With schools closed by the coronavirus outbreak, the education secretary faced questions on a timetable for re-opening and how to support the disadvantaged, while pupils were meant to be learning online from home.
The reopening
of schools in England is expected to take place in a "phased manner",
says the Education Secretary Gavin Williamson.
He told the
Education Select Committee the date for opening would depend on scientific
advice - but schools would get "as much notice as possible".
But when
pupils start returning it could just be for some year groups.
"All
schools returning on day one with a full complement of pupils would not be
realistic," he told MPs.
Committee
chair Robert Halfon warned of a "wave of educational poverty" that
could come from the lockdown.
Speaking to
an online session of the select committee, Mr Williamson said he was keen for
schools to return as soon as was safely possible because of the disruption to
pupils' learning.
"Every
child is going to have suffered from not being in school," he told MPs.
But he said
it would be a staged return, with schools given "proper notice" to
prepare.
"When we
bring schools back - and I think everyone wants to see schools returning - they
will return in a phased manner," said Mr Williamson, as all pupils going
back at once would not be "realistic or practical".
There were no
details from the education secretary on which pupils might return first.
But last
week, Geoff Barton, leader of the ASCL head teachers' union suggested that
Years 6, 10 and 12 might go back first, with 1 June the earliest realistic
date.
A limit on
pupil numbers in school would be necessary to maintain social distancing, said
the heads' leader, which could mean only some year groups going back or pupils
rotating between studying at home and in school.
The timing
will be part of a wider, cross-government plan, Mr Williamson told MPs, with a
sub-group of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) considering
how to re-open schools.
The education
secretary said he did not expect this term to be extended into the summer
holidays - although committee member David Simmonds suggested some schools were
already planning to open over the summer to help pupils catch up.
The
experience of other countries going back to school, such as Germany and
Denmark, would be taken into consideration, said the education secretary.
Mary Bousted,
joint leader of the National Education Union, highlighted ongoing challenges
for staffing in schools when it was safe to re-open.
"All
staff with underlying health conditions or who are vulnerable will need to be
at home so timetables will be tricky and the full curriculum simply
impossible," said Dr Bousted.
"We will
need an extended, flexible recovery plan, and no one should be under any
illusion that there is some catch-up magic bullet."
Mr Williamson
gave more details of the scheme to lend laptops to disadvantaged pupils
studying at home - saying there would be 200,000 laptops, with the first
expected to be delivered by the end of May, with most arriving in June.
This would
help to address the "digital divide" in terms of access to computer
technology.
Mr Williamson
said he had been in discussions with the BBC about putting schools programmes
on television, which could help those without internet connections or unable to
afford mobile phone data.
The education
secretary was challenged by MPs on failings with the free school meal voucher
scheme.
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