Toronto Star

Quebec mandates masks for Grade 5 and up

Coverings to be worn in common areas, but not in classrooms

- SIDHARTHA BANERJEE THE CANADIAN PRESS

MONTREAL—Quebec’s updated back-to-school plan requires students in Grade 5 and up to wear masks in all common areas of school buildings, but not in the classroom.

Education Minister JeanFranço­is Roberge said Monday the government’s new strategy does away with the six-student bubble concept it had announced in June and instead focuses on making communicat­ion between teachers and students as easy as possible.

“We want to preserve the ease of communicat­ion, face-to-face contact, facial expression­s — these are important,” Roberge told a news conference in Montreal. He added that health and education experts advised his office against making masks mandatory inside classrooms.

Roberge said each classroom will be its own bubble and students will not be required to maintain a two-metre distance with their classmates.

There will be limited mixing between classes and in the event of an outbreak, parents will be advised and the affected classroom bubble will be sent home to continue studies remotely.

In Ontario, the government has made mask-wearing mandatory in the classroom for students in Grades 4 through 12, but Quebec’s public health director said children would likely have a hard time following that rule.

“For kids … we (will) organize schools in a different way with classes that are going to be closed — not mixing with others too much,” Dr. Horacio Arruda said on Monday. “Wearing a mask is difficult for an adult, so imagine for kids.”

And while all elementary and high school students will be expected to return to school at the end of the month, children who have a doctor’s note to suggest they’re at high risk of COVID-19 complicati­ons or who live with someone at risk, will be granted an exemption and offered a remote learning service.

The province is also maintainin­g an option for students in Grades 10 and 11 to physically attend classes one out of every two days, if their school cannot organize stable classroom bubbles.

In May, Quebec became the first province to reopen elementary schools — but only outside the Montreal area. Roberge said that exercise went well, with relatively few cases of COVID-19 reported.

Roberge said schools need to fully reopen in order to offer students the ability to properly socialize and learn.

“Not opening the school is putting our kids at risk, we have some trouble with mental health, with learning disability,” Roberge said. “So I think the higher risk is not to reopen our schools.”

Stakeholde­rs in the education sector reacted positively to the revised plan on Monday, welcoming the eliminatio­n of the six-student bubbles as well as the implementa­tion of mandatory mask-wearing within common areas in schools.

“Wearing a compulsory face covering will facilitate movement within the establishm­ent,” said Carl Ouellet, head of a Quebec associatio­n representi­ng school management staff. “This is consistent with the other measures that apply in society.”

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Education Minister Jean-François Roberge said Monday the Quebec government’s new strategy aims to make communicat­ion between teachers and students as easy as possible.
JACQUES BOISSINOT THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Education Minister Jean-François Roberge said Monday the Quebec government’s new strategy aims to make communicat­ion between teachers and students as easy as possible.

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