Smiles and squeals in San Francisco

[ad_1] It’s back to school day in San Francisco, and thousands of parents and children are waking up far earlier than they have all summer to start the 2024 year. The coming year will bring hardship: The school district is mulling closures, and parents across the city have voiced opposition and fear that their children’s…

Photographer

[ad_1]

It’s back to school day in San Francisco, and thousands of parents and children are waking up far earlier than they have all summer to start the 2024 year.

The coming year will bring hardship: The school district is mulling closures, and parents across the city have voiced opposition and fear that their children’s campus will be on the chopping block. There are still too few teachers across the city, enrollment is declining, and the state has stepped in to manage a budget shortfall and propose cuts.

But on Monday, it was mostly smiles and delighted squeals at the schoolhouse gates.

Marshall Elementary

At Marshall Elementary School at 1575 15th St., students and parents trickled into the front gates at 8:30 a.m. Kindergarteners took turns taking pictures in front of a blue-and-white poster reading “Bienvenidos,” surrounded by colored balloons.

“I’m so excited,” said Isaha about entering third grade. He stood posing alongside his mother, Sarah, and his younger brother Elijah, who is entering kindergarten.

“I’m so excited that my brain is going to grow!” said Elijah, glancing at his mom. Entering kindergarten, Sarah said, he’s a bit nervous — it’s both of the siblings’ first year at Marshall.

A woman stands smiling with two boys in front of a colorful balloon arch next to a "Back to School" sign. The boys are holding backpacks and smiling.
Isaha, Sarah, and Elijah (left to right) at Marshall Elementary on back to school day, Aug. 19, 2024. Photo by Zenobia Pellissier Lloyd.

But they seemed prepared: They squirmed and readied themselves to go through the gates. Isaiah peered through a gap in the fence and watched older kids play basketball on the blacktop.

“What matters is that they come to school right,” Sarah said. “And act right.”

“And have fun!” Isaiah added. With that, he darted inside and within minutes was on the basketball court himself. Sarah and Elijah watched from the side of the court with other parents until the school bell rang.

[ad_2]

Source: missionlocal.org