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NEW GUIDANCE CONFIRMS ALL POSSIBLE MEASURES TAKEN BEFORE SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES CLOSE IN ANY LOCAL LOCKDOWN

Gavin Williamson

@educationgovuk – NEW GUIDANCE CONFIRMS ALL POSSIBLE MEASURES TAKEN BEFORE SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES CLOSE IN ANY LOCAL LOCKDOWN 

  • All schools and other educational settings to open to all pupils for start of autumn term
  • New contingency planning guidance published for education settings in local lockdown areas
  • Confirms all other measures should be taken before any changes to school attendance 

Today (Friday 28 August) the government has published detailed guidance for schools on contingency planning for areas with local lockdowns in place. 

The guidance sets out that all possible measures should be taken before any restrictions are imposed on schools to maintain consistent education for children and young people. 

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson said:

 “Our primary focus remains supporting all schools to welcome back all pupils for the start of term and we thank teachers and staff for their hard work in preparations. 

“We hope that we won’t have to implement the guidance set out today because the local lockdown measures we have introduced so far are working. Changes to school attendance will only ever be an absolute last resort.   

“However, it is important that both government and schools prepare for a worst case scenario, so this framework represents the sensible contingency planning any responsible government would put in place.” 

The updated contains guidance sets out four tiers of restrictions for education settings, for use as an absolute last resort in areas subject to local restrictions. 

All schools, colleges and other education settings are opening for the start of term, with all those in areas subject to local restrictions currently at Tier 1 – fully open to all pupils full time, with face coverings required in corridors and communal areas for pupils in Year 7 and above. 

Local authority leaders and directors of public health, alongside national government, would be at the centre of any decision making to move out of Tier 1 for education settings. 

They would take all other possible measures, including implementing restrictions on other sectors, before considering restricting attendance in education. 

If all other measures have been exhausted, Tier 2 would advise secondary schools and colleges in a restricted area to use rotas to help break chains of transmission of coronavirus, while primary schools remain open to all pupils. 

Tiers 3 and 4 introduce remote learning full time for wider groups of pupils, with vulnerable children and children of critical workers continuing to attend. 

The government asked schools in July to ensure they were able to provide high quality remote education that mirrors in-school education, in case any pupils were required to self-isolate or local restrictions were needed. These plans should extend to rotas if ever required. 

All children are due to return to school for the autumn term and schools have been putting in place protective measures to reduce the risk of transmission. 

School staff have been working to implement increased hygiene and handwashing with children remaining in consistent groups, using measures such as staggered break times to keep groups apart. 

To further reassure parents and teachers that all proportionate measures are being taken to make schools as safe as possible, the government has announced that in areas of the country currently subject to enhanced restrictions, staff and pupils in secondary schools should wear face coverings in communal areas where social distancing cannot be maintained. 

If a suspected case of coronavirus occurs in a school, the pupil or staff member will be asked to self-isolate and get tested while the school continues working as normal with its existing protective measures in place. If a case is confirmed, local public health officials will work with the school to take appropriate measures, including asking all members of a pupil’s bubble to isolate for 14 days and access remote education while other pupils continue attending. 

From this week, schools and colleges have begun receiving home testing kits, each receiving a pack of 10 tests, with more available to be ordered if needed. The home testing kits are to be used in exceptional circumstances such an individual with symptoms who may have barriers to accessing a test elsewhere and the home kit would significantly increase their chance of getting tested. This will enable schools and colleges to take swift action to protect others if the test result is positive. 

Schools are also receiving packs of PPE to use in the very limited circumstances it may be required, such as when it is not possible for a staff member to maintain 2m distance from a pupil with a suspected case of coronavirus. 

This week the Chief Medical Officers from all four nations in the United Kingdom made it clear that the risks to children contracting Covid-19 in school or college is extremely low and that the risks associated with not being in school or college outweighs that of not being there.          

The Department for Education has also published further guidance to help schools plan for potential Tier 2 restrictions, which will involve secondary year groups operating a rota system in order to reduce pupil numbers on-site.

Sector Response to DfE guidance on measures taken before schools and colleges close in any local lockdown

Dr Patrick Roach, General Secretary of the NASUWT-The Teachers’ Union, said: 

“The NASUWT has been asking for clarification in respect of local outbreaks for a considerable time. 

“It is regrettable that as schools are finalising their plans for safe reopening next week the Government continues to publish yet more new guidance. 

“We have been saying for some time that schools need clarity on these important issues and that it is the responsibility of the Government to provide that clarity. 

“There must be a recognition that whilst children will be affected by local restrictions, so too will teachers and other staff in schools. 

“The availability of staff where there is a local lockdown or outbreak may mean that schools have to limit provision if they cannot be staffed safely 

“The Government now needs to confirm that schools will have the additional resources they need to deliver an effective remote learning offer to all pupils as well as funding for additional staff that will be necessary to maintain continuity of provision in the event of local disruption.”

Kate Green MP, Labour’s Shadow Education Secretary, responding to new government guidance on schools published this evening, said: 

“It beggars belief that this guidance has been put out just days before schools reopen.

 “The government’s incompetence is insulting to the school leaders and teachers who have worked so hard over summer to prepare schools for children to return. 

“School is the best place for children to be in September, but this government has repeatedly failed to show the leadership that they, their families and their teachers deserve.” 


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