If the families of summer travel to Greece or Spain, it may mean that the children subsequently in the 14-day quarantine from school or day care.

For day-care centres, schools, colleges and other educational institutions ‘can and should’ refuse to receive children and pupils, who have held a holiday abroad.

Such is the recommendation of the Ministry of Children and education, writes the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten.

If this is outside Norway, Iceland, or Germany, as the authorities have again given the green light to the danes can travel to.

the Guidelines, however, will be difficult to enforce for the schools, believes, Claus Hjortdal, who is chairman of the Skolelederforeningen.

– as the principal of a school making parents aware of the rules and put it on the Aula (folkeskolernes communication, red.), he says to Jyllands-Posten.

– It is difficult to know if people have been away. Get you suspect about it, do you call the parents and ask. You can’t afford to ask children, it is not reasonable.

the Danish Teachers ‘ association calls for in each of the municipalities, consideration is given to how the guidelines should be administered. It is backed by teachers ‘ unions, Bupl.

according to the unions, to ensure that it does not become the individual school or institution, which must interpret the guidelines.

however, There is nothing in the way of locally decide that a student be in quarantine. It assesses Hanne Hartoft, who is an associate professor in the department of law at Aalborg University, over for Jyllands-Posten.

– the Authority to make the rules for how the reopening must take place, is local, she says to the newspaper.

She stresses, however, that one should consider how the students must have access to education during the quarantine.

Anne Sophie Callesen, there is undervisningsordfører for The Radicals to be very critical of the new recommendations.

– the Recommendation imposes on the schools a completely unfair contract, she says.

at the same time, she believes that one should have confidence that the citizens ‘use their common sense’ and general compliance with the recommendations, which the authorities have set out.