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Wiesbaden (dpa / lhe) - According to the SPD parliamentary group, lessons at Hesse's schools should be organized differently in view of the corona pandemic.

The current abolition of the compulsory attendance is the "worst possible model", criticized the education policy spokesman Christoph Degen on Monday in Wiesbaden.

The country has given up any control options.

The state school spokesman Paul Harder said he missed a uniform concept of the state government.

The lifting of the requirement to be present was also poorly communicated.

Degen said there are elementary school classes in which up to 70 percent of the children sit together in class.

Some parents assumed that their children would learn better in school - and so they sent them to classes.

Degen repeated the SPD's demand for firmly structured alternating lessons so that the distance could be maintained in schools.

Depending on the local conditions, this could also mean that a class should not only be divided once, but further split up.

But the children need predictable, fixed days of attendance.

This would ensure a regular exchange of learners and teachers.

The SPD parliamentary group submitted a request for a report with 41 questions to Minister of Education Alexander Lorz (CDU) for the upcoming meeting of the cultural policy committee on Wednesday.