All school pupils to have some in-person teaching from March 15
Primary one to three children have already returned full-time to the classroom.
But as of the middle of this month, P4-7 youngsters will also return to schools full-time - ending more than two months of home schooling.
All secondary school students will be given some face-to-face teaching from that date, before they return full-time after the Easter break.
Senior phase students (S4-S6) who are taking national qualifications will have priority for face-to-face lessons in school.
Councils will decide at a local level what the blend of in-person and home schooling looks like for teenagers.
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Hayes, who has also been linked with the women s England job before, could make the move into the men s game after being shortlisted to replace the sacked Glyn Hodges, who left Wimbledon by mutual consent after a 2-0 defeat by MK Dons.
AFC Wimbledon currently sit 21st in League One with just one win from their last 13 matches.
Hayes will have some stiff competition if she decides to put her hat in the ring for the Dons job, with former club players and England football legends also candidates for the position.
Ian Holloway, who left Grimsby in December, ex-England star Sol Campbell, Morecambe manager Derek Adams, former Fleetwood boss Joey Barton, and National League Boreham Wood’s Luke Garrard have all been linked with the vacant role.
SCOTLAND S lower league football fixtures have been postponed for three weeks due to the rising number of coronavirus cases. The suspension will affect Gala Fairydean Rovers and Vale of Leithen who play in the Lowland League; as well as Peebles Rovers, Coldstream, Hawick Royal Albert United and Eyemouth, who compete in East of Scotland divisions. In a statement, Scottish FA chairman Rod Petrie said its board had decided to cancel all football beneath the SPFL Championship for the next few weeks. He said: “The Scottish FA is well aware of the efforts all clubs take to comply with the exacting protocols that were conditional on elite football being given an exemption to continue amid the pandemic.
These protocols have served us well in the past, as the Club has not had one positive case in our own bubble until now. As we have already stated, Celtic s decision to travel to Dubai for a training camp was for performance reasons. Whilst we were in Dubai, the announcements made on January 4 significantly changed the COVID landscape. The reality is that a case could well have occurred had the team remained in Scotland, as other cases have done in Scottish football and across UK sport in the past week. Celtic has done everything it can to ensure we have in place the very best procedures and protocols. From the outset of the pandemic, Celtic has worked closely with the Scottish Government and Scottish football and we will continue to do so.