National teacher poll: 61% of those back for in-person learning are comfortable with it
American Federation of Teachers surveyed those who are back in the classroom or working remotely amid coronavirus pandemic
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A majority of teachers currently back in classrooms for in-person learning during the coronavirus pandemic say they are comfortable with the experience, a national union’s poll has found.
The survey from the American Federation of Teachers, conducted from Feb. 4-6, asked 600 teachers and 200 paraprofessionals/school-related personnel their opinions on an issue that has become a heated debate across the country.
Of the teachers who responded, 61% of those working in schools where in-person or hybrid learning is happening said they feel comfortable with the return so far, compared to 35% who said they don't, according to the poll.
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When the same question was asked to teachers in schools that are still operating remotely, that number flipped. Fifty-five percent of teachers in that group said they would not feel comfortable going back to work in-person, compared to 40% who said they would, the survey found.
Across the spectrum, only 34% of respondents say schools should continue operating remote-only at this point in the coronavirus pandemic. The poll found that 40% believe hybrid learning -- a mix of in-person and virtual teaching -- is the way to go, while 24% called for a full return to classrooms.
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An overwhelming majority -- 79% -- said that remote learning has worked somewhat or much less well compared to traditional in-person teaching, the poll found.
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Sixty-four percent of the respondents also said they are very or somewhat worried about catching the coronavirus in school facilities, despite varying protective measures that districts have put in place.
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The survey reported that 23% of respondents have been vaccinated.