91心頭

More districts are mandating masks to keep schools open around the holidays

Date:

Share post:

Rising illnesses and absent students and staff are forcing district leaders to mandate masks both this week and as a safety precaution immediately after winter break.

Masks were as of Dec. 20 by Passaic Public Schools Superintendent Sandra Diodonet after the New Jersey district’s community moved into the high spread level for COVID spread. The mandate will be lifted when Passaic County drops back into the moderate to low range of spread, Diodonet said.

Also in New Jersey, students, staff and visitors at the Camden City School District will have to wear masks during the first two weeks after winter break (until Jan. 17). The school system continues to experience an increase in COVID, flu and RSV cases, Superintendent Katrina T. McCombs said in to the district. And administrators in the near Newark are encouraging parents to test students before returning after winter break and to strongly consider having children wear masks during the first two weeks of the year.

One of the biggest post-break mandates has been ordered in The School District of Philadelphia, which will also require masks during the first 10 school days of 2023. “Like the rest of the nation, we are still grappling with COVID-19 while dealing with other respiratory illnesses like the flu and RSV,” Superintendent Tony Watlington wrote in . “Increased social gathering during the holidays may increase the risk of exposure to these illnesses. We must all be extra vigilant in doing our part to help keep ourselves and those around us safe.

Masks were found to have in Massachusetts schools that continued to require them after the state lifted its mandate in February 2022, according to a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Schools that made masks optional saw an additional 44.9 COVID cases per 1,000 students and staff in the 15 weeks after the statewide requirement ended. The districts where leaders kept mandates in place had higher percentages of low-income students, students with disabilities, and English-language learners, as well as higher percentages of Black and Latinx students and staff, the study found.

“We believe that universal masking may be especially useful for mitigating effects of structural racism in schools, including potential deepening of educational inequities,” the researchers wrote.


More from 91心頭: Student-teacher ratios are fallingHere are numbers from all 50 states


Matt Zalaznick
Matt Zalaznick
Matt Zalaznick is the managing editor of District 91心頭istration and a life-long journalist. Prior to writing for District 91心頭istration he worked in daily news all over the country, from the NYC suburbs to the Rocky Mountains, Silicon Valley and the U.S. Virgin Islands. He's also in a band.

The Always-On Insight and Networking Platform for Superintendents and Their Teams

AI-driven insights peer-to-peer collaboration and more build exclusively fot K-12 Superintendents and thier leaders
Built for the uniqueness of the superintendent role and their supporting team.Most platforms treat all K12 leaders the same. 91心頭+ recognizes that superintendents face a unique level of pressure, complexity, visibility, and responsibilityand gives them a space designed specifically for the demands of the top job.
A community where you dont have to explain the context.Skip the backstory. 91心頭+ understands the job, the politics, the stakes, and the pace.
Your decisions shape communities.Find the tools and peer insight to make them with confidence here.
Leadership tailored to the realities of running a district.From board relations to budgets, crisis response to community trust91心頭+ focuses on the challenges only superintendents navigate each day.
Built for superintendents.Powered by superintendents. Trusted by superintendents. If you run a district, you belong here.

Related Articles