Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Covid-19: What you need to know today

- R Sukumar

On Monday, schools in Australia’s New South Wales province officially reopened, signalling a “return to normal” that the country, which has seen around 7,100 coronaviru­s disease cases and 102 deaths, hopes to achieve in stages by July.

On Tuesday, two private schools in Sydney, the state’s biggest and most important city, closed after a student tested positive in each; both schools had already opened last week after the state decided it was alright to do so because the number of cases was declining. To be sure, the response to the schools having to close so soon after opening (and, hopefully, temporaril­y) has been just what it should be – even, non-hysterical, and pragmatic. The state’s education minister said school closures brought about by students testing positive were “something we are going to have to live with”, according to a report in The Guardian. Four other Australian states, including Queensland, have also resumed face-to-face schooling (as it is now called; another coinage necessitat­ed by the pandemic). On Monday, news agency AP reported Queensland’s premier Annastacia Palaszczuk as saying that “we have to take each day as it comes”.

Somehow there’s nothing that quite signals a “return to normal” as well as children attending school does – as parents can vouch, it changes the entire rhythm of households in the morning (and not always for the better, but that’s another story).

Denmark reopened schools in April. Japan opened some in May, as did Korea. Even China reopened schools in Wuhan, where it all began, in May.

There are reports that India plans to reopen schools in July, at least for some classes. That’s the beginning of the term in some parts of the country (including Delhi). Schools reopen earlier in other parts of the country; in Maharashtr­a and Tamil Nadu, for instance, the school term starts in June, but given the disease burden in these states (Maharashtr­a has the highest and Tamil Nadu the second-highest number of Covid-19 cases in the country) that seems unlikely.

Still, open they will all have to at some time. Online education privileges the privileged and excludes others. Schools and classrooms try to provide as level a playing field as they can (many fail, and that, too, is another story). Sure, interventi­ons are possible; the state can provide devices (tablets or laptop computers) but it cannot ensure that all students are in an environmen­t that is conducive to learning. Schools, good old-fashioned brick-andmortar schools, with face-to-face schooling, are still the best way to do that.

What does science say on pandemics and school closures?

A review of epidemiolo­gical studies published in BMJ suggests that closing schools does seem to reduce the transmissi­on of influenza. While the coronaviru­s disease is not the flu, it can be safely assumed that school closure will reduce its transmissi­on too. However, there’s still no authoritat­ive research on the role of children as transmitte­rs of the coronaviru­s disease. There are papers suggesting that they don’t get infected much; do not show symptoms even if they are; and are not as contagious as adults who are infected – but none of these are establishe­d facts as yet. These are important questions to answer – especially knowing that older people are more vulnerable to Covid-19, and that many children in India still continue to live in joint families, or in nuclear families with at least one parent of a parent being a member of the household.

And these are just some of the variables administra­tors and policymake­rs will have to factor in while taking a call on how and when schools should be reopened.

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REUTERS

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