decided  to  do  
 nursing at Queensborough  
 to  get  all  the  foundation  
 knowledge I need to pursue  
 my bachelor’s in  
 nursing,”  she  
 said. 
 Staff  and volunteers at QCC’s vaccination  
 site administered more than 1,000  
 doses  of  the  Pfi zer  vaccine  on  opening  
 day last month. According to state  
 data, approximately 1,219,489 people in  
 Queens received a least one dose of any  
 COVID-19 vaccine and 978,770 people in  
 the borough are fully vaccinated. 
 “It’s a great experience for our students  
 to work with Hospital of Special Surgery  
 staff , who administer the vaccinations and  
 manage the site. We’re serving the community  
 and we love it,” said supervising  
 nurse professor Nancy Mobyed. 
 First-semester Queensborough nursing  
 student Dave Meketansky also worked for  
 eight years as an EMT with the Glen Oaks  
 Volunteer Ambulance Corps, which covers  
 neighborhoods in northeast Queens. 
 “As a volunteer we’re keeping people  
 safe. We had 568 people here in just four  
 hours one day last week,” Maketansky  
 said.Th 
   e volunteer added that the patients  
 who come to the site refl ect the community’s  
 diversity and helps to foster a sense  
 of trust between those getting and administering  
 the vaccine. 
 “Th  at goes long way in getting people  
 vaccinated,” he said. 
 Vaccinations are available Wednesday  
 through Sunday at 221-05 56th Ave. For  
 more information, please visit www.qcc. 
 cuny.edu/vaccine/index.html. 
 Photo via Getty Images 
 Photo courtesy of QCC 
 Dave Meketansky is a fi rst semester  
 Queensborough nursing  
 student assigned to  
 the vaccination site. 
 
				
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