《TAIPEI TIMES》 Guidelines for school suspensions
![A Hualien County Government employee yesterday disinfects a school as part of a three-day cleanup ahead of the reopening of schools on Tuesday next week.
Photo: Wang Chun-chi, Taipei Times A Hualien County Government employee yesterday disinfects a school as part of a three-day cleanup ahead of the reopening of schools on Tuesday next week.
Photo: Wang Chun-chi, Taipei Times](https://img.ltn.com.tw/Upload/news/600/2020/02/20/phpMszJVX.jpg)
A Hualien County Government employee yesterday disinfects a school as part of a three-day cleanup ahead of the reopening of schools on Tuesday next week. Photo: Wang Chun-chi, Taipei Times
QUESTIONS: The MOE needs to specify how close or far apart a first and second case of COVID-19 would have to be for a school to close, Taipei Deputy Mayor Huang said
By Sherry Hsiao / Staff reporter
The Ministry of Education (MOE) yesterday issued guidelines for suspension of classes should cases of COVID-19 be confirmed on campus.
Schools from kindergartens to senior-high are scheduled to reopen on Tuesday next week, after the start of classes following the winter break was delayed by two weeks due to concerns about the COVID-19 outbreak in China.
Universities are expected to begin their second semester of the academic year on or after Tuesday.
According to the ministry’s guidelines, a class would be suspended in kindergartens through senior-highs if one student or teacher is confirmed by the Central Epidemic Command Center (CECC) to have the virus.
If two or more students or teachers at a school are confirmed to have the virus, the school must suspend all classes.
If one-third of schools in a township or district have been forced to shut due to the virus, the remaining schools must close as well, the guidelines state.
If one university student or teacher is infected, all courses taken by that student or taught by the instructor would be suspended, while in the event of two or more confirmed cases, the university must close its campus, the ministry said.
Class suspensions would last 14 days, it said, adding that the guidelines could be subject to change.
In addition, all public events held by a school should be suspended if there is a confirmed case on campus, the ministry said.
Taipei Deputy Mayor Vivian Huang (黃珊珊) told reporters that guidelines left questions about how close or far apart the first and second cases of COVID-19 at a school would have to be to warrant a school-wide closure and the ministry should clarify the issue.
Otherwise, there could be “mistakes in judgement,” Huang said.
The Taipei City Government has set a 14-day time frame, meaning that a school would close if two cases are confirmed within 14 days of each other, she said.
Taipei Department of Education Director Tseng Tsan-chin (曾燦金) said the 14-day time frame was based on COVID-19’s 14-day incubation period, but the department would consult with the CECC.
Additional reporting by Tsai Ya-hua
新聞來源:TAIPEI TIMES
![Disease-prevention products are arranged outside a school in Kaohsiung yesterday.
Photo: Huang Hsu-lei, Taipei Times Disease-prevention products are arranged outside a school in Kaohsiung yesterday.
Photo: Huang Hsu-lei, Taipei Times](https://img.ltn.com.tw/Upload/news/600/2020/02/20/phprKoqrm.jpg)
Disease-prevention products are arranged outside a school in Kaohsiung yesterday. Photo: Huang Hsu-lei, Taipei Times