Skip to content
The Times USA
Menu
  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT
  • LIFESTYLE
  • NATIONAL NEWS
  • BUSINESS
  • INTERNATIONAL NEWS
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • PRICE OF BUSINESS SHOW AUDIOS
Menu

The Reopening Of Schools Requires Specific Tools: DrOwl Is At The Top Of Our List

Posted on August 5, 2020 by David Jackson

All around the world, children’s minds are going to waste. As covid-19 surged in early April, more than 90% of pupils were shut out of school. Since then the number has fallen by one-third, as many classrooms in Europe and East Asia have reopened. But elsewhere progress is slow. Some American school districts, including Los Angeles and San Diego, plan to offer only remote learning when their new school year begins. Kenya’s government has scrapped the whole year, leaving its children idle until January. In the Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte says he may not let any children return to the classroom until a vaccine is found. South Africa has reopened casinos, but only a fraction of classrooms.

Many parents are understandably scared. Covid-19 is new, and poorly understood. Schools are big and crowded. Small children will not observe social distancing. Caution is appropriate, especially when cases are rising. But as we have argued before, the benefits of reopening schools usually outweigh the costs.

The new coronavirus poses a low risk to children. Studies suggest that under-18s are a third to a half less likely to catch the disease. Those under ten, according to British figures, are a thousand times less likely to die than someone aged between 70 and 79. The evidence suggests they are not especially likely to infect others. In Sweden staff at nurseries and primary schools, which never closed, were no more likely to catch the virus than those in other jobs. A new study of 1,500 teenage pupils and 500 teachers who had gone back to school in Germany in May found that only 0.6% had antibodies to the virus, less than half the national rate found in other studies. Granted, an outbreak at a secondary school in Israel infected over 150 pupils and staff. But with precautions, the risk can be minimized.

However, the costs of missing school are huge. Children learn less and lose the habit of learning. Zoom is a lousy substitute for classrooms. Poor children, who are less likely to have good Wi-Fi and educated parents, fall further behind their better-off peers. Parents who have nowhere to drop their children struggle to return to work. Mothers bear the heavier burden, and so suffer a bigger career setback. Children out of school are more likely to suffer abuse, malnutrition and poor mental health.

And that doesn’t even touch on the economic impact of schools closing. Researchers analyzed the effect of three impacts on the workforce. Single parents, those with younger children, and those with less ability to work from home are the most affected, and thus the most likely to be absent from work or to stop working altogether. About 30% of the pre-virus labor force has children at home, and a remarkable 15% of the labor force, or 24 million workers, fall into one of those three “higher-risk” categories.

This analysis doesn’t take into account longer-term costs, which the Goldman analysts say include “negative effects from lower quality education, the lack of social and emotional skill development, increased rates of depression and anxiety, food insecurity, worsening income inequality if lower income households are less able to work from home, and worsening educational inequality if poorer households have less access to remote learning.”

Sending children to school has been a basic component of American socioeconomic life for generations. A sudden cessation leaves millions of kids at home in an economic system which is virtually built on the assumption that their parents don’t have to take care of them during the day. We can only imagine how disruptive that would be. 

Perhaps one of the most overlooked consequences of closing schools and lockdowns more generally because of its difficulty in measuring is hope. Although we can measure decreases in the healthcare workforce and economic retraction, we can’t easily measure optimism. Right now, optimism is critical. A working paper from the University of Chicago estimates that 60% of the current economic downturn is due to consumer sentiments; that is, being afraid of living their lives due to COVID-19. 

There will surely be further economic retraction due not only from physically closing schools but a reduction of hope and increased anxiety. The effects will be impossible to measure until they happen. The same goes for increases in suicide rates, domestic violence, substance abuse, and so on. These are further unintended consequences and tradeoffs that have resulted from the lockdowns. It is not absurd to think they will only worsen by keeping schools closed.

Some experts are saying that reopening schools poses a far lesser risk to children and society as a whole than remaining closed. If schools properly follow medical advice from sources like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), there is little risk of spreading COVID-19. Using tools to assist with things like health screening and contact tracing can keep that risk low. Companies like DrOwl are even giving away use of their platforms to schools for free. 

