Toronto Star

Masks, ‘cohorts’ and social bubbles

Here’s how the provinces are preparing for school as pandemic continues

- ALEX MCKEEN VANCOUVER BUREAU

September will come with more than the usual amount of back-to-school jitters as parents, teachers and students grapple with how to return to class safely in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Each province plans on reopening schools in the fall — with varying requiremen­ts for keeping kids at a distance from one another, and Ontario is the only province to mandate that all students from Grades 4 to 12 don a mask. All provinces ask that students and teachers who feel unwell stay home rather than go to school, and require additional cleaning measures and stringent handwashin­g routines.

Experts at SickKids released a document last week, saying smaller classes are key to limiting kids’ contacts, and that younger students should remain at least one metre apart, and teens, two. They also recommende­d that masks should be used by high school students when physical distancing is difficult.

Here’s how each province is planning to bring students back to class:

British Columbia

B.C. was the only province in Canada to open all schools at the end of the previous school year — albeit on a part-time basis, with voluntary attendance.

Now the provincial health officer has announced a plan to return all students to school full-time, with in-class instructio­n. The distinguis­hing feature of B.C.’s back to school plan is the creation of “learning groups” — essentiall­y social bubbles within schools that will set caps on the number of students able to socialize with one another outside of their own classrooms.

For elementary school students, the learning groups have a maximum of 60 students, while the number is120 for high school students.

Masks will not be mandatory in B.C. classrooms, but will be recommende­d where social distancing isn’t possible.

Alberta

Alberta will be bringing students back to school for fulltime in-class instructio­n in the fall. The province’s back-toschool plan emphasizes cleaning of surfaces, and spreading messages to students and parents about physical distancing and hand sanitizing.

The plan allows for the possibilit­y of staggering break times so that fewer students socialize together at the same time.

Masks will not be required under Alberta’s plan, but the Calgary board of education is recommendi­ng them for the start of the school year. Saskatchew­an Saskatchew­an has announced a phased approach to back-toschool, whereby the return of in-class learning depends on whether the province keeps case counts of COVID-19 to a minimum. The plan provides for the possibilit­y of a return to at-home instructio­n if the province sees a COVID-19 resurgence.

Saskatchew­an has not yet announced which phase of its back-to-school strategy will be in effect come September, but plans to do so next week. Masks will be optional. Manitoba All students will return to inclass instructio­n in the fall in Manitoba — but high school students may still be learning with a mix of online and in-class teaching.

High schools will decide on individual plans for bringing students back to school, with the requiremen­t that the students must interact within “cohorts” with a maximum size of 75.

A likely result is that high school students will learn inclass for only two days a week.

Students in Grade 8 and below will go back to school full-time. Masks will not be required. Ontario Most of Ontario’s students will return to traditiona­l classrooms full-time in September. Elementary students and many high schoolers will be in school five days a week in standard class sizes, while secondary students at two dozen boards that are higher risk will only attend class half the time in an effort to curb the spread of COVID-19.

Those high schoolers will have a maximum class size of 15 and receive “curriculum-linked independen­t work” when they are not in school. Some of it will have to be live video conferenci­ng or other so-called “synchronou­s” learning.

Students in Grades 4 through 12 will be required to wear masks in class, while younger kids are encouraged to do so. Quebec Quebec released its fall backto-school plan in June. It was one of only two provinces to send students back to school before the end of the 2019-20 school year, but reneged on plans to return Montreal students to classes as the city tackled one of the worst coronaviru­s outbreaks in the country.

The plan includes strict physical-distancing rules. Students up to Grade 9 will have to keep two metres between one another, except for small “subgroups” comprising six students each.

For older students, schools can decide to implement similar “subgroups” or stagger school attendance to every second day, with half of the instructio­n happening online.

Quebec will not be requiring students and staff to wear masks. New Brunswick New Brunswick announced a return-to-school plan with significan­t physical-distancing measures in June.

Students in Grade 5 and below will only interact in groups of15, with class sizes likely larger than that. Middle school students will be asked only to interact with other members of their classrooms, and high school students will return on a staggered basis, taking about half their instructio­n online.

The province quickly reversed a decision to make masks mandatory in public buildings last month, and they will not be required.

Nova Scotia Nova Scotia plans to return students to school in the fall with classrooms reorganize­d for physical distancing, and students restricted to socializin­g within their classroom bubbles.

The province will require high school students to wear masks in circumstan­ces where physical distancing is not possible, but students won’t have to wear masks in classrooms where desks are spaced apart.

School gatherings and assemblies will be cancelled and students will be required to eat lunch at their desks.

The province will require masks for high school students in common areas, and for all students on school buses. Prince Edward Island Students will return to school in Prince Edward Island fulltime in September, with classrooms rearranged for physical distancing, staggered break times and the promotion of social contact only within “cohorts.”

The province also plans to reduce bus routes, asking parents to transport their kids to school if they can. Students and staff may be asked to wear masks in common areas. Newfoundla­nd and Labrador

Newfoundla­nd and Labrador will send students back to class full-time in September — unless an uptick in coronaviru­s cases changes course for the province.

The province released three scenarios at the beginning of July: a full return with extra physical distancing, a partial return or the cancellati­on of classes. The province has not yet officially announced which scenario it will use come the fall.

Newfoundla­nd and Labrador does not recommend masks for kids, but says students and staff may choose to wear one.

With files from The Canadian Press

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Most schools will see reduced class sizes and staggered attendance­s as students return in the fall.
JONATHAN HAYWARD THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Most schools will see reduced class sizes and staggered attendance­s as students return in the fall.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada