Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Getting it Right: Reopening our Nation's Schools. A National Town hall on Sat. Aug. 15 from 12-4 pm.

This Saturday August 15, I will be co-hosting the second half of a four-hour program called "Getting it Right" from 12 -4 PM EST on school reopening and how best to educate students during the pandemic.   My panels will focus on issues with remote learning and health and safety.  There is an amazing set of panelists; see below. 

You can watch at the Washington Teachers' Union Facebook page; listen live on WBAI 99.5 FM in NYC or at wbai.org; and/or register at Zoom at https://bit.ly/31mpSfh.  


              National Town Hall: Getting It Right: Reopening Our Nation's Schools


Educators, Health Experts, Civil Rights Leaders to Discuss the Chaos, Complexities, How Best to Reopen Schools

Melissa Harris-Perry to Moderate Opening Panel

WASHINGTON-The Washington Teachers' Union, WPFW-FM and WBAI-FM are co­ sponsoring a national town hall on Aug. 15 to discuss the chaos, complexities and most effective ways to reopen our nation's schools; it will feature national education, health and civil rights leaders, teachers and social workers.


"Getting It Right: Reopening Our Nation's Schools" will be aired live on WPFW 89.3 FM in Washington, D.C., and audio streamed on wpfwfm.org; aired live on WBAI 99.5 FM in New York City and audio streamed on wbai.org; and can be seen live on the Washington Teachers' Union Facebook page- www.facebook.com /WTU1ocal6.

The four-panel, four-hour town hall will be on Aug. 15, from noon to 4 p.m. EDT:


Noon-1
p.m. EDT:


The opening panel, moderated by Wake Forest University's Maya Angelou Presidential Endowed Chair Melissa Harris-Perry, will focus on the state of reopening schools, the chaos and politics involved and the inequities for disadvantaged children that COVID-19 has exposed. Panelists include:

       American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten

 

       Washington Teachers' Union President Elizabeth Davis

               Florida Education Association President Fedrick Ingram

               Dr. Reed Tuckson, co-founder, Black Coalition Against COVID-19

       April Goggans, core organizer, Black Lives Matter DC

  1  p.m. - 2 p.m. EDT:

Moderated by WPFW's Askia Muhammad and D.C. teacher Michelle Bollinger, this panel will focus on what's happening on the ground across the country and lessons learned from the spring months of remote learning. Panelists include:

       Texas AFT President Zeph Capo

 

       Dallas-area teacher Misty Griffin, who resigned rather than be forced to teach remotely from her school

               Detroit Federation of Teachers President Terrence Martin

               Providence, R.I., first-grade teacher Ashley Davis

    Western Washington University professor Joheen Neem will address concerns about the future of public education as well as how the COVID-19 situation could encourage more privatization

 

2  p.m. - 3 p.m. EDT:


Moderated by WPFW's Askia Muhammad and WBAI's Leonie Haimson, the panel will focus on technology for remote learning: how effective it has been; how to do it well; problems providing disadvantaged children access to devices and Wi-Fi; advice for parents; and lessons learned from the spring.

       WTU President Elizabeth Davis 

       United Teachers of Dade President Karla Hernandez-Mats

       Washington, D.C., teacher Ashley Kearney

 

       Lyndsie Galizia, Fairfax County, Va., school-based tech specialist. The county had a very difficult remote rollout in the spring.

 

       Grace Hu, Washington, D.C., parent/ community activist will address tech issues and lack of investment for disadvantaged children.

 

3  p.m. - 4 p.m. EDT


Moderated by Aslda Muhammad and Leonie Haimson, this panel will focus on the physical and mental health issues that families, educators and others are dealing with.

       Dr. Melissa Clarke, health educator and member of the Black Coalition Against COVID-19


       Dr. Jennifer Lighter, NYU Langone Health pediatric infectious disease specialist

 

       Mary Balla, Washington, D.C., teacher on task force about moving a portion of law enforcement funds to social and emotional learning programs

 

       Maureen Eigenfeld, New York City school social worker, works in a high-needs Bronx middle school.

 

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

NYC schools should not open. People will die if they do.

Don’t let these speakers say there is a safe way, there isn’t.

josh Karan said...

Leonie: This looks to be terrifically informative.
Please record it for viewing on zoom during subsequent days.

Josh Karan