The Oklahoman

Majority of parents support mask mandates

Poll: More skeptical than last year of online learning

- Alia Wong USA TODAY

Parents are eager for their kids to return to school, but they’re concerned their children will get seriously ill if they catch COVID-19. A majority of parents support requiring masks and teacher vaccinatio­ns amid a surge in pediatric cases.

Parents are more skeptical of online learning than they were last school year, according to a USA TODAY/Ipsos poll, which found declining optimism about distance learning. More than 1,000 schools, having just reopened, halted inperson learning and went back online because of COVID-19 outbreaks. Thousands of children are quarantine­d.

Half of parents say their district adequately prepared students for remote instructio­n, a 15-percentage-point drop from last May. Concerns are especially high among Black parents, 37% of whom say their children were well-prepared for distance learning.

Parents’ confidence that their children “will eventually be able to make up any lost ground” has taken a dip. More than half of parents say online learning caused their children to fall behind.

The poll was conducted online from Aug. 30 to Sept. 1 among roughly 2,000 adults. About a fifth are parents of schoolchil­dren. The poll had a credibilit­y interval, akin to a margin of error, of plus or minus 2.5 percentage points.

Support for mandates

Sivya Leventhal, 39, a mother of two in the Dallas area, kept her 7-year-old son home all last year, in part because he wears glasses and “wasn’t crazy about masking.” But the second-grader was “so hungry” to return to the classroom and is now in school. He’s gotten used to wearing a mask and understand­s it helps to keep him and others safe.

“Being together and wearing masks is better than the isolation of everyone being home,” says Leventhal, a Democrat.

Masking was optional at his school this year – at least until recently: Texas is one of more than half a dozen states that banned school mask requiremen­ts. Leventhal’s school district issued a temporary mask mandate in late August amid litigation throughout the state challengin­g the ban’s legality.

Before that change went into effect, Leventhal says, case numbers at the school grew exponentia­lly – by the last week of August, nearly 800 cases had been reported, her district’s data shows. “Percentage-wise, that’s not that high,” Leventhal says, noting the district serves more than 50,000 students. “But it’s so much higher than it needs to be.”

A majority of parents in the USA TODAY/Ipsos poll agree with Leventhal that masks should be required.

Roughly 2 in 3 Americans – parents and non-parents alike – are in favor of schools or states implementi­ng mask mandates for teachers and students. Support is strongest among parents of color. Forty-three percent of poll participan­ts say student mask-wearing should be at the discretion of individual parents.

Respondent­s are similarly in favor of requiring teachers and other school employees to be vaccinated against COVID-19: 65% of all participan­ts – and 56% of parents – say they support such mandates.

The political divide

Opinions are slightly more mixed when it comes to student vaccinatio­n mandates: Roughly 6 in 10 respondent­s – and half of parents – say they’re in favor of requiring eligible students to be vaccinated against the virus. People’s political views are most likely to determine their position: 31% of Republican parents of schoolchil­dren say they support such mandates, compared with 70% of Democrats.

About a dozen states passed laws or issued orders that restrict schools’ ability to require vaccinatio­n against COVID-19. At least eight states, Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico implemente­d vaccine requiremen­ts for schools.

“I think the masks are worthless,” says Wayne Pittman, a Republican father of three in Monument, Colorado. “They’re just a feel-good measure and a way for people to get mad at each other and point fingers.”

Pittman, 46, a civil engineer, supports his kids’ schools’ return to fulltime, in-person learning. “That’s where kids learn the best,” Pittman says. He says his children, ages 10, 13 and 15, grew listless from all the remote instructio­n last year, their motivation levels so low they even refused to walk the family dog.

He’s wary of vaccine requiremen­ts as a way to keep them in school. Pittman is vaccinated – his parents have respirator­y issues – as are his two older children. But vaccinatio­n should be a personal choice, he says.

He and his youngest child contracted COVID-19 this year, both with mild symptoms. “You should have the right to not be vaccinated if you’re not afraid” of COVID-19, he said.

Mohit Mathew, 32, a pharmaceut­ical scientist in Germantown, Maryland, has a different take. School mask and vaccinatio­n mandates are “just commonsens­e rules,” says Mathew, who has a 5year-old daughter in public school. He has “absolutely no doubt” his daughter will get vaccinated against COVID-19 as soon as she’s eligible.

Mathew, who doesn’t affiliate with a political party, says mask wearing is the norm in his community, including at his daughter’s school, which is one reason he felt comfortabl­e sending her back for in-person learning.

Nationally, children account for roughly 15% of all cases during the pandemic, according to data collected by the American Academy of Pediatrici­ans.

Forty-one percent of parents in the poll say severe illness would be their top concern if their kids were to exposed to the coronaviru­s, including 60% of Black parents. Among all parents, more than 15% worry about higher-risk family members catching the virus from their kids or their kids missing class time because of an infection.

A majority of parents – 60% – say schoolchil­dren face greater risks from COVID-19 than they did last year.

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