Most of Alberta’s students will return to in-person learning on Tuesday.
Students have been attending classes online since May 7 when the government ordered all kindergarten to Grade 12 students be sent home for just over two weeks as the province dealt with surging COVID-19 case rates that threatened to overwhelm Alberta’s hospitals.
Thousands of students in higher grades in Edmonton and Calgary had already been working from home.
Get weekly health news
Education Minister Adriana LaGrange said in a news release last week that the two-week plan has been successful in nearly all areas of the province, and she’s confident all students will finish the remainder of the school year in the classroom.
Read more: Alberta Teachers’ Association pass non-confidence vote on education minister with 99% in favour
The exception is kindergarten to Grade 12 students in the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo, which includes Fort McMurray, whose students will continue to learn from home until at least May 31.
- Officials urge Calgarians to play it safe on the water this summer
- Trent University receives $57.7M in Ontario funding to prepare students for in-demand careers
- Calgary families cut out of school bus service for upcoming year
- Camrose students protest disturbing rape, mutilation messages shared on Snapchat
The release explained that case numbers Wood Buffalo have not been trending downward at the same rate as in other regions.
Comments
Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.