USA TODAY US Edition

Majority supports masks in schools

2 in 3 favor mandates, vaccinated school staff

- Alia Wong

U.S. parents are eager for kids to return to school, but they’re concerned their children will get seriously ill if they catch COVID-19. A majority 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 in-person 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-percentage­point drop from last May. Concerns are especially high among Black parents, 37% of whom say their children were well-prepared for distance learning.

Parents’ confidence 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.

Among parents of schoolchil­dren, 7 in 10 support returning to full-time instructio­n in classrooms. Support is strongest among white and Asian parents and weakest among Black and

Hispanic parents, communitie­s that have been hit harder by COVID-19.

The poll was conducted online from Aug. 30 to Sept. 1 among roughly 2,000 adults. About a fifth 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 effect, 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 nonparents 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.

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. A person’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 fingers.”

Pittman, 46, a civil engineer, supports his kids’ schools’ return to full-time, 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. The decision to sign his teenagers up for the shots was largely based on convenienc­e: The family will soon fly to Hawaii, which waives certain travel restrictio­ns for visitors who show proof of vaccinatio­n.

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 different take. School mask and vaccinatio­n mandates are “just common-sense rules,” says Mathew, who has a 5-year-old daughter in public school. He has “absolutely no doubt” that his daughter will get vaccinated against COVID-19 as soon as she’s eligible.

Mathew, who doesn’t affiliate 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. The school did a pretty good job with remote instructio­n, but the in-person experience is especially hard to replicate for children her age, he says.

“We should not have to put that kind of stress on them. … It’s unfair for a child to have to go to school and feel that way.” Tameka Dumas Mother of two in Grenada, Mississipp­i

What parents fear

Nationally, children account for roughly 15% of all cases during the pandemic, according to 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 exposed to the coronaviru­s, including 60% of Black parents. Among all parents, more than 15% worry about higherrisk 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.

Tameka Dumas, 48, a mother of two in Grenada, Mississipp­i, is wary of inperson learning because of the health risks. Her younger son, who’s back in class, regularly tells her how scared he is of catching the virus at his high school. He doesn’t have the option of distance learning, and students at his school aren’t required to mask up.

“He’s still giving it his all,” Dumas says, but returning to school affects him emotionall­y. “We should not have to put that kind of stress on them. … It’s unfair for a child to have to go to school and feel that way.”

To Dumas, a Democrat whose son got the vaccine as soon as he was eligible, school mask and vaccine requiremen­ts are a no-brainer.

“The more time these children are spending in that school” without such mandates, she says, “the more likely they are to get sick. I don’t know what the excuse is.”

 ?? WM. GLASHEEN/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? About 60% of parents say kids face greater COVID-19 risks than last year.
WM. GLASHEEN/USA TODAY NETWORK About 60% of parents say kids face greater COVID-19 risks than last year.
 ?? TIM SHORTT/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? The Brevard County School Board in Florida voted 3-2 Aug. 30 to institute a 30-day policy requiring masks in public schools.
TIM SHORTT/USA TODAY NETWORK The Brevard County School Board in Florida voted 3-2 Aug. 30 to institute a 30-day policy requiring masks in public schools.

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