WHAT WORKS IN EDUCATION The George Lucas Educational Foundation

Should schools hit by swine flu stay open?

Yes. As long as schools take reasonable precautions, there is no need to shut down, even if multiple people are infected.
34% (106 votes)
Maybe. Although the goal should be to remain open, if more than a few people have the virus, the school should seriously consider temporarily closing.
39% (124 votes)
No. To prohibit the spread of the disease, a school should shut down after its first confirmed case of swine flu.
26% (81 votes)
None of the above. (Comment below.)
1% (4 votes)
Total votes: 315

Comments (13)

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i dont think so cause then it

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i dont think so cause then it can speard

i dont think so cause then it

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0

i dont think so cause then it can speard

Have you heard about the

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Have you heard about the conspiracy theory regarding the swine flu?

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DiELv7lmtT0

Basically she says that the us goverment tried to kill us citizens with a tampered with vaccine.

I honestly just can't handle this world anymore.

How sick are we humans?

Pedro

Elizabeth Farmer

Shouldn't we learn how to prevent the spread of H1N1?

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Even if schools decide to close down with the spread of the H1N1 virus, don't you think it's important for them to LEARN how to prevent the spread of it? Who's to say that Swine Flu won't come back to their school, to their kids, to anyone they come in contact with. The virus can spread so easily through air and human contact that I don't think just closing down a school is the sole solution.

Here's what I think should happen. I think schools should take advantage of free resources, like this one: http://tinyurl.com/ksvo44 to learn about the virus and learn how to prevent the spread of it in schools!

Hailey Daggett

Ultimately schools should try

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Ultimately schools should try to remain open and not shut down. If there are just a few cases of swine flu it may be just an isolated case and there is no reason to not continue with classes. If it is a few people in every class though, especially with the vaccine not available till October, the school should seriously consider closing its doors for a while.

Karon Orr

Swine Flu:

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I think schools should closely monitor the situation and not over-react nor under-react. My uncle was 7 years old when the Swine Flu hit years ago. He was sick in bed for so long that he had to learn how to walk all over again. If something as widespread as that version of the swine flu breaks out, young people are at great risk, and should be allowed to stay home from school to avoid getting it. If a strain no more dangerous than any typical flu season comes along, schools should not close. Hopefully, the CDC will have clear guidelines on what to do.

Christine Norton

Swine flu closing?

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As a society, I think we have become germaphobic. We worry so much about preventing disease that we don't allow our bodies to become naturally immune. Wash this, disinfect that - all the while killing off natural immunities. My grandmother used to say, "You'll eat a bushel of dirt before you die." She had a very good point. Don't get me wrong, if someone in my class gets sick, I'm going to disinfect their work area. But once a virus is introduced to an environment, it is impossible to disinfect absolutely everything a person has come in contact with.
Keep your child home & visit the doctor if they are sick, but don't close the school.

Chipp Knudsen

Schools shoud be the proactive centers of Swine Flu prevention

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Schools need to take a proactive approach to Swine Flu while taking all necessary precautions. Schools should focus on prevention by becoming immunization centers for their whole communities. They have immediate access to nearly all children and their families which could eliminate a vast potential pool of infection. Outreach to the rest of the community would facilitate further immunizations by providing people with convenient locations to recieve treatment.

Bob Angeli

The latest guidelines coming

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The latest guidelines coming out from federal, state and local health agencies are backing away from the need to close schools. While everyone wants to prohibit the spread if the flu and keep students and staff safe, closing schools is problematic and may not have the desired effect. Who's going to keep everyone locked up in their homes until it is safe to come out again? Are we closing malls, churches, health clubs and libraries, and stopping air, train, and bus transportation?

Continuing to educate students via Internet or other electronic means while facilities are closed for extended periods, requires school systems to have fairly sophisticated technolocal infrastucture, not to mention the guarantee that all students have access to computers in their homes. Additionally, school systems will have had to have 100% of all teachers trained and using the remote system and be able to teach in this manner from their homes, in order to ensure immediate continuation of instruction.

Even if this could be pulled off, what would be the trigger that it is safe to reopen schools?

S. L. Johnson

Swine Question: To Stay Open or Not To Open

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Common sense has fallen by the wayside; the true pandemic. Circumstances should drive the response. A government "Guide to Thinking About Closing"; essentially a flowchart of driving questions to be considered by K-12 schools may be the key to the pig flying by or settling in at a trough.