About one-third of parents in Boston, Massachusetts have decided to keep their children learning remotely at home rather than returning back to school.
About a week and a half after grades K-8 were allowed to return to in-person learning, data shows more than 10,000 eligible students at home, according to the Boston Herald.
STAY IN THE KNOW
Watch NBC10 Boston news for free, 24/7, wherever you are. |
|
Get Boston local news, weather forecasts, lifestyle and entertainment stories to your inbox. Sign up for NBC Boston’s newsletters. |
The district's superintendent told the Herald that only half the number of students they were expecting to return actually came back. Some parents said they don't trust safety measures at schools, but others said their children were falling behind in remote classes.
The results were not split evenly. More than 70% of first graders returned for in-person learning compared with 55% of eighth graders who did the same.
Get top local stories in Boston delivered to you every morning. Sign up for NBC Boston's News Headlines newsletter.
There was also a differences by race among high schoolers, who still can't come back full time. Of the students learning in-person, about 60% are white, 30% are Asian and 45% are Black and Latino.
Those numbers are being reported as Boston Public School officials consider launching a permanent remote school.