GAVIN Williamson has been urged by almost 50 Tory MPs to ensure that schools “go back to normal” after Freedom Day.
Powerful backbenchers have written to the Education Secretary demanding he end Covid rules like class bubbles from July 19.
Ex leader Iain Duncan Smith is those who signed the letter railing against “unnecessary and significant disruptions” caused by current restrictions.
The 48 Tory MPs it was “vital that all schools go back to normal from July 19 when restrictions lift, even if just for the last few days of term”.
They added: “This will send an important signal ahead of the autumn that the route to freedom is a ‘one way road’ and genuinely ‘irreversible’.”
Other signatories include former cabinet minister Esther McVey and the Commons Education Select Committee chairman Robert Halfon.
Mr Williamson is facing mounting pressure to bin the strict isolation rules that are proving a big headache for teachers and parents.
Mr Williamson today confirmed the Government will be swapping the bubbles with routine testing “as quickly as possible”.
Current rules require children to self-isolate if any of their classmates test positive – leaving parents scrambling to sort childcare at short notice.
Mr Williamson said: “Further steps will be taken to reduce the number of children who have to self-isolate including looking at the outcomes of a daily contact testing trial as we consider a new model for keeping children in schools and colleges.”
But he said the new measures won’t kick in until July 19 at the earliest – when most schools have broken up for the summer hols.
Health Secretary Sajid Javid is said to be concerned some schools may be adopting a blanket approach to sending home bubbles rather than seeking to reduce number of kids forced to self-isolate, the Telegraph reports.
Another Cabinet source told the paper schools needed to be “sensible” about applying the rules.
“They don’t have to send home the whole year or a whole class. I think there’s a lot of overinterpretation of the rules by schools who seem keener to send people home than they need to be,” said the source.
The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said there is guidance available to schools “that it is not a requirement necessarily that whole school bubbles need to isolate”.
Lockdown-hating Tory Mark Harper said: “I’m not really sure why we can’t do it now because we’re going to cause a huge problem for the rest of term and not give teachers much time to prepare for the autumn.”
Education Committee boss Robert Halfon piled in: “We are in danger of creating a generation of ghost children denied a proper chance to climb the education ladder of opportunity.”
Labour’s Barry Sheerman fumed: “Will he stop this dither and delay. There is a generation of young children who have missed education and will continue to miss education.”
But Kevin Courtney, the general secretary of the National Education Union, said: “It’s a bit rich for the Government to blame schools who are doing their best to follow the guidance in the circumstances.
“The idea that the Government is trying to blame them I think will enrage them. It’s the government policy that schools are implementing.”
Bubbles are set to be replaced with a new system of daily testing and contact tracing from September to crack down on the spread of infections.
At the moment about 250,000 children are out of class and having to quarantine for 10 days. That’s 3% of the school population.
That figure has leapt from 1% in the space of a week amid concerns about the rapid spread of the Indian variant amongst the young.
Department of Education chiefs have written to headteachers asking them to prepare for the fresh rules to come into force this Autumn.
A spokesman said: “We are provisionally asking secondary schools and colleges to prepare to offer on-site testing when students return for the new academic year, so that schools are ready in case it is needed to keep as many children as possible in face-to-face education.
“We will provide further details about the approach to protective measures and test and trace in education from September in due course.”
A trial of the new system which is being carried out across secondary schools is set to finish tomorrow.
Schools minister Nick Gibb said a decision will be announced before the announcement on whether Freedom Day can go ahead on July 19.
He previously said: “We are conducting trials of daily contact testing as a possible alternative to self-isolation.
“What matters also is that we keep the school safe and if you go around our schools, you will see a raft of measures to reduce the infection rates within schools.
“There’s extra hygiene, there’s staggered breaks, we keep children in bubbles, and there’s extra ventilation in classrooms to minimise the risk of transmission.”
Mr Gibb said evidence suggests most children catch Covid outside school rather than in the classroom.
That means a daily test and trace regime would be able to stop those kids coming into lessons and giving it to fellow students.
And those pupils who have been pinged because of a classmate would be able to take a daily test to clear them for school.
He said cases “tend to correlate with the level of infections in the actual local community rather than what’s happening in the schools”.
New health secretary Sajid Javid is also pushing for the draconian self-isolation rules to be dropped.
He has ordered officials to look again at the policy in a bid to keep millions in school.
Mr Javid said: “This is a very important issue and something I’ve focused on, on day one of the job.
“That is why I’ve asked for fresh advice on this.”
The new Children’s Commissioner for England also called for bubble arrangements and self-isolation to end soon.
Dame Rachel de Souza said there is an urgent need for children to get back to normal as lockdown has been a “real trauma” for many.
She told the Telegraph: “Children are really troubled, and it’s right across the board.
“They have done a huge amount for us, I mean they really were the least at risk of this.
“They’ve given up 19 weeks of their education, they’ve had all this anxiety and concern and exams cancelled – they’ve taken a big burden for us.”
She has run a new survey of more than 550,000 kids called The Big Ask to gauge how they’re coping with lockdown.
It shows mental health was the biggest concern for 20% of respondents, a figure that rose to 40% for those aged 14-17.
Official figures today showed another rise in infections, with almost 23,000 lab-confirmed cases – the highest daily rise since January 30.