Skip to main content
Donate to the 95 years appeal
Teachers ‘favour retaining virus mitigation in schools’

TEACHERS remain concerned about potential Covid-19 spread in schools and want to see effective safety mitigations in place throughout the winter months, the Educational Institute of Scotland (EIS) has said.

The teaching union’s survey found most school staff want to keep measures aimed at stopping the spread of coronavirus in schools, as scientists sound alarm over the omicron variant, which is feared to be much more transmissible.

Only 6 per cent wanted face masks to no longer be required in secondary schools, with 55 per cent wanting them to be retained throughout the winter.

The poll of more than 16,000 teachers also found that 30 per cent did not believe their working space was well ventilated to combat the risk of Covid-19 spreading.

EIS general secretary Larry Flanagan said: “The emergence of new variants such as omicron, coupled with the higher risk of illness during the winter months, will only increase the risk of Covid infection spreading through school communities.”

According to the survey, 47 per cent of teachers felt “very safe” or “somewhat safe” in schools with current mitigations. 

Mr Flanagan said: “Teachers continue to work flat-out, in the face of the continuing Covid pandemic, to ensure a quality learning experience for young people.

“It is clear, however, that the threat of Covid has not gone away and also that teachers remain concerned about the potential risk to pupils, staff and their families.”

On Friday, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said she would “bust a gut” to ensure schools remained open amid a surge in cases but admitted there could not be a guarantee that schools would remain open. 

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Scottish Health Secretary Humza Yousaf
Britain / 9 January 2022
9 January 2022
It is ‘unfathomable’ that staff are having to keep doors and windows open and ask pupils to layer up for a second winter, Scottish Teachers for Positive Change and Wellbeing says
Similar stories
9 - EIS pickett.jpg
Features / 29 April 2025
29 April 2025

The devastating impact of austerity has left Scotland’s education system on its knees, argues ANDREA BRADLEY, urging politicians to show courage by increasing wealth taxation to fund our schools properly

A teacher and students in a classroom
Britain / 10 April 2025
10 April 2025
A person placing a swab from a Covid 19 lateral flow test in
Features / 15 March 2025
15 March 2025
The NHS continues to say Covid spreads primarily through ‘droplet and touch’ while the WHO emphasises airborne transmission, meaning vulnerable patients and healthcare workers face unnecessary risks, reports RUTH HUNT
A woman showing signs of depression (picture posed by a mode
TUC 2024 / 9 September 2024
9 September 2024
Physical and mental wellbeing are key to the functioning of our education system, says ANDREA BRADLEY