Cheers and fears: Kids yearn for class, teachers are uneasy

Cheers and fears: Kids yearn for class, teachers are uneasy

SeattlePI.com

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BRUSSELS (AP) — In a world turned upside down by the coronavirus pandemic, rarely have so many kids relished the end of their summer vacations — and rarely have so many teachers faced such anxiety as school bells ring in a new year across much of Europe starting Tuesday.

The pandemic-stained months of this year's summer break — with social distancing rules and enforced seclusion from friends — came on top of months of lockdowns and uneven online instruction since COVID-19 hit Europe.

Now from Belgium to Russia, France to Hungary, tens of millions of kids will be unleashed upon one another in classrooms, gyms and playgrounds again. While it's a joyous time for youngsters, parents and teachers are more than uneasy how that will fuel the continent's daily infection rates, which are already much higher now than in May or June due to virus spread during family outings and summer vacations.

“The first thing I will do at school will be greeting everyone and hugging, because I’m full of love," said Eva Aldanova, 10, who is heading back to her 4th grade class in Moscow. “I will tell everyone that I missed them a lot. And I will get ready for my first lesson!”

Preparing schools for that first lesson has been a challenge throughout the continent, which in contrast to many school districts in the United States, is choosing in-class teaching as opposed to online. Disinfectants need to be in place, better air circulation guaranteed, masks plentiful, ways to reduce interactions between large groups of students introduced. Some language teachers will even need transparent face masks so they can show pupils how to pronounce words.

“I feel OK, but I am a bit tired because we worked on all those plans, security plans, and risks assessments the last two weeks, and it was a lot of work," said Karin Heremans, director...

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