Photos: Millions return to school in Italy after COVID-19 closure

More than 5,000 extra classrooms have been created to give pupils more space

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Millions of Italian children returned to the classroom on Monday as most schools reopened more than six months after they were closed to curb the coronavirus pandemic. | Above: Teachers (L) greet pupils and parents as they arrive for the start of the school year at the Luigi Einaudi technical high school in Rome.
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A pupil has her temperature checked as children return to the Simonetta Salacone primary and secondary school in Rome.
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Students attend a welcome ceremony at the Visconti high school, in Rome. Although some Italian schools opened earlier this month, roughly 5.6 million students from a total of eight million went back to school on Monday, confronting a new reality of restrictions.
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Italy was one of the first in Europe to be hit by the pandemic, which has now officially killed over 35,500 people out of a total of 280,000 cases.
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Premier Giuseppe Conte admitted on Sunday that Italian schools faced a difficult situation, including a lack of teachers, single-seat benches and surgical masks.
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"There will be difficulties and inconveniences, especially in the beginning," Conte wrote on Facebook. | Above: Students gather outside the Visconti high school on the first day of the reopening in Rome.
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Conte also saluted teachers, who he said had "made an extraordinary effort in the months of confinement to continue lessons and distant learning". "We are grateful to you," he said.
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With the country registering more than 1,500 infections a day, Conte also had particular words for youngsters. | Above: Students wearing protective face masks return at the Liceo Isacco Newton high school.
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"You have to do your part. You have to commit yourselves to the rules of caution that will allow you to protect your health and the health of the people you love," Conte said. | Above; Students sit in a class during a lesson at the Liceo Isacco Newton high school.
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A pupil (R) undergoes a body temperature scan as he arrives at the Luigi Einaudi technical high school in Rome.
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Italian Education Minister Lucia Azzolina said more than 5,000 extra classrooms had been created to give pupils more space. | Above: Students gather outside the Visconti high school on the first day of the reopening in Rome.
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A sign reads "Welcome" as children return to the Simonetta Salacone primary and secondary school, in Rome.
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A teacher wearing a face masl addresses pupils, also wearing a face mask, at the start of the school year at the Luigi Einaudi technical high school in Rome.
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Nevertheless, some southern regions like Puglia and Calabria already postponed the reopening until September 24, over concerns they were not ready to meet all the new requirements.
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Italian officials said the back-to-school strategy involved immediate quarantine of those "in close contact" with a student or teacher testing positive.
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After a positive result, pupils will be allowed back to school only after returning two negatives, carried out a day apart.
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A teacher welcomes pupils at the San Policarpo parish as Italian schools reopened, in Rome.
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Children are seen as they return to the Simonetta Salacone primary and secondary school for the first time since March, adhering to strict regulations to avoid coronavirus disease (COVID-19) contagion, in Rome.

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