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Columbus City Council set to fund high-quality preschools

Columbus City Council set to fund high-quality preschools
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Lower-Income Ohio Kids Spent A Lot More Time Behind Screens Early In The Pandemic

File photo While the pandemic pushed all Ohio kids out of classrooms and behind computer screens, a big spike in digital device use by children from lower-income families is causing some concerns among researchers. A new study from Ohio State University’s Crane Center for Early Childhood Research and Policy says kindergarten students from lower-income households spent about 6.6 hours per day watching TV and using computers, phones and tablets in the early weeks of the pandemic when child care was shut down. That’s about double the amount of screen time reported in similar studies of lower-income kids before the pandemic.

Pandemic screen time tops 6 hours a day for some kindergartners

Date Time Pandemic screen time tops 6 hours a day for some kindergartners Kindergartners from low-income families spent more than six hours a day in front of screens during two early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, a small Ohio study suggests. That is nearly double the screen time found before the pandemic in similar children, according to other research. Caregivers from low-income households may have faced more difficulties than those from more advantaged families in managing the time their children spent watching TV and using computers, phones and tablets when child care was shut down, according to the researchers. Still, the results are concerning, said Rebecca Dore, lead author of the study and senior research associate at The Ohio State University’s Crane Center for Early Childhood Research and Policy.

What do Ohio s school coronavirus cases, reopening plans look like headed into school staff vaccination? Q&A

What do Ohio’s school coronavirus cases, reopening plans look like headed into school staff vaccination? Q&A Updated Jan 28, 2021; Posted Jan 28, 2021 The pharmacy at MetroHealth in Cleveland catalogs the batch number on a Pfizer vaccine vial. (John Kuntz, cleveland.com) John Kuntz, cleveland.com Facebook Share CLEVELAND, Ohio As Ohio looks to vaccinate school staff at 500 schools over the course of its first week, districts are welcoming back students into buildings. Buildings are beginning to open up ahead of the state beginning to vaccinate staff at districts or schools that agree to return in person, fully or partially, by March 1. About 45% of students in public school districts are now fully in-person, with 36% in partial in-person. Gov. Mike DeWine, who backs the choice to prioritize educators for the vaccine as a “policy decision” to get kids back in buildings, attributed the shift to in-person instruction to the promise of the vaccine.

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