Stretching from Roseville to Granite Bay, the Eureka Union School District has welcomed nearly 50 Ukrainian families since the start of the war in Ukraine.
Five things COVID-19 has changed about education in Utah
The pandemic has “really, truly acted as the catalyst” to transform education, one educator says.
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Self-portraits of students wearing masks hang on a wall at Crescent Elementary in Sandy on Thursday, Dec. 10, 2020. As Utah school districts struggled to make the most of the pandemic school year, they’ve come away some innovations that are expected to stay long after the coronavirus has subsided. | Updated: 5:23 p.m.
But the pain hasn’t entirely been for naught. As Utah school districts struggled to make the most of the past school year, they’ve come away with knowledge and innovations. Projects that had been bandied around for years, or even decades, suddenly coalesced. New ideas took root.
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Vaccines for Utah teachers have been delayed at least a week â possibly longer
K-12 staffers were slated to get immunized by the middle of January. That timeline has been pushed back at least a week.
(Courtesy University of Utah Health) University of Utah Health unboxes their COVID-19 vaccines, prep the doses, and giving vaccinations to front-line health care workers on Tuesday, Dec. 15, 2020. Doses for teachers, who were supposed to come soon after, have now been delayed.
Utah teachers and school staff will have to wait a while longer to get the COVID-19 vaccine.
The planned immunizations for K-12 personnel are now being pushed back because the state is receiving doses at a slower rate than expected from the federal government. Instead of education employees here getting a first shot by the middle of January, it will be closer to the end of January or early February.