This 1911 photo shows schoolchildren on the ferry boat Rutherford, across the river from Manhattan, New York. Pic/AP
Concerns about school infrastructure are adding momentum to plans in some districts in the US, even in colder climates, to take classes outdoors for the sake of student and teacher health. Nationwide, an estimated 41 per cent of school districts need to update or replace their heating, ventilation and cooling systems in at least half their schools, a federal report issued in June stated.
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Ineffective systems a threat
There is no proof that the disease can spread through ventilation systems from one classroom to the next, said Dr Edward Nardell, a Harvard Medical School professor who specialises in airborne diseases. The danger, he said, is from ineffective systems that don't remove floating viruses and let them linger in classrooms after they are expelled in an infected person's breath or sneeze.
Solution from past outbreaks
Some, including Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, say one solution to air circulation problems may be teaching classes outdoors, which was done during tuberculosis and influenza outbreaks in the early 1900s, even in cold weather. The coronavirus spreads less efficiently outdoors and students could more easily sit 6 feet apart.
Several schools in the Northeast have bought large tents like those used at outdoor weddings and plan to use them to teach outside through November. Some have even installed propane heaters.
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