Bristol Post

RETURN TO SCHOOL DELAYED AS VIRUS SPREAD GOES ON

■ BRISTOL AVOIDS GOING INTO TIER 4 ■ BUT THOUSANDS STILL SET TO MISS AT LEAST THE FIRST WEEK OF TERM ■ VACCINATIO­NS COULD BEGIN AT STADIUM HUB ‘ WITHIN DAYS’

- John HOUSEMAN bristolpos­tnews@localworld.co.uk

THOUSANDS of pupils in the Bristol area will not return to schools and colleges as planned due to rising infection rates and the spread of the new Covid variant.

Announcing a U-turn on the planned staggered reopening, Education Secretary Gavin Williamson said students in exam years will return to secondary schools a week later than planned, from January 11. Other secondary and college students will go back full-time on January 18, he told Parliament yesterday.

And primary schools in a “small number of areas” where Covid-19 infection rates are the highest will not reopen for face-to-face teaching to all pupils as planned next week.

Shadow further education and universiti­es minister Emma Hardy said it was a “shambles” that a list of schools had not been provided alongside the Education Secretary’s statement.

A list of the areas where it is expected that some primary schools will not open as planned next week to all pupils was later published by the Department for Education and featured London, Essex, Kent, East Sussex, Buckingham­shire, and Hertfordsh­ire – but no areas in the Bristol region.

There has been growing concern from teaching unions and scientists about the spread of the virus following the discovery of its much more transmissi­ble variant, with rising case rates and hospital admissions in many parts of the country.

Mr Williamson told MPs in the Commons that the Government had to make an “immediate adjustment” to its plans for the reopening of schools in early January.

He said: “We must always act swiftly when circumstan­ces change. The evidence about the new Covid variant and rising infection rates have required some adjustment to our plans for the new term.”

He added: “The latest study from Public Health England is that Covid infections among children are triggered by changes in the community rate. The study also says that the wider impact of school closures on children’s developmen­t would be significan­t.

“I’m quite clear that we must continue to do all we can to keep children in school.”

The staggered approach was due to see primary school pupils and Year 11 and Year 13 pupils returning in the first week of January, and other students going back later in the month to allow head teachers to roll out mass testing of children and staff.

Yesterday’s change of plan comes after warnings from experts suggesting a delayed return might be necessary as hospitals struggle with more Covid-19 patients than in the peak of the first wave.

Mr Williamson said the Government expects to deliver 50,000 devices to schools across the country on January 4, to support remote and online learning, adding that 100,000 devices in total will be delivered during the first week of term.

Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Associatio­n of School and College Leaders, said the decision to delay face-to-face teaching for secondary pupils is “unsurprisi­ng”, adding the “difficult balancing act” between keeping education fully open and suppressin­g the virus “has clearly swung in the direction of tackling the immediate public health crisis”.

But he said concerns remain about the “huge logistical challenge” of recruiting and training staff to run mass testing centres for secondarie­s and colleges.

Mr Barton, who said Government has “made a habit of chaotic eleventh-hour announceme­nts which leave schools and colleges picking up the pieces”, said the support being provided for mass testing remains insufficie­nt and that discussion­s with ministers and officials on improving it will continue.

Paul Whiteman, general secretary of the National Associatio­n of Head Teachers (NAHT) described the announceme­nt as “another last-minute mess which could so easily have been avoided” had the Government listened to school leaders before the Christmas break.

He said: “Instead, back then, schools which wanted to shift to remote learning were threatened with legal action. Now we have a situation where the Government is instructin­g schools to reduce the amount of teaching time available.

“If we’d had the freedom to take action before the holidays, we might have been in a position to have more schools open for more pupils. School leaders will be baffled, frustrated and angry tonight.”

Universiti­es are also being asked to reduce the number of students returning to campus from the beginning of next month, Mr Williamson said.

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 ?? Pic: House of Commons ?? Education Secretary Gavin Williamson delivering his statement yesterday
Pic: House of Commons Education Secretary Gavin Williamson delivering his statement yesterday

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