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Natick Public Schools: Masks mandatory to start the year; new COVID-19 testing program may debut

August 10, 2021 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

The Massachusetts Department of Education’s priority is to get all students back in classrooms for a full schedule, with lunches, for the 2021-2022 school year, and the job for Natick Public School and town leadership is to make that happen here logistically.

NPS Supt. Dr. Anna Nolin met with the Board of Health on Monday to present an update on her draft return-to-school plan, a copy of which has been shared with the public.

As is outlined in that document, the plan is to return to school with masks being mandatory for all when indoors, including on busses. The Board of Health confirmed that approach by vote at the meeting upon the recommendation of Health Director Jim White, who emphasized that this needs to be complemented by more members of the school community getting vaccinated. As he pointed out during a rundown of Natick’s latest COVID-19 and vaccination numbers, thousands of eligible school community members are still not fully vaxxed even as the Delta variant spreads.

“One of the ways we can protect the children who cannot get vaccinated right now is for everyone around them to get vaccinated….[the younger children] don’t really have any options right now,” White said. This approach should make teachers who have been hesitant to return more comfortable, he added.

Nolin agreed that masks are necessary, though also seeks the Board of Health’s guidance on how these and other mitigation measures might be phased in or out depending on the direction in which infection rates are going. “I absolutely agree on masking both from a health perspective and an equity perspective. Trying to make some people be masked and not others, who’s singled out and…I could just see a bullying situation on the rise. And my job is to eliminate that kind of thing…,” she said.

The Natick School Committee has received a steady stream of emails from parents regarding masks, and asked the Board of Health to stay in close communications as new decisions are weighed in light of changing COVID-19 and vaccination numbers.

Natick health and school officials have looked to see what surrounding communities are doing (Wellesley, for one, hasn’t pinned down plans yet), and the results are all over the map, as state agencies continue to roll out new guidelines and information.

Test and stay

One likely addition to supporting in-person learning is a “test and stay” program that the state’s education and health departments have begun talking about to health officials. White says the way this would work is that if a child is a close contact and unvaccinated, but is not symptomatic and tests negative every day, they can remain in school.

Nolin said she’ll be getting a full briefing on the testing system this week.

The pool testing program Natick took part in last year will again be available, with test kits and support provided by the state. The question is whether pool testing is worth the resources given today’s low infection rates locally.

White described running pool testing as “a bear,” and noted that just 1 positive case was detected during summer COVID-19 pool testing with 1,000 students. Still, White says pool testing “is not off the table” for the regular school year. If it were used, Nolin noted that getting participation from those who are vaccinated will be difficult unless students and families are given incentives like last spring, where you needed to take part in pool testing to participate in sports and other activities. White did say that given the very high vaccination rate among high school age residents in town, one approach could be to skip pool testing at the high school if the testing program is restarted.

Board of Health Member Karla Sangrey raised the idea that the school system should at least be prepared to mobilize testing right away if numbers jump.


Do you want to take over for Public Health Director Jim White? He’s retiring, and the listing for his job has been posted by the town.


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Filed Under: Health, Schools



Natick High Class of 2021 honks & beeps its way through town

May 29, 2021 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

The Natick High School Class of 2021, escorted by local police and driven by family or friends, cruised through the streets of Natick on Saturday afternoon as part of their year-end celebration. Vehicles, mainly festooned with signature red-and-blue NHS colors took a big loop starting and ending at the high school.

We live streamed the event, and apologize for my relatively modest parade banter (I didn’t have anyone to banter with!).

nhs car parade class of 2021

nhs car parade class of 2021

We didn’t see too many tops down, given the drizzly conditions, but there were plenty of smiles and beeps from the Class of ’21 as they ready for next weekend’s graduation ceremony.

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Filed Under: Police & crime, Schools

Natick High Class of 2021 to get their wished-for car parade

May 18, 2021 by Deborah Brown Leave a Comment

Last year May, Natick Public Schools staff celebrated students with a series of three car parades on different routes.  This spring,, Natick High School’s Class of 2021 made it known earlier this year that they’d like to do the parading on the streets of town. This year’s graduates will get their wish on May 29 at 3pm, when a car parade featuring up to 400 vehicles will start to wind its way through Natick, with the blessing of NHS Principal Brian Harrigan, the Natick Police Department, and the Select Board.

