Washougal School District leaders are confident students will have a rewarding educational experience this fall despite the fact that the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has postponed a return to in-classroom learning.
Some Washougal parents, however, disagree.
During the WSD board of directors meeting held Aug. 11, two parents expressed concerns about the district’s decision to begin the 2020-21 school year online.
Washougal resident Lisa Knapp, a mother of two Cape Horn-Skye Elementary School students, told the school board she thought the education her children received in the spring, when the district was forced to go remote due to the COVID-19 outbreak, was “extremely poor.”
“I don’t want to put them through that again,” Knapp stated in a written comment to the board. “My son, a first-grader, did show-and-tell three times a week online with his class and was offered a packet of worksheets that his teacher distributed but did not reference in the show-and-tell. There was no teaching. It was pathetic. We supplemented it with other materials.”
Knapp said she believes district leaders based their decision to postpone in-classroom learning “on the powerful lobby of educators and fear.”