KEY POINTS
  • It's the second time Mayor Bill de Blasio has pushed back reopening classrooms for in-person instruction for this school year.
  • Kindergarten through fifth grade and K-8 schools will begin in-person instruction on Sept. 29, he said.
  • High school and middle school students will be allowed to return to the classroom on Oct. 1, according to the reopening plan.  
Richard Carranza, chancellor of the New York City Department of Education, left, and Bill de Blasio, mayor of New York, carry bins with supplies during a news conference at New Bridges Elementary School in the Brooklyn borough of New York City, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in New York, U.S., August. 19, 2020.

New York City's public schools will adopt a phased reopening schedule to return students to the classroom, pushing back the start of in-person learning for middle and high school students to October, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced Thursday. 

The new plan will delay the start of in-person learning for middle and high school students in the country's largest school district to Oct. 1, de Blasio said. Kindergarten through fifth grade and K-8 schools will begin in-person instruction on Sept. 29, he said.