If a family chooses to pivot their pre-K through second grade student to the hybrid learning model, he or she will have two days per week of in-person instruction and three days per week of online learning.
The new schedule would take effect the week of April 5 after all pre-K through second grade students who are already enrolled in the hybrid learning model have successfully begun some in-person instruction.
If a family does not respond to the survey, their student will continue with all-remote learning. Families are also permitted to remain all-virtual or revert back to online-only instruction after originally choosing to partake in the hybrid learning model.
Back to school: Hybrid learning starts for select Philadelphia School District students
WPVI
Monday marked the first day of hybrid learning for pre-kindergarteners through second-graders at 53 Philadelphia public schools.
That includes Hon. Luis Muñoz Marín Elementary in North Philadelphia. They are ready and learning in classrooms right now. They are attentive, they are navigating the virtual space with other partners that are still at home on Zoom, said Principal Amanda Jones.
Teacher Mandie White is excited to see her returning students. I told my husband, I m so glad to be able to talk to someone besides you! she joked.
The School District of Philadelphia gave Action News a behind-the-scenes look at the new safety measures in place at one elementary school as some students return to in-person learning next week.
It s not the first day of school, but it is the first-day in-school for dozens of hybrid students at Juniata Park Academy. I m going to make some friends from school, said student Adrianne Martinez. You can go to the gym and do gym and that stuff. On a computer, you can t do gym, said 5th grader Zohaib Khan.
School district Superintendent Dr. William Hite and Mayor Jim Kenney welcomed students.
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Sonny and Alice Ho during an event at the William Dick School in North Philadelphia, one of the sites where the couple s $100,000 donation will help provide fresh food and nutritional counseling to kids in food-insecure neighborhoods. Ho started working at Dunkin Donuts as a 16-year-old city high school student; he now owns 45 of the Dunkin chain s locations. (Tom Gralish/The Philadelphia Inquirer/TNS)
He owns the same Dunkin’ store where he got his start – and he’s giving back to say thanks
PHILADELPHIA Sonny Ho was a 16-year-old Philly high school student when he landed his first job.
“I was a porter, doing cleanup,” he said. “After school I threw out the trash, mopped the floor, and hosed down the kitchen in the Dunkin’ Donuts at Erie-Torresdale. I made about $100 (a week) and was so happy for it.”