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Reopening schools in a context of low COVID-19 contagion: consequences for teachers, students and their parents.

Anna GodøyMaja Weemes GrøttingRannveig Kaldager Hart
Published in: Journal of population economics (2022)
Knowing how school reopenings affect the spread of COVID-19 is crucial when balancing children's right to schooling with contagion management. This paper considers the effects on COVID-19 testing prevalence and the positive test rate of reopening Norwegian schools after a 6-week closure aimed at reducing contagion. We estimate the effects of school reopening on teachers, parents and students using an event study/difference-in-differences design that incorporates comparison groups with minimal exposure to in-person schooling. We find no evidence that COVID-19 incidence increased following reopening among students, parents or teachers pooled across grade levels. We find some suggestive evidence that infection rates among upper secondary school teachers increased; however, the effects are small and transitory. At low levels of contagion, schools can safely be reopened when other social distancing policies remain in place.
Keyphrases
  • high school
  • coronavirus disease
  • sars cov
  • mental health
  • risk factors
  • physical activity
  • public health
  • respiratory syndrome coronavirus
  • healthcare
  • placebo controlled
  • double blind