Majority want to restrict number of days kids attend school in person with most support in emerging markets

More people comfortable sending kids back to school or daycare within six months.

A majority of people across 16 major countries support restricting the number of days children can attend school in person with parents most comfortable to send their children back within six months, according to the latest Ipsos survey.

In a survey of more than 14,500 people conducted from July 17 to 20, a majority of respondents in 12 countries agree with restricting the number of days children can attend school in person. This support is highest in emerging markets of South Korea (83%), India (81%), Mexico (80%), South Africa (77%), Brazil (74%) and China (73%), followed by the United States (71%).

On the other end, a majority of people in European countries of France (58%), Italy (56%), Germany (54%) and Russia (52%) oppose this, followed by those in the United Kingdom (47%).

People in Europe also are most divided on this issue with only 4 percentage points separating those that support and oppose restricting the number of days kids can attend school in Russia, followed by the U.K. (6 points), and Germany (8).

Should the number of days children attend school be restricted | Coronavirus | Ipsos

In terms of how comfortable parents are in sending their child back to school or daycare, Japan is the only country in a poll of nearly 5,600 parents where a majority (60%) of people say they are already doing this, followed by France (47%), Germany (45%), Australia and South Korea (40%).

More people across all countries said they would be more comfortable doing this within six months with majority agreement in Russia (71%), Spain (65%), Italy (64%), Mexico (56%), the U.K. (55%), Canada (52%) and India (51%).

The second most likely timeframe for sending kids back to school or daycare is in one to three months with Italians more likely to do this at 39%, followed by those in Russia (38%), Spain (37%) and the U.K. (36%).

About one in five parents in Brazil (18%), Italy (17%), South Africa and the U.S. (16%) remain unsure.

Are you comfortable sending your child back to school of daycare | coronavirus | Ipsos

These are the results of an Ipsos survey conducted July 17 to 20, 2020 on the Ipsos Essentials platform among 14,500 adults aged 18-74 in Canada and the United States and 16-74 in Australia, Brazil, China, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, India, Japan, Mexico, Russia, South Africa, South Korea and the United Kingdom.

Related news

  • Ramadan Marques 2026 Tunisie Tunis
    Société Enquête

    Le Manuel du Ramadan 2026 - Rapport de la Tunisie

    Découvrez des insights approfondis sur la saison du Ramadan grâce à notre Manuel 2026. De l’identification des tendances d’achat au profilage de cinq personas consommateurs clés, ce rapport met en lumière les attitudes envers la communication des marques et révèle quelles sont les 10 marques qui se démarquent actuellement dans le paysage du Ramadan du point de vue des consommateurs.
  • Ce qui inquiète le Monde
    Société Enquête

    Ce qui inquiète le monde – Juillet 2024

    Menée mensuellement dans 29 pays auprès d'un panel de plus de 20 000 adultes depuis plus d'une décennie, l'enquête What Worries the World offre un instantané exceptionnel de l'opinion mondiale sur les problèmes mondiaux urgents.
  • Ipsos | what worries the world | climate change | inflation | economy  |
    Santé Enquête

    What Worries the World – December 2022

    Have we reached peak inflation? Although still the top concern, worry about inflation falls for the first time in two and a half years.