Otago Daily Times

Uncertaint­ies over school reopenings

- SIMON COLLINS

AUCKLAND: Schools have been told to prepare to reopen for ‘‘some but not all’’ of their pupils on April 29, but principals are still uncertain what reopening will look like.

The Ministry of Education has sent a bulletin to schools saying that ‘‘a hybrid model of both distance learning and onsite learning is very likely at least in the early stages’’ after the coronaviru­s lockdown ends.

‘‘We want to reassure you that following any announceme­nt, you will have some time to prepare for physically reopening your school or early learning service to welcome back on site your staff and some, but not all, of your children/students,’’ it said.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has said the Cabinet will decide next Monday, April 20, whether the lockdown will end as originally planned at midnight on April 22.

‘‘Assuming the alert level does change, current planning assumption­s are that you will have Thursday, April 23 and Friday, April 24 to fully access your site and undertake a property inspection and necessary maintenanc­e and cleaning,’’ the ministry has told schools.

‘‘Monday, April 27 is a public holiday (Anzac Day observed) and Tuesday, April 28 will be a staffonly day.

‘‘We therefore anticipate Wednesday, April 29 would be your first day with some of your students/children able to attend in person. Early learning centres might not need all of this time.’’

Education Minister Chris Hipkins told TVNZ’s Q&A yesterday that teachers might return to schools before their pupils.

‘‘It may be that in the first instance they are able to come back into their classrooms and continue to provide remote learning from the school environmen­t, where they have access to broadband,’’ he said.

‘‘We do need to prepare for a number of scenarios, and one of those scenarios is that a significan­t number of young people could be at home for a long time after Level 4 is lifted.’’

Once it was safe to let some children return to school, the children of essential workers were ‘‘clearly a priority’’ so their parents could go to work, he said.

‘‘But it might not be everyone back at school at the same time,’’ he said.

Schools would still have to enforce ‘‘social distancing’’.

‘‘That social distancing is really challengin­g in a school environmen­t, and even more so in an early learning environmen­t,’’ he said.

‘‘Timetables will be different. Some kids may be in school only part of the time and working from home some of the time.’’

Some teachers who were older or had health conditions, making them more vulnerable to Covid19, might still be working from home, and reopening could differ for different age groups.

‘‘With students doing NCEA we know that social distancing is more possible. If you tell them to sit 2m apart they probably will,’’ he said.

‘‘On the other hand, with toddlers — not so possible.’’

These comments indicate that pupils’ return may vary a lot between schools. Most schools reported that only ‘‘a couple of handfuls’’ of children turned up on the two days just before the lockdown, when schools stayed open only for the children of essential workers.

Even in rural areas, where farmers are classed as essential workers, few turned up. Secondary Principals’ Council chairman James Morris, principal of rural Darfield High School in Canterbury, said ‘‘essentiall­y no students came in’’ on those last two days.

‘‘Lots of them had someone who could look after them at home for that time, or they were old enough to look after themselves,’’ he said.

He said it would be very difficult to provide normal classes only for children of essential workers.

‘‘They would be scattered throughout the different classes. You would have an entire teaching workforce there with one or two people in each of the classes,’’ he said.

He said another option of starting with NCEA pupils would also create problems because they were often caring for younger siblings at home.

And any move to teach some classes on different days, leaving pupils to work at home on the other days, would not reduce the risk of spreading the virus because pupils would be going home to mix with siblings in other classes.

Some schools would also be hit harder than others by staff who were older or otherwise at risk. Auckland Grammar was ‘‘down by 20 staff’’ on March 23, when people over 70 or with other atrisk health conditions were advised to stay home, and Mr Morris said 5% to 10% of teachers might need to stay home across the country.

He said a likely scenario was reopening schools region by region. — The New Zealand Herald

 ??  ?? Chris Hipkins
Chris Hipkins

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand