BCSC will use eLearning on snow days

Bartholomew Consolidated School Corp. Superintendent Jim Roberts addresses school board members and members of the public during a Bartholomew Consolidated School Corp. (BCSC) school board meeting to discuss and vote on a school reopening plan in the BCSC Administration Building in Columbus, Ind., Monday, July 20, 2020. Mike Wolanin | The Republic

COLUMBUS, Ind. — As the possibility of snow flickers in and out of the forecast, Bartholomew Consolidated School Corp. is making a change to its snow day plans.

BCSC school board members have approved Superintendent Jim Robert’s request for eLearning to be used on up to five snow days for the 2020-21 school year. After the first five days, any additional snow days will be made up at the end of the school year. Right now, the last day of school is scheduled for May 26, per BCSC’s online calendar.

“Our staff did a tremendous job, first semester, in bouncing back and forth between instruction models and being as engaging and rigorous as they could be, given the circumstances, to keep moving our kids forward,” Roberts said at Monday’s school board meeting. “That experience has given us faith, belief, that if we do an eLearning day, that it will be done well, and our kids will benefit from it.”

Roberts sent out a statement confirming the change Tuesday afternoon, in which he stated this policy change also pertains not just to snow days, but also “any other necessary cancellation of a school day” during this school year.

Previously, 2020-21 school year had built-in makeup days scheduled for the first week of spring break, March 8-12, with any additional days added to the end of the year. Two of these days have already been scheduled for makeup to accommodate the later start to the school year. Originally, the fall semester was scheduled to begin on Aug. 6, but it was later moved back to Aug. 10.

In light of the school board’s decision regarding snow days, the remaining scheduled makeup days will be part of spring break, which now begins on March 10.

For more on this story, see Saturday’s Republic.