Parents on Edge as Schools Brace for Fully In-person Learning amid Record Virus Surge | Be Korea-savvy

Parents on Edge as Schools Brace for Fully In-person Learning amid Record Virus Surge


A classroom in an elementary school in the southern city of Gwangju is being disinfected on Feb. 22, 2022, ahead of the spring semester. (Yonhap)

A classroom in an elementary school in the southern city of Gwangju is being disinfected on Feb. 22, 2022, ahead of the spring semester. (Yonhap)

SEOUL, Feb. 28 (Korea Bizwire)Schools from elementary to secondary levels are bracing for fully in-person classes for the upcoming spring semester, but parents are on edge over infection fears as the country’s daily COVID-19 tally is expected to go up further down the road.

With the new semester for most schools scheduled to start Wednesday, the education ministry is recommending all schools nationwide provide full in-person learning under its new four-tier attendance scheme following a grace period in the first two weeks.

Under the scheme, schools will be recommended against shifting to full remote learning unless 3 percent of students test positive or 15 percent go into self-quarantine due to infections or close contact with patients.

During the two-week grace period from March 2-11, it will be up to each school to decide for itself whether to give lessons in person or online, and many schools have opted for all classes at school.

Parents have voiced anxiety over imminent in-person class gatherings at a time when the country’s daily COVID-19 tallies are renewing records while young children have yet to be inoculated under the national vaccination scheme.

“I am very nervous about my children going to school in person everyday given the recent upsurge in infection cases ahead of the new semester,” a mother of two girls in eastern Seoul wrote in an online moms’ community.

“I was on edge literally every day over infection fears as my children went to school every day in the second semester last year,” she noted.

Another mom of a high schooler in southern Seoul is worried that all the efforts she made to keep away from COVID-19 and outside activities may go to waste if her son goes to school this week and comes in contact with anyone with the virus.

“I hope in-person classes can resume after the peak of (the current omicron wave) is reached,” she added.

A cafeteria at an elementary school in western Seoul is being cleaned on Feb. 22, 2022, ahead of a new semester. (Yonhap)

A cafeteria at an elementary school in western Seoul is being cleaned on Feb. 22, 2022, ahead of a new semester. (Yonhap)

In Seoul alone, a total of 5,036 COVID-19 infections involving kindergarten and school students were confirmed in the week ending on Feb. 20, with 22.4 percent of them infected via schools.

Infections among children aged 5-11 have also risen sharply as the government has yet to roll out a vaccination campaign.

After approving the use of Pfizer Inc.’s COVID-19 vaccine for the age group, the government is scheduled to announce its first inoculation scheme for young children next month.

Medical experts, however, predict the actual administration of COVID-19 vaccines for children is likely to kick off only after the current omicron wave reaches its peak, which is widely expected be around 250,000 new daily cases in mid-March.

On Monday, South Korea reported 139,626 new coronavirus infections after recording an all-time high of 171,442 last Wednesday.

Earlier in the day, Prime Minister Kim Boo-kyum once again pledged fully in-person classes for all students following the upcoming two-week grace period.

“Schools where children meet friends and learn socialization should be (open and) retained as other public spaces of our society,” he wrote on Facebook.

“Teachers nationwide are preparing for the school opening with resolute determination to safeguard students and keep up fully in-person learning.”

(Yonhap)

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