JCB-sponsored academy in Staffordshire is first school to close due to a confirmed coronavirus case

A school in Staffordshire is believed to be the first school to have closed due to a confirmed coronavirus case since they reopened to pupils. 

The JCB Academy in Rochester, Staffordshire, was one of the first schools to welcome pupils back at the end of August but told children to stay at home today.

In an email sent to parents late last night, the school said it was investigating a ‘single case’ of the virus but did not clarify whether a member of staff or a student tested positive.

The school has been closed ‘as a precaution’, with 700 of the 800 students being allowed to return to class next Monday.

The JCB Academy in Rochester, Staffordshire, was one of the first schools to welcome pupils back at the end of August but told children to stay at home today

Around 100 students have been asked to stay at home and self-isolate for the next 14 days. 

The school has told parents not to be ‘unduly concerned’ by the outbreak but advised them to book a test for their child if they become symptomatic.

Principal Jenny McGuirk said the academy has taken advice from Public Health England and the Staffordshire Covid-19 Response Team.

She told the BBC: ‘Through track and trace, academy staff have worked throughout the day to contact the families of students believed to have been in contact with the individual who has tested positive.

The school has been closed 'as a precaution', with 700 of the 800 students being allowed to return to class next Monday

The school has been closed ‘as a precaution’, with 700 of the 800 students being allowed to return to class next Monday

‘As a result, around 100 students have now been asked to self-isolate for the next 14 days.

‘In the meantime, the JCB Academy will re-open on Monday for the remaining 700 students.’

Self-isolating students will be able to access learning on Google Classroom for their lessons. 

At least seven schools in England have sent students home due to outbreaks of the virus but the JCB Academy is believed to be the first school to fully close since reopening.

The school has told parents not to be 'unduly concerned' by the outbreak but advised them to book a test for their child if they become symptomatic

The school has told parents not to be ‘unduly concerned’ by the outbreak but advised them to book a test for their child if they become symptomatic

More than two dozen pupils at Unity College in Burnley were sent home to self-isolate after a child tested positive for coronavirus yesterday afternoon. 

The school confirmed a Year 7 pupil contracted the virus on his first day of school.

It was the first day many children were returning to the classroom after a six-month absence.

In a statement on the school’s website, Headteacher Mrs Sally-Jane Cryer said: ‘At the start of the afternoon of Wednesday 2 September 2020, I was contacted by a parent of a child in year 7 to inform me that the year 7 child has tested positive for Covid-19.

More than two dozen pupils at Unity College in Burnley were sent home to self-isolate after a child tested positive for coronavirus on the first day of school yesterday afternoon

More than two dozen pupils at Unity College in Burnley were sent home to self-isolate after a child tested positive for coronavirus on the first day of school yesterday afternoon

‘The boy and his family have been part of the governments track and trace pilot and are tested weekly. The parents do not have the virus but the year 7 child does have it.

‘The boy has had no symptoms at all. The college took immediate action and isolated the boy and his family collected him immediately.

‘The parents of all the other students in the child’s bubble, 25 year 7 students in total, have been contacted and all 25 have been sent home this afternoon and told to self-isolate for 14 days.

‘The rooms where the class have been taught were deep cleaned immediately. No other student bubbles in any year group including year 7 have been affected.’

One in five parents STILL aren’t sending their children back to school despite classrooms reopening after lockdown 

The majority of headteachers are reporting an attendance of more than 80%  among the pupils in England returning to the classroom this week, suggesting around one in five parents are yet to send their children back to school. 

Schools in England have begun welcoming back students in all year groups for the start of the autumn term, with the remainder due to open next week.

Early indications from a poll, by the school leaders union NAHT, suggest around nine in ten (92%) schools have had more than 80% of pupils attend.

The survey, of more 840 school leaders on Friday, found more than four in five (82%) schools have had more than 90% of children turn up to school.

Year 7 students line up in the playground and observe social distancing at City of London Academy Highgate Hill today after schools reopened, as a poll shows there are still pupils not returning because of coronavirus

Year 7 students line up in the playground and observe social distancing at City of London Academy Highgate Hill today after schools reopened, as a poll shows there are still pupils not returning because of coronavirus

School leaders said the top reasons for pupils not attending school were that they were quarantining following a trip abroad, were still away on holiday or were unwell with a non-coronavirus illness.

The overall absence rate during the 2019/20 Autumn term was 4.93 per cent, with the unauthorised absence rate at 1.32 per cent. For the three years prior, it was lower still.