The Natick Police Department has revealed the parade route, which will take participants from Natick High, down West Street, to South Main Street, a right on E. Central St., up Marion St., a right on Bacon St., a left on Oak St., a left on Pine St., a left on North Main St. to S. Main St., then back to the high school.

Natick graduation parade route

The total parade is expected to take about an hour. Students, who are not allowed to drive during the parade due to the excitement of it all, will be chauffeured by family or friends.

Graduates and their families will most certainly have their cars all decked out for the event, which is optional. The car parade is not a substitute for commencement ceremonies, which will take place on Fri., June 4, 7pm on Memorial Field. The rain date is Sun., June 6, 7pm on Memorial Field. The public is not invited to graduation.

The community is invited to line the parade route on May 29 to cheer the grads on.


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Filed Under: Schools

Dr. Nolin’s Dispatch—Natick Public Schools podcast hits Spotify

May 14, 2021 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

Tired of the tunes? You can now toss “Dr. Nolin’s Dispatch” onto your Spotify playlist.

The idea for this new podcast from Natick Public Schools came via the Parent Academy town hall held in January 2020, and parents have since confirmed that they’d like a podcast featuring school Supt. Dr. Anna Nolin and touching on timely topics.

A trailer has been released teasing the first episode, which will explore “agility, innovation, and a Natick profile of a graduate.”

Dr. Nolin's Dispatch

The podcast will start with three episodes, distributed over the summer at dates to be determined. Nolin will look to differentiate the podcast from her other communications, including a weekly newsletter and appearances before the School Committee and other town groups.

“This podcast will be focused on discussing the nuts and bolts of our district work by introducing some of our leaders and the work they’re doing that impacts the district,” Nolin explained in an email to us. “In addition, this is also an opportunity for us share our deep community-student connections in new and exciting ways; the first episode shares a glimpse into that aspect specifically.”

The podcast has been produced by Natick students, who are leaning on their technical theatre and production backgrounds.

“The great part of doing a podcast is that allows flexibility in how we record our episodes, so most of our work is done in a remote capacity right now. However, when things allow, we plan to move to recording in-person (using the NHS studio) in the future,” Nolin says.

Nolin and the Natick Public Schools Communications Office met with students 6 times this spring to create the podcast (students Allie Conwell, Sammy Scharr, Ellie Pantekidis, Anna Victor, and Daniel Zogby are cited in a recent Natick Public Schools newsletter item on the podcast).

Natick is not the only school district to have a podcasting superintendent, but there aren’t many around here.

We give Dr. Nolin credit for bravery (we’ve been encouraged to add podcasting to our mix and have held off).

Which podcasts does she listen to, and perhaps take inspiration from?

  • Modern Love (NY Times)
  • Kind World (NPR)
  • The Moth
  • Harvard Business Review

Stay tuned for the first episode.


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Filed Under: Schools

Natick student art showcased at Page Waterman’s Virtual Gallery juried exhibit

May 10, 2021 by Deborah Brown Leave a Comment

Natick High School artists shine this year at Page Waterman Gallery’s 5th annual juried exhibition,  NEXT UP!, taking place online through May 28th. It’s been nice to see that Natick entrants have increased their presence in the prestigious show—four painters, drawers, printmakers, and photographers have entered their talents this year, up from one last year.

The NHS artists are: Rabkwan Chaimattayompol; Shanna Deng; Tia Perkins; and Rebecca Riley.

Natick HS, Page Waterman

138 art submissions have been entered. First-, second-, and third-place winners will be chosen, plus honorable mentions and people’s choice awards, in the following categories:

  • Painting, drawing and printmaking
  • Photography
  • Sculpture

NEXT UP! jurors are Keris Salmon, a former network long-form news producer now working as a photographer, filmmaker and textile designer, as well as a media consultant on independent television and film projects; and Allison Tolman, owner at The Tolman Collection of New York who has worked as a private dealer of contemporary Japanese works on paper for 25 years.

Winners will be announced May 16.

Here’s how to support your favorite artists by casting a People’s Choice vote.

Natick HS, Page Waterman
Natick HS, Page Waterman
Natick HS, Page Waterman

About Page Waterman, Gallery & Framing

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Art, Education, Schools

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Events calendar

  1. Scoopapalooza all-you-can-eat ice cream feast

    June 25 @ 12:00 pm - 3:00 pm
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    June 26 @ 6:00 pm - 7:00 pm
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