Las Vegas Review-Journal

Debate stirs as schools look at closer spacing

Study suggests 3 feet is sufficient distance

- By Collin Binkley

BOSTON — New evidence that it may be safe for schools to seat students 3 feet apart — half of the previous recommende­d distance — could offer a way to return more of the nation’s children to classrooms with limited space.

Even as more teachers receive vaccinatio­ns against COVID-19, social distancing guidelines have remained a major hurdle for districts across the U.S. Debate around the issue flared last week when a study suggested that masked students can be seated as close as 3 feet apart with no increased risk to them or teachers.

Published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases, the research looked at schools in Massachuse­tts, which has backed the 3-foot guideline for months. Illinois and Indiana are also allowing 3 feet of distance, and other states such as Oregon are considerin­g doing the same.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is now exploring the idea too. The agency’s director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, said the 6-foot guideline is “among the biggest challenges” schools have faced in reopening.

The CDC included the larger spacing in its latest school guidelines, which were issued in February and concluded that schools can safely operate during the pandemic with masks, distancing and other precaution­s. It suggested 6 feet and said physical distancing “should be maximized to the greatest extent possible.”

Other organizati­ons have issued more relaxed guidelines. The American Academy of Pediatrics says to space desks “3 feet apart and ideally 6 feet apart.”

Dan Domenech, executive director of AASA, a national superinten­dents group, said he expects more states and schools to move to the 3-foot rule in coming weeks. With the larger guideline, he said, most schools have space to bring back only half of their students at a time. Moving to 3 feet could allow about 75 percent at a time, he said.

“There are districts that have been doing 3 feet for quite some time without experienci­ng any greater amount of infection,” he said.

In Illinois, health officials said last week that students can be seated 3 feet apart as long as their teachers are vaccinated. Before, state officials required 6 feet.

With the state’s blessing, the Barrington district near Chicago reopened middle schools Tuesday using the smaller spacing rule. Any student will be allowed to attend in-person classes, although the district expects roughly 30 percent to continue with remote learning.

Questions around spacing have led to a battle in Massachuse­tts, where teachers and some schools oppose a state plan to bring younger students back five days a week starting next month. The plan calls on schools to seat students 3 feet apart, although many have been using 6 feet as a standard. Districts that fail to meet the reopening deadline would risk losing state funding.

The Massachuse­tts Teachers Associatio­n, a statewide union, argues that seating students closer will increase the risk for everyone in the classroom. It also poses a problem for districts that have agreed to contracts with teachers adopting the 6-foot rule as a requiremen­t.

In some states that already allow 3-feet spacing, schools say they have seen no evidence of increased risk. School officials in Danville, Indiana, which moved to 3 feet in October, said students have been in the classroom all year with no uptick in virus transmissi­on.

 ?? Ashlee Rezin Garcia The Associated Press ?? Pre-kindergart­en students listen as their teacher reads a story at Dawes Elementary in Chicago. New evidence suggests it may be safe for schools to seat students 3 feet apart.
Ashlee Rezin Garcia The Associated Press Pre-kindergart­en students listen as their teacher reads a story at Dawes Elementary in Chicago. New evidence suggests it may be safe for schools to seat students 3 feet apart.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States