The current instruction from Education Minister Peter Weir prohibits pupils singing individually or in choirs.
Mr Weir said the decision was taken on the advice of the chief medical officer and the Public Health Agency (PHA).
The playing of brass and wind instruments is also currently banned indoors.
School choirs in Northern Ireland were previously permitted to sing indoors from last September to December as long as social distancing and good ventilation were in place.
In order to highlight the importance of dancing, acting and singing on the mental health of young people, The Belfast School of Performing Arts (BSPA), conducted a survey on the dramatic impact the Covid-19 pandemic has had on performing arts students in Northern Ireland.
Inside the growing campaign to nationalise Ireland s hospitals amid Covid-19 crisis
A campaign to abolish private healthcare in Ireland is gathering pace – as controversy rages between the HSE and a leading private hospital over the Covid-19 crisis
Updated
Ambulances at the Emergency Department at Tallaght Hospital (Image: Colin Keegan, Collins Dublin)
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Dublin council members to call for nationalisation of Ireland s private hospital care
The campaign has already seen support from three different councils, and the INMO has also made a similar plea
Updated
Hospital bed (stock) (Image: Bret Kavanaugh/Unsplash)
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Plans for 732 new residential units in the Liberties will be met with local outrage according to a City Councillor.
Developers Hines and APG have submitted proposals to refurbish the Player Wills factory building on the South Circular Road, and add on to it.
Those new builds will be between 2 and 19 storeys in height, with two new parks alongside them.
Local Councillor Tina McVeigh says the wishes of the local people have been ignored: They look at this, and they ask:
Where is the community voice in this? We attended so-called
consultations, we set out our views and what s been proposed is the antithesis of that.
Who owns the historic Iveagh Market that has been lying derelict in the heart of Dublin’s Liberties for the last 20 years?
Dublin City Council and hotelier Martin Keane have been in and out of the courts trying to lay claim to it since 2008.
But Arthur Edward Rory Guinness, the fourth Earl of Iveagh, whose family built the iconic market at the beginning of the 1900s, has now put the cat among the pigeons by invoking a clause contained in the original deeds from 1906 to repossess it. The locks were changed yesterday, a new security company was installed to secure it, and both Dublin City Council and Martin Keane spent yesterday consulting their own legal advisors to establish where they stood, which appeared to be out in the cold.