When it comes to school closings, politicians have learned a lot from the pandemic, and many people agree on that. But how can protection against infection and the right to education be reconciled? In this debate, the tone is sharper, sometimes more desperate. At least there are constructive suggestions (“This is the matter”).
In the event that you want to take a short break from the pandemic and other problems, we particularly recommend November 20th. We’ll tell you at the end of this newsletter (“Good to know”) why the day is ideally suited for changing your mind and how this benefits education.
In a way, we are allowed to participate in the Chancellor’s post. We receive various open letters to Angela Merkel by e-mail. They contain urgent – but also contradicting – demands on the subject of corona and school. The background to this is the decision of the Conference of Ministers of Education last Tuesday and the decision by Merkel and the Prime Minister the next day to impose a far-reaching shutdown, but to leave daycare centers and schools open.
One parliamentary group expresses “greatest concerns”, “because our children and thus also the general population are irresponsibly endangered,” as the Federal Parents’ Council and other associations write. The core of their criticism: the Conference of Ministers of Education and Cultural Affairs does not implement the recommendations of the Robert Koch Institute as binding national guidelines. The institute had recommended that schools from a certain number of corona cases in the region return to teaching in small groups and in a shift system.