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Very few kids are getting COVID-19 after going back to primary school, research shows - but masks are key
Very few kids are getting COVID-19 after going back to primary school, research shows - but masks are key
Aria BendixJan 27, 2021, 06:22 IST
Kindergarten students raise their hands at Lupine Hill Elementary School in Calabasas, California, on November 9, 2020.Al Seib/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images
Kids attending school in person have, for the most part, avoided the
coronavirus as long as masking and social distancing are required.
Schools in Norway and Sweden have seen few coronavirus cases even without mask requirements when community transmission rates are low.
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Two crossed lines that form an X . It indicates a way to close an interaction, or dismiss a notification. Kindergarten students raise their hands at Lupine Hill Elementary School in Calabasas, California, on November 9, 2020. Al Seib/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images
Kids attending school in person have, for the most part, avoided the coronavirus as long as masking and social distancing are required.
Schools in Norway and Sweden have seen few coronavirus cases even without mask requirements when community transmission rates are low.
The studies suggest that schools can reopen safely if they take appropriate public-health measures.
Dozens of North Carolina schools reopened their doors in August. The in-person learning environment was slightly different than in pre-pandemic days: Students age 5 and up were required to wear masks, stay six feet apart, and wash their hands regularly.
Al Seib/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images
Kids attending school in person have, for the most part, avoided the coronavirus as long as masking and social distancing are required.
Schools in Norway and Sweden have seen few coronavirus cases even without mask requirements when community transmission rates are low.
The studies suggest that schools can reopen safely if they take appropriate public-health measures.
Dozens of North Carolina schools reopened their doors in August. The in-person learning environment was slightly different than in pre-pandemic days: Students age 5 and up were required to wear masks, stay six feet apart, and wash their hands regularly.
Richmond, Charleston Warn About Parties Jan. 25, 6:15 a.m. The University of Richmond and the College of Charleston are warning students about the dangers of parties. The University of Richmond sent students a letter Friday that said students were endangering in-person learning, The Richmond Times-Dispatch reported. University officials said they were aware of two parties in
Wandering in Unbelief
One of our greatest struggles with contentment is that we often have an incorrect picture of what it means to be content. It’s helpful to understand what something
is not in order to have a more correct understanding of what
it is. Paul learned contentment, but we can gain a better picture of what that really looked like from what he shared about his life with the churches to whom he wrote. From Paul’s letters, below are four things contentment is not.
1. Contentment is not a carefree existence.
Contentment isn’t having it all together and finding a life of perfect balance. Nor is it an idyllic moment spent swinging on a hammock, sipping lemonade, and reading a book on a cool fall afternoon, while all the world around you falls apart. Paul’s description of his time in Asia probably wouldn’t make the Facebook feed: