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Face coverings U-turn for England’s secondary schools | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Secondary pupils in England will have to wear masks in school corridors in local lockdown areas of England, after the government reversed its guidance. | |
Head teachers in any secondary school will also have the "flexibility" to introduce masks in their schools. | |
Education Secretary Gavin Williamson says it follows updated advice from the World Health Organization. | |
"At each stage we have listened to the latest medical and scientific advice," said Mr Williamson. | |
The Department for Education says it is keeping its recommendation against using face coverings - but that schools can make their own decision to ask pupils and staff to wear them. | |
This will be in "communal areas" of schools such as corridors, rather than in classrooms, when schools "believe that is right in their particular circumstances". | |
The government had been under pressure over face masks in England's schools - with secondary schools in Scotland to use them in corridors or shared areas from next week. | |
Prime Minister Boris Johnson had earlier said: "We'll look at the changing medical evidence as we go on, if we need to change the advice then of course we will." | |
The ASCL head teachers' union had warned of confusion about the rules over face coverings - and said there was a lack of clarity over how schools should respond if teachers or pupils wanted to wear masks. | |
They had said it would be "prudent" to reconsider guidance against using masks - in the light of a recent recommendation from the World Health Organization for over-12s to wear face masks. | |
The union's leader, Geoff Barton, had urged that if there was a U-turn, that it should be "sooner rather than later". | |
Despite the official guidance against face coverings, some schools had already been preparing to use them. | |
The Oasis academy trust, with more than 50 schools in England, is to provide visors for its teachers - and secondary pupils will have to wear masks in corridors. | |
Steve Chalke, chief executive of the trust, said there was a responsibility to make schools "as safe as we possibly can" - and that meant using masks and visors. | |
Like wearing a school uniform, he said wearing masks would become "part of what we do" and would be part of a wider safety plan, including hand washing and keeping pupils apart in separate "bubbles". | Like wearing a school uniform, he said wearing masks would become "part of what we do" and would be part of a wider safety plan, including hand washing and keeping pupils apart in separate "bubbles". |
But in secondary school corridors and shared areas, where pupils could not be kept apart, Mr Chalke said masks would be required. | But in secondary school corridors and shared areas, where pupils could not be kept apart, Mr Chalke said masks would be required. |
"We're using our common sense for our schools and our buildings," he said. | "We're using our common sense for our schools and our buildings," he said. |
It would be another safety measure for teachers, he said, including those who might have underlying health conditions or in a more vulnerable age group. | |
Mr Chalke said schools leaders had to make a "moral choice" on how best to make schools safe on the scientific advice available. | Mr Chalke said schools leaders had to make a "moral choice" on how best to make schools safe on the scientific advice available. |
He also thought using masks, which would be provided, might increase the confidence of parents "nervous" about sending their children back to school. | |
A secondary school in Kent, Sir Roger Manwood's School in Sandwich, is expecting pupils and staff to wear masks - with pupils each being given three washable masks. | A secondary school in Kent, Sir Roger Manwood's School in Sandwich, is expecting pupils and staff to wear masks - with pupils each being given three washable masks. |