
 
        
         
		2020 YEAR IN REVIEW 
 The ups and downs of education during the pandemic 
 BY ANGÉLICA ACEVEDO 
 This unprecedented year  
 brought unprecedented change  
 to the largest school system in  
 the country — from an initial  
 shutdown  some  said  took  too  
 long to call, a delayed reopening  
 in the fall, and new challenges  
 for students, parents and school  
 staff alike to grapple with. 
 In early March, after the  
 first  COVID-19  case  in  New  
 York  City  was  reported  at  the  
 end of February and the first  
 in Queens at the beginning of  
 March, some private schools began  
 to close out of precaution of  
 the outbreak. 
 Educators, parents and elected  
 officials then began to call for  
 all public schools to close, in order  
 to get a better handle of the  
 novel coronavirus. However,  
 childcare and meals became a  
 big concern, as working families  
 depended on the school system  
 to ensure their children not  
 only have two steady meals per  
 day, but also have a safe place to  
 be while they’re at work. 
 Queens City Councilmen  
 Francisco Moya and Robert  
 Holden joined Speaker Corey  
 Johnson and Brooklyn Councilman  
 Mark  Treyger  in  urging  
 the city to instead just have  
 schools provide families with  
 free meals. 
 Shortly after, in an emergency  
 address, Mayor Bill de Blasio  
 announced the “painful decision” 
  to close the city’s public  
 school system, which serves 1.1  
 million students. Attempts to reopen  
 schools during the spring  
 semester were in vain, though,  
 as the city and state struggled to  
 keep up with the virus inundating  
 the hospital system. 
 Schools Chancellor Richard  
 Carranza noted families could  
 pick up daily free meals at designated  
 schools and the city’s  
 75,000  teachers  would  undergo  
 intensive training to begin instructing  
 students remotely. 
 But with the new structure  
 came new challenges, namely  
 internet and tech access. 
 The Department of Education  
 (DOE) initially set out to  
 deliver  25,000  iPads,  with  an  
 ultimate goal of 300,000, with internet  
 capabilities to students in  
 need. Some internet providers,  
 like Spectrum, offered free WiFi  
 for a few months — but they  
 were soon met with criticism as  
 some families with unpaid bills  
 couldn’t access it, according to  
 Chalkbeat. They later provided  
 the service for low-income families  
 for a certain period of time. 
 All throughout, school-aged  
 children tried to adjust to the  
 abrupt shift. 
 “I feel sad I cannot see my  
 friends,” Jordan Turkoglu, a  
 first-grader at P.S. 290Q, said at  
 the time. “I have some school  
 work but it’s not a lot and I feel  
 sad I cannot see my teacher. I’m  
 happy because I saw some of my  
 friends on video yesterday. I do  
 want to play with my friends but  
 now I cannot.” 
 Parents, most of whom found  
 themselves working from home  
 for the first time, also had to  
 adjust  to having  their children  
 home all day, every day. Some  
 felt  they  had  to  become  their  
 children’s teachers. 
 One Astoria mother and entrepreneur, 
  Tamykah Anthony,  
 who homeschooled her two children  
 long before COVID-19, gave  
 QNS a breakdown of what a day  
 in her life teaching her children  
 and running her own businesses  
 looked like, with the hopes  
 of encouraging parents to be  
 patient with themselves as they  
 navigate the switch to remote  
 learning. 
 For students with special  
 needs, teletherapy became the  
 default. But that meant parents  
 who normally relied on educators  
 and therapists for their  
 children became overwhelmed  
 and concerned of regression in  
 their development, as a Forest  
 Hills mother with a daughter  
 with autism told QNS. 
 The height of the pandemic  
 caused many New Yorkers to  
 feel hopeless as cases and deaths  
 surged, while people’s everyday  
 life underwent abrupt changes  
 in order to fend off even more  
 heartache. 
 TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.14     COM   |   DEC. 25-DEC. 31, 2020 
 But there were bright moments  
 sprinkled along the  
 darkness, and acts of kindness  
 became more of the norm.  
 Teachers stepped up to the challenges  
 ahead, with some recognized  
 for their efforts to bring  
 joy and lighthearted fun to  
 their students, such as Andrea  
 Feldman,  teacher  at  I.S.  145Q  
 in Jackson Heights, and Tom  
 Carty, principal of P.S./I.S. 49  
 in Middle Village, who sang  to  
 their students to keep them motivated. 
 “Our kids are probably going  
 through a mix of emotions from  
 being worried, curious, scared  
 and nervous about what lies  
 ahead,” said Feldman. “If my  
 silly songs and jokes can help  
 put a smile on their faces and  
 get through this, that’s the most  
 important thing to me.” 
