How the first week went at 2 P.E.I. schools - Action News
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How the first week went at 2 P.E.I. schools

After a six month hiatus, students, teachers and administrators found themselves back inside the halls of P.E.I. schools this week.

'We're taking it one day at a time'

P.E.I. students are back to school. Here is how it's going

4 years ago
Duration 8:33
This fall's return to school is unlike any other. Kerry Campbell speaks with Norbert Carpenter of the P.E.I. Public Schools Branch about how it's going.

After a six month hiatus, students, teachers and administrators found themselves back inside the halls of P.E.I. schools this week.

Schools shut down to in-person learning in March, with most students never returning to the buildings, except maybe to clean out their lockers. Bloomfield Elementary principal Andrew Stewart says the first week went smoother than many may have expected.

"Kids are really resilient and really adaptable, and we've watched them this week," he said.

"We're amazed right from the first day that, you know, it almost seems normal to them. They seem to have caught on so quickly."

Test run

For Gulf Shore Consolidated principal Maria Lavoie, the week also served as an opportunity to test out the new procedures and protocols that have been prepared since it was announced students would beback in the classroom come September.

Bloomfield Elementary principal Andrew Stewart says he's focusing on taking things one day at a time. (John Roberston/CBC)

"Kids did get sick this week. We did have to have them walk out of a classroom, sanitize it and remove all the students until that process was done," she said.

"The first time that happened, we were kind of a little bit nervous because it was like a fire drill wondering, 'OK, who goes where?'"

The first few days were mostly filled with teaching students about the new COVID-19 protocols, like when to wear their masks and how to travel around the school.

Gulf Shore Consolidated principal Maria Lavoie says pandemic or not, students are always approaching learning on different levels. (John Roberston/CBC)

Lavoie said the transition seems to have taken place rather quickly, andteachers and students seem to already be in the habit of hand sanitizing and wearing masks.

"These schools aren't meant to be quiet places. There was 178 days between March 13 and September 8," she said.

"To have the halls alive again and have that chatter and energy in the building was fantastic. That's how schools are supposed to be."

Back into a routine

Charlotte MacLaine, a Grade 9 student at Gulf Shore Consolidated, said it's exciting to get back into a routine and be productive.

"It was kind of weird to even just go back to what normal school would have been, but I think now it's been a few days, I think I'm used to the new routine and it's going well," she said.

"I like it a lot better than online school because I get to see my friends and I actually it's a lot easier to ask questions to my teacher."

Grade 9 student Charlotte MacLaine says she's happy to be getting back into a routine. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

As for filling the learning gaps created with the shift to home learning, Lavoie said this is a part of the classroom COVID or not.

"Students are always at different places in a classroom, and that's not necessarily different in a classroom. There would be a huge range of abilities and that's not any different," she said.

"We're adjusting and it's nice to see the learning happening again in classrooms."

The province has said masks are encouraged when physical distancing cannot be maintained. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

Both principals said they have had to make adjustments as the week progressed, particularly around drop-offs and pickups, as well as how the cohorts move around the playgrounds, but it's all part of the new normal.

"I think we're taking it one day at a time, and I think, you know, throughout COVID, and just even our regular lives, that's sort of what we have to do," Stewart said.

"That doesn't mean that we're not preparing for different scenarios."

More from CBC P.E.I.

With files from John Robertson