Miscellaneous
Sky Amish goes to school at a community classroom at the Genesee Valley Regional Market in Henrietta. Since August, Amish, who is 18, and most of the other 100-plus students enrolled at Holy Childhood have been attending in-person classes just two days a week, many of them at the school's main campus on Groton Parkway in Henrietta. The other three days, they were learning remotely. Amish is not a fan of getting virtual lessons on a laptop. "Kinda tricky ... it's kinda crazy," he said. His classmate, Corynn Dunton, also 18, agrees. They're both excited about a new hybrid plan that started this week: four days a week in the classroom and one day at home. "I'm ready for it 'cause I don't like doing school online at home," Dunton said. School program director Dave Halpern said a lot of thought went into the decision and it seemed like the right time for the transition to mostly in-person learning. "Because the January surge was ending and the vaccines were coming out," he said. "A number