As schools in South Korea sent some 2.37 million more students
back to classrooms Wednesday, 561 kindergartens and schools in cities at high
risk of community transmission of COVID-19 postponed reopening.
About 2.7 percent of the schools that were supposed to reopen
Wednesday remained closed as of the afternoon, according to Education Ministry
data. Most were in Seoul; Bucheon, Gyeonggi Province; and Gumi, North
Gyeongsang Province; where most of the country’s new infections were reported
in recent days.
On Wednesday, two high school seniors tested positive for the
virus, one in Seoul and one in Daegu, leading their schools and nearby schools
to shut down.
Health authorities believe the virus situation in Korea is under
control despite small-scale outbreaks linked to bars and clubs in Seoul’s party
district of Itaewon, and most recently a logistics center in Bucheon.
But there are lingering concerns about sending children back to
classrooms, especially in Seoul and the surrounding Gyeonggi Province, home to
roughly half of the country’s population, as the metropolitan area is seeing a
spike in new cases.
Adding to the concerns, Korea on Monday reported two suspected
of cases of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children.
Despite the concerns, education authorities are adamant that the
phased reopening of schools will go ahead as planned.
“I understand (parents’) concerns about reopening of schools in
the situation where COVID-19 infections are reported sporadically,” Education
Minister Yoo Eun-hae said Wednesday at a meeting with the heads of regional
education offices.
“But if we cannot send our students back to school under the
country’s current COVID-19 management system, schools in Korea will never be
able to open again this year and classes can only be held online,” she said.
“Only through remote learning, we cannot provide students with sufficient
education that is only possible through face-to-face interaction with teachers
at schools.”
Currently, it takes one confirmed patient for a whole school to
shut down. In other cases, schools can decide whether to close after consulting
with regional education offices and health authorities.
In the second phase of reopening, in-person classes resumed on
Wednesday for students in kindergarten, the second year of high school, the
third year of middle school and the first two years of elementary school.
High school seniors returned to school the previous Wednesday.
So far, in-person classes have already resumed for about 47
percent of the country’s students, an estimated 2.8 million, attending
kindergartens and elementary, middle and high schools.
Students in their first year of high school, their second year
of middle school, or their third or fourth year of elementary school will go
back to classrooms June 3. Schools will reopen for the rest on June 8.
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