When Adair Roop broke the news to her six-year-old daughter Ana that she wouldn’t be going back to school this year, she broke down and cried. “Ana would come in and cry and just say, ‘I’m not having a good day today mommy, I miss my friends and miss my teacher,” said Roop.
The COVID-19 pandemic has closed schools and turned our education into a solitary at-home experience for tens of thousands of students across the region.
As the school year winds down, many parents and students are now left wondering what September will bring. Whether you call it at-home, online, or emergency remote learning, it has been a learning experience on its own. “One thing that’s worked for us is just trying to be relaxed about our expectations,” said Roop. “I