Second Clayton County school to end year virtually due to COVID-19 spike
By FOX 5 Atlanta Digital Team
Published
CLAYTON COUNTY, Ga. - Clayton County Public Schools announced Sunday a second school within the district will complete the year virtually due to an increase in COVID-19 cases.
The district released a statement saying it is aware of an increase in COVID-19 cases at Sequoyah Middle School in Riverdale and, starting Monday, the school would pivot to virtual instruction.
The school district said it is sanitizing classrooms and other possible infected areas on the school.
The district said it has suspended food service for Sequoyah Middle, which also served Harper Elementary School. The district advised students to receive meals via drive-up service from Riverdale Elementary, Riverdale Middle or Riverdale High School on Monday and Tuesday. The district plans to announce alternate meal service options for students on Wednesday.
EDMOND For the first time in Edmond Public Schools history, a woman will lead the district in a non-interim role.
Angela Mills Grunewald will succeed longtime Edmond Superintendent Bret Towne, who will retire at the end of the 2020-21 school year. The district Board of Education chose Grunewald, Edmond’s associate superintendent for educational services, in a special meeting Tuesday.
Aside from an interim superintendent in the early 1990s, Grunewald will be the first female superintendent of Edmond schools. She has served as a principal and administrator in the district.
With 23,600 students, Edmond is the fourth-largest school district in Oklahoma, behind Epic Charter Schools, Tulsa Public Schools and Oklahoma