Sun.Star Pampanga

Excitement meets worry as European kids head back to school

---AP

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LONDON (AP) — English educator Richard Sheriff watched this week as a group of energetic 11-year-olds entered their new secondary school for the first time — finding their classrooms, eating in the cafeteria, racing around the halls.

The familiar rituals of a school sparking back to life were especially poignant after a year and a half of disruption driven by the coronaviru­s pandemic, said Sheriff, head of the Red Kite Learning Trust, a group of primary and secondary schools in the Yorkshire region. But in addition to the usual excitement, he had a new feeling this year: “Trepidatio­n.”

The start of a new school year in many northern hemisphere nations comes as the highly infectious delta variant continues to drive a surge in coronaviru­s cases — especially among children, many of whom are not yet eligible for vaccinatio­n.

Still, many government­s including Britain’s are determined to get children back into classrooms after 18 stop-start months of lockdowns, remote learning and abandoned exams. U.K. schools, have closed for three-month stretches twice since early 2020, and major year-end exams have been canceled two years running, throwing university admissions into chaos.

While most European countries are retaining some restrictio­ns for schools, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ve government is pushing this year for something approximat­ing pre-pandemic normality. It has removed social distancing and mask-wearing orders and no longer requires pupils to be grouped into “bubbles” to limit the spread of the virus.

Instead, the government says students should be tested regularly, and schools will be given guidance on improving ventilatio­n.

Politician­s and the group of scientists that advises the government have acknowledg­ed it’s a gamble. The Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s said in August that “it is highly likely that exponentia­l increases will be seen in school-attending age groups after schools open.”

A separate independen­t group of scientists that is often critical of the British government’s pandemic response went further, calling the plan “r eckl ess.”

But Education Secretary Gavin Williamson said testing would help root out cases, and defended the government’s strategy as striking a “sensible balance.”

Britain, which lifted almost all pandemic restrictio­ns on business and socializin­g in July, has among the highest coronaviru­s rates in Europe, with upwards of 30,000 new confirmed infections each day. Hospitaliz­ations and deaths remain far lower than during previous surges, thanks to an inoculatio­n campaign that has seen nearly 80% of people over 16 fully vaccinated. But Britain is still averaging about 100 coronaviru­s deaths every day.

Unlike the U.K., Italy and Spain are maintainin­g social distancing and masks for students and staff. Italy also requires teachers to show proof of vaccinatio­n or a recen t negat i ve coronaviru­s test, as do Turkey and Greece.

In France, where students headed back to school Thursday, face coverings must be worn by pupils 6 and up, and whole primary school classes will be sent home if one child tests posi t i ve.

In the Balkan nations that are among Europe’s poorest, meanwhile, low vaccinatio­n rates and surging outbreaks have made it difficult to get kids back to class after a year and a half.

In Kosovo, where the weekly average of new cases rose more than tenfold between July and August, the start of the school year has been delayed by two weeks until Sept. 13. Neighborin­g Albania also postponed school, and the government has ordered mandatory vaccinatio­ns for teachers. Only a third of Albania’s population, and less than 20% of people in Kosovo, have been fully vaccinated.

Even in countries with high inoculatio­n rates, warning bells are sounding in areas where schools have already returned. Scotland has seen cases soar to the highest level yet in the pandemic since schools reopened in mid-August. Israel, where school resumed Wednesday, is restrictin­g students in areas with the highest infection rates to online learning for now.

In Germany’s North Rhine-Westphalia, 30,000 students and almost 300 teachers in the state of 18 million are in quarantine, two weeks after school started. Infection rates in young people between 5 and 19 are by far the highest of any age group.

The United States may give hints of what lies ahead. American students returned to classrooms over the last month in many places just as the delta variant started to hammer the country, triggering dozens of outbreaks in schools. In some states, children now make up the largest proportion of new COVID-19 infect i ons.

Many schools have shut down entirely or reverted to online learning because so many children and staff got sick or had close contact with those infected. In the state of Georgia, many school superinten­dents said they experience­d more cases and quarantine­s in the first few weeks of class than during all of last year.

The start of school year has also led to fierce battles between parents and administra­tors over mask requiremen­ts that have devolved into violence at times.

---AP

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