 To respond to childcare  
 needs, the DOE established  
 more than 100 Regional Enrichment  
 Centers (REC) where children  
 of emergency and essential  
 workers could stay during the  
 COVID-19 health crisis. 
 In Queens, one of those RECs  
 was located at P.S./I.S. 128 in  
 Middle Village. Chancellor Carranza  
 and first lady Chirlane  
 McCray paid a visit to the facility  
 in June, which gave a first  
 look at what schools may look  
 like once buildings reopened —  
 children and staff wore masks  
 all day, they had to get their temperature  
 checked at the door,  
 and  indicators  were  placed  on  
 the floor and desks to maintain  
 six feet distance. 
 As COVID cases decreased  
 and Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s reopening  
 plan ensued — bringing  
 back temporarily dormant  
 jobs and businesses — parents  
 and educators anxiously waited  
 to hear a plan for the city’s new  
 public school. 
 De Blasio and Carranza  
 introduced their plan, which  
 included random COVID tests  
 for students and school staff as  
 well as two different learning  
 models: blended learning, a mix  
 of in-person and fully remote  
 school days, or fully remote  
 learning.  
 The  city  promised  100,000  
 childcare seats for students  
 in blended learning, with less  
 than 30,000 of those seats slated  
 to open by the beginning of the  
 school year. Meanwhile, Catholic  
 schools in Brooklyn and  
 Queens mostly prepared for inperson  
 learning. 
 But in the weeks before the  
 original start to the school year  
 in September, teachers and  
 school staff across the city and  
 Queens  —  some  protests  took  
 place in Jackson Heights and  
 Bayside — called for a delay in  
 reopening school buildings,  
 with safety and staff shortages  
 as their main concerns. 
 After negotiations with the  
 United Federation of Teachers  
 (UFT), the mayor announced  
 that schools would open in  
 phases and provide more safety  
 measures  for  each  school  
 community. 
 Students were still getting  
 into the groove of the new way  
 of learning, many missing inperson  
 learning and activities.  
 But some found creative ways  
 to get kids out into their communities, 
  such as Maspeth High  
 School’s  “Maspeth  Making  a  
 Difference” club in which students  
 helped clean up their surrounding  
 neighborhood. 
 But blended learning came  
 with some confusion for some  
 Queens  parents.  In  October,  
 parents at P.S.128 protested over  
 what they said was a lack of live  
 instruction and clear communication  
 from the school. 
 “Why  didn’t  they  organize  
 this  better?  Be  truthful  to  the  
 parents,” one parent, who is an  
 essential worker and asked to  
 remain anonymous, told QNS at  
 the time. “If you decided blended, 
  the rest of the week your  
 child would not have a live instruction. 
  Explain it first, then  
 we could have organized this  
 differently.” 
 A DOE spokesperson said  
 the school was working on getting  
 the needed staff to ramp up  
 live instruction. 
 More than 335,000 families  
 have opted into blended learning  
 after the city’s second opt-in  
 period in November. Opt-in periods  
 were originally meant to  
 take place in a quarterly basis,  
 but that plan was scratched after  
 the city reported lower than  
 expected in-person class enrollment  
 and attendance. 
 But as a second wave threatened  
 to fully shut down schools  
 once  again,  de  Blasio  announced  
 schools would close for  
 two weeks prior to the Thanksgiving  
 holiday. While many  
 parents argued the closure, the  
 decision was based on the city  
 reaching a 3 percent infection  
 rate, a threshold previously negotiated  
 with the UFT to ensure  
 school safety. 
 More than 800 schools returned  
 to in-person learning in  
 the  second  week  of  December,  
 with the DOE establishing more  
 weekly COVID testing and a  
 map of schools that is updated  
 on a weekly basis, showcasing  
 the buildings and classrooms  
 that have closed due  to COVID  
 cases. Just a few days after  
 schools reopened, nine schools  
 in  Queens  were  closed  again  
 due to COVID cases. 
 The city later announced a  
 new plan to address the “COVID  
 achievement gap” for public  
 school students, and rolled out  
 plans to overhaul the admissions  
 process for the upcoming  
 school year. 
 With two COVID-19 vaccines  
 now approved by the FDA and  
 their distribution currently  
 underway as COVID infection  
 rates and hospitalizations see  
 a resurgence, there is no telling  
 what other transformations  
 New York City’s  school  system  
 will undergo in 2021. 
 First  lady  Chirlane McCray,  Mayor  Bill  de  Blasio  and  Schools  Chancellor  Richard Carranza welcome  
 students back to school on Monday, Sept. 21, 2020.  Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Offi ce