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School safety and at-home spending this fall
With the start of the academic year, here are some guidelines that your school may use to keep kids safe, as well as the amount parents are spending for at-home learning tools.
Practicing good hygiene, disinfecting surfaces regularly.
SOURCE: CDC; National Retail Federation; Tribune News Service
Cloth face coverings
Teachers, school staff and students my be asked to wear face coverings
With the start of the academic year just a few days away, here are some guidlines that your school may use to keep kids safe, as well as the amount parents are spending for at-home learning tools.
School safety and back-to-school spending
Cohorting
Sometimes called podding, this strategy may be used by schools to limit contact between students and staff as part of their efforts to limit transmission
Social distancing
Limiting group sizes, keeping students six feet apart, restricting non-essential visitors, and closing communal spaces
Sometimes called podding, this strategy may be used to limit contact between students and staff as part of their efforts to limit transmission
Extracurriculars
Integrate strategies into co-curricular and extracurricular activities (e.g., limiting or cancelling participation in activities where social distancing is not feasible)
Back-to-school spending
Consumers tentatively plan to spend a record amount to prepare K-12 students for school this year in anticipation that at least some classes will take place online.
Integrate strategies into co-curricular and extracurricular activities (e.g., limiting or cancelling activities where social distancing is not feasible)
E-learning purchases
Percent of K-12 parents who plan to purchase items because of potential online learning this year:
In anticipation that at least some classes will take place online this year, parents plan to spend a record amount to prepare K-12 students.