Schools

Fredericksburg Schools Follow National Trend In Going Virtual

Only a quarter of students nationwide will attend daily in-person school, a survey shows.

School districts across Virginia, including in the city of Fredericksburg​, are in line with the nation's majority.
School districts across Virginia, including in the city of Fredericksburg​, are in line with the nation's majority. (Shutterstock)

FREDERICKSBURG, VA — More than half of American K-12 public school students won’t be going back to the classroom so far this school year because of the coronavirus pandemic, according to an ongoing survey that looks at thousands of school calendars nationwide.

School districts across Virginia, including in the city of Fredericksburg and surrounding counties, are in line with the nation's majority.

Districts across the nation have been debating whether to open schools and, if so, how. And parents have been agonizing over whether to send their kids if and when schools do open.

Find out what's happening in Fredericksburgwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The Burbio.com study shows 52 percent of students across the country are going to begin the 2020-2021 school year online, while 44 percent will attend some form of in-person learning in the fall, and 4 percent of school districts remain undecided as of Aug. 11.

“What we found was similar regions across the country were doing similar things,” Dennis Roche, president and co-founder of the Pelham, New York-based Burbio.com, told Patch.

Find out what's happening in Fredericksburgwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

“A lot of big cities flipped about a week-and-a-half ago,” Roche said, specifically mentioning decisions made to go fully remote in Chicago and Pittsburgh.

“And then in places the size of Bergen County, New Jersey… they are all hybrid.”


See also: How Will School Look In A Pandemic? Like A Hot Mess, Many Say


The Burbio study looked at more than 80,000 K-12 school calendars across 12,000 school districts, actively monitored more than 35,000 schools, and reviewed district plans every 72 hours to account for changes. See the survey’s full methodology here.

Of the 200 largest school districts across the country, the survey found that 66 percent will be going all virtual. The smaller the school district, trends show, the more likely it is that students will be headed back to the classroom.

“The more communication there is between the teachers, the board and the parents is where they seem to be getting back into school,” Roche said, pointing to a map that shows how often students in each county are going to be in school.

Among the 44 percent of students nationwide that will have in-person schooling, 25 percent will go to school daily to start the year while 19 percent will participate in some form of hybrid model that combines learning in school and at home.

Roche said the number of districts going virtual “could slip a little higher” than the 52 percent it stood at on Aug. 11.

“We aren’t seeing any schools that were going to be virtual switching to in-person,” he said.


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