Leicester Mercury

‘Lack of school a bigger risk’ – PM

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BORIS JOHNSON said he is “very hopeful” the return of pupils will go to plan as he warned the risk of keeping classrooms locked outweighed a school-led spike in Covid cases.

Pupils in England are set to return to school for the first time in two months today as part of the first stage of lockdown easing.

Some scientists have raised concerns the increased levels of interactio­n could push the reproducti­on number – the R value – above 1, causing Covid to spread faster.

The Prime Minister echoed the warnings of education experts that more damage was being done to pupils by keeping them at home than having them return to in-person lessons. He said: “You ask about the risk (of schools returning) – I think the risk is actually in not going back to school tomorrow given all the suffering, all the loss of learning we have seen.”

It comes after Amanda Spielman, England’s chief schools inspector, expressed concern about eating disorders and selfharmin­g among children after she said pupils endured “boredom, loneliness, misery and anxiety” during the school shutdown since January. In her final address as children’s commission­er for England last month, Anne Longfield said it was “impossible to overstate how damaging the past year has been for many children”.

Some pupils have not been in lessons since late December, while others briefly returned before the third lockdown came into force early in the new year.

Mr Johnson said he believed pupils, parents and teachers were “ready” to go back, with more than 20,000 schools set to open their gates once again.

The Prime Minister said during a visit to a north London vaccines centre: “I’m very hopeful that it will work, it will all go according to plan and that all kids, all pupils, will be back in schools tomorrow. I’m massively grateful to parents who have put up with so much throughout the pandemic and teachers who have done an amazing job of keeping going.

“I do think we are ready, I think people want to go back, they feel it, they feel the need for it.”

Ofsted chief inspector Ms Spielman, in an interview with Sky News’ Sophy Ridge On Sunday, said remote education had “been a real slog” for many.

She said teachers and parents “need to be alert” to more serious mental health difficulti­es persisting for a minority of children even after face-to-face learning resumes.

“There is a minority – and let’s hope it is not too large a minority – whose problems have increased and it is really important that we are good at recognisin­g where problems are arising,” she said.

“Things like eating disorders, things like self-harm and mental health services are very aware of the kinds of problems that have been increasing and whether they can expect more cases coming through, so everybody needs to be alert to these.”

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Boris Johnson

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