Mask mandates remain at most Tennessee schools, poll shows

Students create distance between each other using their arms as they line up to go outside in Mrs. Cecarelliís second grade class at Wesley Elementary School in Middletown, CT, October 5, 2020.
While most Tennessee parents send their children to school in mask, parents are divided on other COVID safety measures such as vaccine mandates for teachers, according to the Vanderbilt Child Health Poll. (Allison Shelley for American Education: Images of Teachers and Students in Action)

Most Tennessee parents are sending their children to school wearing masks, and despite state law essentially banning mask mandates in public schools, most parents report that their child’s school requires masks. The findings are part of the Vanderbilt Child Health Poll, an annual survey that seeks parents’ feedback on the well-being of Tennessee children. 

The poll, conducted in late fall 2021, sampled 1,026 parents and found that region, race, and ethnicity influenced many parents’ opinions about COVID  safety protocols, with Black parents and West Tennessee parents having a stronger preference for safety measures. 

“While leaders need to take these differences of opinion into account, the guiding principle in setting school policies should be the well-being of all children,” said Dr. Joe Zickafoose, a pediatrician at Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt and one of the poll’s leading researchers. 

“Regardless of where we live in Tennessee, it’s important for everyone to remember and recognize that every school has at least a few children with underlying conditions that put them at high risk of severe COVID-19, and we know that it takes multiple prevention efforts to keep them safe in school,” he added.

The Vanderbilt findings on Tennessee parents’ divided view about masking complement the Momentive and Axios poll from the beginning of the school year that sampled 38,251 people nationwide and found that 56% of Tennessee respondents supported mask mandates for all students and staff.  

The divided views that both polls capture may reflect the conflicting COVID policies that abound in Tennessee as the state’s Republican lawmakers enacted a law to restrict masks mandates while federal judges issued orders blocking it.

Researchers conducted the Vanderbilt poll as some of the legal challenges unfolded, but before the rise of the omicron variant that has caused a spike in pediatric COVID cases statewide. Some key findings in the Vanderbilt poll include:

  • 53% of Tennessee parents reported that their children’s schools have a mask mandate in place.
  • 67% of Tennessee parents send their children to school in masks.
  • 54% of Tennessee parents said that students are safer in school when teachers and staff wear masks.
  • 40% of Tennessee parents both agreed and disagreed that schools should require COVID vaccines for all school staff, while 20% were indifferent. 

To see more results, visit childpolicy.org/poll.

The Latest

Before the pandemic, at least 137 schools serving roughly 70,000 students did not have a school nurse, according to one estimate.

Advocates say there are about 45 outdoor preschool programs in Colorado.

History often pays attention to Oliver Brown and the male lawyers behind the landmark case. But 12 Black mothers from Kansas also played a crucial role in challenging inequities in their children’s schools.

The contract provision in question has to do with the end of the so-called budget stabilization factor, which withheld funding from Colorado’s K-12 schools.

Unintentional marijuana use is spiking among young children, while the district is dealing with hundreds of incidents involving weed and vape pens.

Mock legal and legislative proceedings dispel notions of teen disengagement in Adam Williamson’s class.