Medical experts who support school closures more generally clarify that they are a tool to be considered at the beginning of a pandemic, not seven months in. Lastly, COVID-19 poses a far lesser risk to children for both death and infection. Closing schools will probably spare some schoolchildren from infection. Whether it will be enough to justify what we may have to sacrifice is another question entirely.

You Might Also Like...

  • Businesses Reopening Must Focus on Safety

    Recently Kevin Price, Host of the nationally syndicated Price of Business Show, interviewed attorney and…

  • The Top 3 Mistakes Businesses Make with SEO

    INTERVIEW ON THE PRICE OF BUSINESS SHOW, MEDIA PARTNER OF THIS SITE.   Recently Kevin…

  • The Top Recommended Health Products for 2019

    U.S. News & World Report, the global authority in rankings and consumer advice, and Pharmacy…

  • Which Institutions Offer the Top Free Online College Courses?

    College Consensus (https://www.collegeconsensus.com), a unique new college ratings website that aggregates publisher rankings and student…

  • A Closer Look at the Top Resolution for 2019

    We hear it every year—the biggest resolution for the coming year is to lose weight.…

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

VIDEO: This Week’s Best of our Network

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cC51lwrXBvU

GDPR Compliance

USABR does not collect data on its visitors.  For more information visit: https://www.usabusinessradio.com/contact-us/

Contact

Contact articles@usabusinessradio.net for more information on articles on this site. BMuyco@usabusinessradio.net for all other information.

Recent Articles

  • Is It Essential To Have Legal Representation After Truck Accidents?
  • How Auto Brokers Are Helping Buyers Navigate an Increasingly Complex Car Market
  • Firework Stores Chicago: How Decision Speed and Confidence Shape Fireworks Buying
  • The Chemicals Our Systems Fail to Keep Away from Children
  • Valentine’s Day Driving Risks Spike as Emotions Rise, Study Finds

Also in TTUSA

  • The Significance of the Hunter Biden Laptop
  • Is it Time to Rethink Veterans Day?
  • Small Business Job Growth Slowed at the End of 2018
  • EXCLUSIVE: Former CIA Director Points His Finger at the Forces Behind JFK’s Death
  • Groups Call for Urgent FDA Ban on Skin Electric Shock Devices

RSS The Daily Blaze

  • The Crisis in Mexico With Narco Terrorists Is a Major Issue for the USA
  • February’s Magic: Seeds of New Beginnings
  • The Ultimate Guide to Storm Damage Restoration: Why Tarping in an Emergency Is a Good Idea
  • The Power of “Mom Logic” in Planning for Long Term Care
  • Is JFK, Jr. and Bessette Series Worth Watching on Netflix?

RSS USA Business Radio

  • What’s the Best Corporation Model for Your Business
  • The PEO Scandals Few Are Talking About
  • The Consequences of the Courts Tariffs Being Overturned
  • Former CBS VP on the War Between Paramount and Netflix
  • What Business Owners Must Know About Chatboxes

RSS USA Daily Times

  • Why Sugar Is So Hard To Quit
  • The Ides of March Is Fast Approaching; Take Heed of Any Warnings in Your Enterprise Data
  • Combating the Business Broker Myths
  • Building on Client Trust To Meet the Moment
  • Gut Instincts: The Real Reason You Crave Sugar

RSS USA Daily Chronicles.

  • How To Make Doula Services Affordable
  • Essential Lease Clauses Every NYC Restaurant Owner Must Fight For
  • Life After Ownership – Planning Your Purposeful Next Chapter
  • National Diabetes Month Spotlight
  • 10 Ethical ChatGPT Prompts for Answering Assignments Every Student Can Use (2025–26 Guide)

RSS Price of Business

RSS US Daily Review

  • John McEntee Might Be the Dark Horse Republicans Need in 2028
  • The Decline and Fall of The Washington Post
  • Rejuvenate Your Body: The Benefits of Professional Massage Therapy in Lansing
  • Enhancing Patient Care Through Physician Collaboration
  • Alejandro Betancourt: The Visionary Behind Revolutionary Digital Transformation

PoB Digital Network

US Daily Review

USA Business Radio

USA Daily Chronicles

USA Daily Times

The Daily Blaze

The Times USA

Price of Business

Privacy Policy

https://www.thetimesusa.com/privacy-policy-2/

© 2026 The Times USA | Powered by Superbs Personal Blog theme