About one in five (21%) school leaders said they had a pupil in their school who did not attend because their parents felt too anxious to send them back.

A similar proportion (20%) said they had a pupil in their school who did not attend because they were self-isolating following exposure to Covid-19.

Paul Whiteman, general secretary of the NAHT, said: ‘This is a remarkable achievement, but we should not take anything for granted because we know that restrictions may well be likely as we get deeper into this term.

‘What’s important is that the Government gives very clear messages to schools and parents from now on so that attendance can remain high.’

The findings came as a school in Staffordshire closed as a precaution on Friday after a student tested positive for Covid-19. 

Pictured: A teacher talks to her year two pupils during their first day of school after the summer break at St Luke's Church of England Primary School in East London on September 3

 Pictured: A teacher talks to her year two pupils during their first day of school after the summer break at St Luke’s Church of England Primary School in East London on September 3

She added that robust measures were put in place – including compulsory hand sanitising and the wearing of face masks between classrooms – before the school reopened for the autumn term.

It is the first time many pupils have stepped into a classroom since March, when schools were closed due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The Department for Education has said fines for parents who refuse to send their children to school will only be used as a ‘last resort’.

Mr Whiteman added: ‘Obviously for some, the anxiety of coronavirus means that they do not feel able to send their children to school.

‘Schools will work compassionately with these families and they should not be shamed or fined, which is why we are restating our appeal to the Government to take the threat of fines off the table.’

SIGNIFICANT OUTBREAKS OF COVID-19 LINKED TO UNIVERSITIES HIGHLY LIKELY – SAGE 

Significant outbreaks of coronavirus linked to universities are ‘highly likely’ and they risk amplifying the transmission of the virus across the country, Government scientific advisers have said.

Social interactions and accommodation are likely to be a ‘high-risk environment’ for transmission to occur – and asymptomatic cases among students may make it harder to detect, they warned.

In a document published by the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), scientists have suggested that wider-scale testing, combined with action places, may help control campus outbreaks.

Wearing face coverings in campus buildings and reducing in-person interactions may mitigate the transmission of Covid-19, the advice suggests.

It says: ‘Students who are residents in university accommodation should be segmented as far as possible to co-locate courses or year groups, to minimise networks between different parts of an institution.’

The document, released on Friday by Sage, comes as students across the country prepare to return to university campuses for the autumn term.

It said: ‘There is a significant risk that HE (Higher Education) could amplify local and national transmission, and this requires national oversight.’

The paper, which sets out the principles for managing transmission, adds: ‘A critical risk is a large number of infected students seeding outbreaks across the UK, influencing national transmission.’

There is a small risk of this at the start of term, it says, but there is a ‘more substantial risk’ at the end of term if the infection spreads in universities.

The advisers warned outbreaks would coincide with Christmas and new year posing ‘a significant risk to both extended families and local communities.’

Universities should consider providing dedicated accommodation facilities to enable students who test positive to effectively isolate and minimise the risk of an outbreak, the scientists said.

Universities have been advised to involve students when producing rules on how to behave to increase the likelihood of young people adhering to them.

The document warns: ‘Disagreements, mistakes and transgressions will happen. Preventing anger, confrontation and stigmatisation will be important.’

On the Sage report, Professor Julia Buckingham, president of Universities UK and vice-chancellor of Brunel University London, said: ‘It is reassuring to note that many of the recommendations have already been addressed by universities in their planning for the start of the new term.

‘Higher education institutions are aware of the risk of cases emerging on campus and that is why they have been working hard over many months and investing considerable resource and expertise into planning for all scenarios.

‘It is vital that the sector and local health and public bodies work together over the new term to develop robust plans for managing outbreaks in university towns.’

Jo Grady, general secretary of the University and College Union, said: ‘This report is sobering reading and brings the dangers associated with reopening university campuses into sharp focus. It exposes how wrong it was to try and pretend it would be almost business as usual. The worry now is how ill-prepared the Government and universities appear to be.

‘We welcome the recommendations for better testing and tracing, and for universities to work with staff and students on guidance. This report adds further weight to our call that online teaching must be universities’ default position.

‘What we really need now is a serious response from universities and Government – The health of university staf, students and the wider community is too important to gamble with. This is not business as usual.’

A Department for Education spokeswoman said: ‘The safety and wellbeing of university students and staff is always a priority and these findings from Sage underpin the protective measures being taken to open universities safely for students, staff and local communities.

‘We have already published guidance on reopening higher education buildings and campuses, and will update this shortly to reflect Sage’s advice, to help universities prepare to open safely.’