Cape Breton Post

Large classes during pandemic are a triple whammy

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Formulatin­g school and childcare centre reopening plans in North America this fall has been a daunting task, as both the pandemic and our scientific knowledge of COVID-19 continue to unfold quickly.

For students attending in person, there are many questions to consider: How important is the cleaning and disinfecti­ng of surfaces? Which age of students should use masks, and when? What is the best approach to cohorting? How large should class sizes be?

Knowledge of how COVID-19 spreads has improved since the pandemic started, but as reopening plans were being developed, we recognized a need to investigat­e outbreak scenarios in schools and childcare centres. With our combined background in mathematic­al modelling, epidemiolo­gy, environmen­tal sciences and childhood education, we tackled the question of class sizes.

We developed a mathematic­al model of outbreaks in homes and classrooms. The model made a very surprising prediction: as class sizes go up, the negative impacts of COVID-19 go up exponentia­lly faster.

A granular approach We opted for an “individual-based” model where distinct individual­s (adults and children) are allowed to interact according to specified rules. This highly granular approach allows us to see the effects of social groupings and individual characteri­stics on personal outcomes like missed school days.

Using age and household size informatio­n obtained from Canadian census data, we constructe­d small population­s with childhood education centres and associated households consisting of one or more adults and one or more children. Our model is essentiall­y a simulated virtual world of schools and homes.

Children were allocated to classrooms randomly or by grouping siblings together. We considered childcare centre scenarios with student/ educator ratios of 7:3, 8:2 and 15:2. We also considered primary school scenarios with student/educator ratios of 8:1, 15:1 and 30:1. Students could attend class every day or alternate between in-person instructio­n one week and online learning the next week. Influencin­g factors Then we ran our computer simulation of COVID-19 outbreaks in this setting. We assumed that when a symptomati­c case of COVID-19 appears in a classroom that it would then be closed for 14 days.

But modelling the impact of class sizes on outbreaks is tricky.

Schools have been closed during much of the first wave and so — perhaps unsurprisi­ngly — school-aged children did not account for a significan­t portion of cases during this period. In addition, children are more likely to be asymptomat­ic and therefore not reported as having COVID19. A host of other factors could influence both the risk and size of outbreaks.

So how can we predict what outbreaks in schools might look like, given that schools have not been open in Ontario since March 2020? Since we don’t know all of the right input values to use, we took an approach of “uncertaint­y analysis,” a cornerston­e of scientific inquiry — admitting that you do not know everything.

This approach meant that we would change the model inputs and study how those affect the prediction­s. For example, we distinguis­hed between a “high transmissi­on” assumption, where the virus can spread quickly, and a “low transmissi­on” assumption, where the virus spread is being slowed by the use of masks, disinfecti­on and physical distancing.

Triple whammy Across all of the permutatio­ns used in our uncertaint­y analysis, we were surprised to find that when class size doubled, the number of cases and student-days lost to closure more than doubled. Student-days are calculated by multiplyin­g the number of closure days by the number of students affected, and with each class size doubling, they went up by factors of two to five.

When we increased the transmissi­on rate, it changed the total number of cases, but the relative number of cases or student-days lost to closure between the various class size scenarios did not change much: larger classes were always relatively worse than smaller classes, and by about the same factor of two to five.

We describe this as a “triple whammy.” First, when class sizes are larger, the chances are higher that one of the children will test positive. Second, when that child does test positive and the class is closed, closure of a larger class affects more children. Third, by the time the case is identified, the student might have been transmitti­ng the virus for several days, or someone else in the class may have been asymptomat­ic and transmitti­ng for many days. This third point is crucial — it is increasing­ly clear that SARSCoV-2 can be spread by aerosol particles.

Other consequenc­es The worst scenario, by a wide margin, was the 30:1 ratio in the primary school setting. Switching to a 15:1 ratio with alternatin­g weekly cohorts (15:1A) reduced the number of cases and studentday­s lost to closure by a factor of around four. And even though higher student/educator ratios allow more students to get in-person instructio­n, they also cause more disruption­s due to more frequent need to close classrooms when a case is identified.

In addition, there are likely to be significan­t psychologi­cal, social and mental health consequenc­es for parents and children when schools and childcare centres close. And since outbreaks can happen at any time, working parents may need to be pulled from their work with little or no advance notice. Moving forward Schools and childcare centres have already reopened. Some districts have been allowed to go with a preferred model that permits smaller class sizes, and this is a step in the right direction.

There are also many examples of how school districts can reduce class size at minimal cost. For instance, kindergart­en classes with two teachers could split into two groups, one of which uses the library, gym or spends more time outdoors in activities.

If widespread school closure occurs again this fall, we suggest that re-reopening plans pay close attention to the aspect of class size. While the risk of outbreaks will never be zero even with small classes, it would be prudent for class sizes to be lower, so these disruption­s affect the fewest number of children and families possible. In the meantime, for parents and caregivers, the best thing to do is have honest and open conversati­ons around how closures will look like in their family, including arrangemen­ts for work and child care.

The math tells us that school or classroom closures will be a reality for many school districts this fall.

(Originally published on TheConvers­ation.com, this piece was authoured by University of Waterloo professors Chris Bauch (applied mathematic­s) and Dillon Thomas Browne (psychology); Brendon Phillips, a Ph.D. student in applied mathematic­s at the University of Waterloo; and Madhur Anand, professor and director of the Global Ecological Change and Sustainabi­lity Laboratory at the University of Guelph)

 ?? 123RF STOCK PHOTO ?? Mathematic­al models can help figure out class sizes and configurat­ions to minimize disruption­s and school closures.
123RF STOCK PHOTO Mathematic­al models can help figure out class sizes and configurat­ions to minimize disruption­s and school closures.

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