Gulf Today

Adek’s move ensures full safety of schools

- Imran Mojib, Special Correspond­ent

ABU DHABI: As schools throughout Abu Dhabi continue to reopen, the Abu Dhabi Department of Education and Knowledge (ADEK) has announced it will continue regular inspection­s of all schools and nurseries to ensure ongoing compliance to wide-ranging COVID-19 prevention protocols and secure the safety of all staff, pupils, and parents.

Ater inspecting all schools in the emirate last August and issuing No Objection Certificat­es to 220 compliant schools to reopen, ADEK is mandating further checks to maintain safety standards, with those found flouting the guidelines set to face stiff penalties.

“We have to put the safety of our community first and ongoing inspection­s are vital to ensure parents have confidence in the safety protocols of our schools and nurseries,” explained Amer Al Hammadi, Undersecre­tary of ADEK.

As of Feb.21, ADEK has conducted inspection­s at 221 schools reopening for in-classroom education and 119 operationa­l nurseries.

The inspection­s track compliance across a range of 62 criteria, including adherence to social distancing protocols; the existence of on-premise COVID-19 taskforces; regular cleaning and disinfecti­on programmes; regular COVID-19 testing of staff and students aged 12 years and above; regulated classroom numbers, PPE equipment standards, and daily routine checks conducted by a nominated school compliance officer to ensure safety regulation­s are being followed.

ADEK has identified a sliding scale of penalties for regulation breaches with fines ranging from Dhs10,000 to Dhs250,000. Repeated non-compliance can lead to schools being forced to shit to distance learning provision, with parents entitled to remove their children from the school and gain fee refunds. Based on inspection­s, non-compliant nurseries can be immediatel­y moved to distance learning for a week, or fined.

“Our sincere hope is that none of these penalties will have to be exacted,” added Al Hammadi. “We have confidence in our school and nursery communitie­s and their desire to adhere to the regulation­s for the safety of all.” School tours for new and prospectiv­e parents may also resume, while class sizes have been increased to a maximum of 30 students with 1.5m social distancing and compulsory face masks for Grade 1 and above.

For kindergart­en, class size is capped at 25 students with 1.5-metre social distancing. Bubbles for younger children remain at a maximum of 10 students, in addition to a dedicated teaching team.

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