English, asked by priyashukla9904, 9 months ago

As a part of e-learning drive your school was invited you to visit. The New Learning, E-learning a prominent company. Write a report on the visit for your school magazine in 150-200 words ​

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Answered by srishiam
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Answer:

Thank you for all you have done for students this past year. You have worked incredibly hard to get schools reopened, meet students' needs, and address the impacts of COVID-19 on your school communities. Your efforts have not gone unnoticed, and I am honored every day to serve our country with you. Today, I write to ask for your assistance with vaccinations, screening testing, and summer learning and enrichment opportunities.

We have made tremendous progress in the past few months, but we still have work to do to ensure that every student has the opportunity and confidence to return to the classroom this fall and start making up for lost instructional and extracurricular time this summer. We need your help more than ever to make in-person learning five days a week a reality this fall, and what you do over the coming weeks and months will truly make a difference.

Both vaccination and testing are critical factors in the Administration's goal to safely reopen all of America's schools and offer five days of in-person instruction to all families each week.

I urge you to do all you can to help students age 12 and up, their families, and all school staff with getting vaccinated. COVID-19 vaccines are the most effective strategy we have to protect people from getting sick and to reduce the risk of people spreading COVID-19. It is up to all of us to protect the members of our school communities from the harms of COVID-19, and vaccinations are the most important safety measure we can take.

To boost the vaccination rates in your school community, I ask you to take the following steps:

First, for our superintendents, if you have not already, stand up a vaccination clinic at your school sites, and for state officials, please support your districts with this critical work. Attached with this letter is a Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) toolkit (https://wecandothis.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/2021-06/(508%20Compliant)On-Site%20Vaccination%20Clinic%20Toolkit.pdf), developed in consultation with the White House, with recommendations on how to effectively work with your local health partners to stand up a vaccine clinic for your staff and eligible students and their families as soon as possible. To learn more about the Health Center Program, visit: https://bphc.hrsa.gov/about/.

Second, launch a campaign to encourage eligible students, parents, and staff to get vaccinated and share with them the safety and effectiveness of vaccines and why they are critical to protecting individuals from COVID-19 and lowering community transmission. Share this information with limited English proficient parents and students by providing it in their primary languages. Many families see their teachers and school administrators as some of the most trusted figures in their communities―your culturally responsive, accessible guidance and encouragement will be critical. We encourage you to use your voice and your platforms to encourage students and parents to get vaccinated, and to organize events in your community this summer and in the lead up to school reopening focused on vaccination and reopening. You can partner with community- or faith-based organizations, labor, and others to get students and/families out to get vaccinated. You can also collaborate with student leaders to make efforts fun and get young people to participate.

As part of these efforts, we encourage you also to consider implementing creative incentives and initiatives to boost excitement and vaccine participation and use these opportunities to partner with local community-based programs, including early childhood education providers. For example, Ohio has created in-state scholarship lotteries for students who get vaccinated; in Los Angeles, secondary schools that exceed a 30% vaccination rate will receive $5,000 grants, and Head Start programs have partnered with a school district and local hospital to host vaccination satellite sites; and teens in Detroit are leading virtual sessions for their classmates encouraging them to sign up for vaccines. These are just some of the creative approaches states and districts are taking all over the country to

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