The Scotsman

Teachers report pupils coughing on each other on schools return from lockdown

- By CHRIS GREEN newsdeskts@ scotsman. com

Pupils coughing on each other, shortages of hand sanitiser and the need to quarantine jotters are among the issues being raised by Scottish teachers following the start of the new term.

Larry Flanagan, the general secretary of the country’s largest teaching union, the EIS, said a number of “significan­t” concerns had been highlighte­d by members.

He welcomed the decision to introduce face coverings in communal areas in secondary schools from Monday, but highlighte­d a series of other areas where action was needed.

He said some schools had started running low on hand sanitiser and had been told to fund new supplies themselves – despite not having any budget to do so.

Teachers have also found social distancing from each other to be “quite challengin­g” due to many staff rooms being too small to accommodat­e the 2m rule. This has led to some schools closing their staff rooms altogether, meaning that teachers effectivel­y have nowhere else to go except their own classrooms.

He also said there was evidence that the lengthy coronaviru­s lockdown had left a “significan­t impact” on children’s learning, with some finding it difficult to settle back in to school.

There are also repor t s of “unacceptab­le behaviour” among pupils, incidents which would be treated extremely seriously if they took place outside the school gates.

“Things like coughing on fellow pupils, stuff like this,” he said.

“The concern that’s come back is that this can’t be treated just like normal misbehavio­ur because there are bigger implicatio­ns.

“That’s popped up in quite a lot of feedback already. Schools will have to manage it, but there needs to be parental support for taking sanctions against pupils who are risking other pupils’ health by their poor behaviour.”

He said some schools may have no option but to insist that perpetrato­rs are temporaril­y removed from class.

“The school will always work towards trying to educate the child, but it might be that they would have to be schooled at home for a period,” Mr Flanagan added.

With schools becoming used to the new safety routines, he said the focus was now beginning to turn to the practical challenges posed by the virus – and coming up with solutions to them.

“If you’re going to mark jotters, you have to collect them in, quarantine them and after you’ve marked them you have to quarantine them before you can return them,” Mr Flanagan said.

“Given that, you think ‘ Do you really need to mark these jotters?’ Is there a different way of giving feedback?

“Can we do what we did during the lockdown and get pupils to email work to the teacher?

“There are a lot of practical, in- class situations that people are still finding their way with.

“How does a pupil support assistant work with a child if they have to physically distance, when before they would sit beside them?

“Now we’re up and running, all of these things are starting to exercise people’s minds.”

distanced. Now suddenly you’re packed in rooms where basically what you’re doing is a 2m cordon at the front of the room to try to keep the teacher safe.”

As well as marking off the teacher’s part of the classroom with tape on the floor, the school has also introduced a one- way system for accessing the playground.

Children also have to wash their hands six times a day, when they arrive and before they leave for the day and also before and after both break times.

It is also operating staggered break and lunchtimes so the playground and dining hall are not overcrowde­d.

“The children are very good at it in the classroom, keeping

their side of their line,” the teacher said. “Where they find it trickier is if they’re speaking to you one- toone in the corridor or the playground.

“They tend to come towards you, and what you find is that you’re backing away a little and they keep coming towards you. It can be quite comical.”

Despite these measures, she said schools would not feel truly safe until children could be taught in smaller groups rather than classes of 30 or more.

“Where else are 34 people – 33 pupils plus a teacher – allowed to be crammed in a small room with no social distancing?” she asked.

“We have quite a nasty cold virus ripping through our

school like wildfire at the moment. Lots of staff with it, lots of children with it. One class the other day had eight children off.

“That’s with the 2m distancing and hand washing, and everyone is catching that cold. That doesn’t inspire you with much confidence if the real thing was to get into our school.”

She added that the new safety measures meant school staff were spending “far less” time teaching.

“We reckon we’re losing something like two and a half hours a day,” she said.

“This idea that they all had to come back full- time so they could get a fulltime education actually is erroneous.”

 ??  ?? 0 Glasgow- based artist Laura Mcglinchey held an ‘ anti rave’ beside
0 Glasgow- based artist Laura Mcglinchey held an ‘ anti rave’ beside
 ?? PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN ?? a billboard of her work on Glasgow’s Southside for socially distanced masked revellers
PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN a billboard of her work on Glasgow’s Southside for socially distanced masked revellers

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