New: Schools with no masking requirement are about 3.5 times more likely to experience Covid-19 outbreak than schools w/universal masking, a CDC study in AZ found. CDC assessed masking & Covid-19 outbreaks in about 1,000 K-12 schools in Arizona’s Maricopa and Pima Counties.
— Jim Sciutto (@jimsciutto) September 24, 2021
Pediatric covid-19 cases rose faster in counties without school mask requirements, CDC says https://t.co/4Wr6pV9rE0
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) September 24, 2021
An entire middle school in Carroll County is switching to online learning for 2 days, because so many people there got covid or were close contacts with someone who tested positive. @kris10griffith with the latest:https://t.co/17IP6hxMSb
— Pamela Wood ☀️ (@pwoodreporter) September 20, 2021
Texas A&M is keeping its count of on-campus positive students low by kicking them out of the dorms. There are no online class options, and their families live hours away. So the students are not reporting themselves, because they’d have to drop out. https://t.co/Eclk0odbyl
— Stephanie Leary (@sleary) September 18, 2021
Four kids in the class have tested positive so far. TK = pre-K, so they're under 4 yo. This should be a crime. https://t.co/Ou4rmOp9hw
— Dr Red Bison, PhD 💉💉😷 🆘🔥🌎 🏳️🌈♀⚖️ #RESIST (@RedBison) September 13, 2021
A Texas school district that closed for a week after two junior high school teachers died from COVID within a few days is now requiring masks inside all of its facilities as the community is seeing surge of new cases, hospitalizations, and deaths. https://t.co/gYFmFiULz0
— Kyle Griffin (@kylegriffin1) September 12, 2021
“Across the country, frustrated college faculty are reaching a breaking point, furious about being forced to teach in person on campuses where COVID regulations are non-existent or barely enforced.” https://t.co/QWBnr6W0sM
— Ronald Brownstein (@RonBrownstein) September 12, 2021
Just a few weeks into the new school year, thousands of students and teachers across the Washington region have been quarantined for potential exposure to the coronavirus https://t.co/3nslKPyu3J
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) September 12, 2021
There have been no COVID-19 outbreaks in San Francisco schools since students and educators went back into classrooms on Aug. 16, the San Francisco Department of Public Health has announced.
— Kyle Griffin (@kylegriffin1) September 11, 2021
About 90% of children ages 12 to 17 are fully vaccinated. https://t.co/RmRKKlJdzI