The intrusion of school into families’ private spaces through online learning created tensions for families.
(Shutterstock)
It takes a village to raise a child, but the pandemic showed teachers and parents have different roles.
Jim Steele/Alamy Stock Photo
Despite having left people more exposed to the delta variant now, the strategy helped protect the most vulnerable during the second wave, so was the right call.
Mick Tsikas/AAP
There’s always an element of ‘hindsight being 20/20’ whenever we’re evaluating a lockdown.
Joel Carrett/AAP
NSW sits on a knife edge, with the coming day to show whether it’s in for a nasty but brief pause on activity, like the recent Victorian lockdown, or something much more serious, writes Michelle Grattan
Why are Ontario reopening rules treating live arts like a luxury instead of something critical?
(Shutterstock)
5 ways to support safe live performance re-openings as we emerge from COVID-19.
For some queer people, time at home has meant time away from communities and friends that recognize and support their gender and sexual identities.
(Zackary Drucker/The Gender Spectrum Collection)
Pandemic experiences for queer people were marked not only by loneliness but new possibilities and connections that will shape their lives when the world reopens.
Protecting the “heartwork,” of educators means protecting their emotional and mental health based on recognizing that holistic and passionate investment in work is an asset that also implies vulnerability.
(Shutterstock)
“June-tired” has taken on a whole new meaning for educators this year. What can be done this summer to help them recharge and recover?
Neil Hall/EPA-EFE
Two doses have always been more protective than one, but the delta variant has made the benefit of a second vaccine much greater.
NIAID-RML
New DNA evidence shows humans may have been battling coronaviruses for longer than recorded history.
A shipment of COVID-19 vaccines supplied by COVAX, the vaccine-sharing programme, arriving in Timor Leste.
Antonio Dasiparu/EPA-EFE
World leaders have called for an end to the pandemic – but the numbers don’t add up.
RidingMetaphor/Alamy Stock Photo
Carbon dioxide levels can be a proxy for the amount of airborne coronavirus in a room, but plenty of things can mess with the measurements.
fivepointsix/Shutterstock
Stronger stay-at-home measures led to bigger reductions in crime – though these changes soon began to reverse.
David Mariuz/AAP
While it’s potentially promising, there’s not enough information yet to determine if the vaccine is safe and effective.
James Ross/AAP
The rules around allocation, and the enforcement of those rules, can’t rest with each individual. Responsibility lies with those in charge of delivering vaccines.
Roman Pilipey/EPA
Two scientists claim that the genome pairing CGG-CGG is evidence that SARS-CoV-2 was made in a lab.
Managing academic expectations, culture shock, language barriers and financial constraints amid concerns about viral safety are some of the intersecting stressors faced by international students.
(Shutterstock)
International students are a vulnerable population who have faced many stressors in the COVID-19 pandemic. Emotional intelligence can help navigate these.
In April 2020 all six Tŝilhqot’in communities decided to erect checkpoints to monitor and regulate travel to and from their reserves.
(Keith Koepke)
The minutiae of bureaucratic policy and procedure perpetuates colonialism and undermined a fully Tŝilhqot’in-led pandemic response.
Djohan Shahrin/Shutterstock
Upwards of 60% of the world needs to be vaccinated to suppress COVID-19 – even with an extra billion doses, that target looks very far away.
Navigating risk can feel like walking on a tightrope, even when you’re perfectly safe.
zhukovvvlad/Shutterstock
We often underestimate dangerous risks because they are slow or we think we are in more control of them than we actually are.
Reuters/Alamy Stock Photo
New theories about the lab leak don’t make the case for it any stronger, but do reveal the messiness of how historical events play out.