The Baltimore City school system is rolling out yet another way to test students and staff members for the coronavirus. The latest no-symptom testing includes the district's high school students.


As more students head back to the classroom for in-person instruction, they'll find a variety of ways in which they can be tested for coronavirus, especially at the high school level.

A self-administered coronavirus test is catching on with the city's elementary school students. It began as a pilot program at two schools and is now being expanded across the district.

“The kids have responded really well to it. It's not scary, it doesn't hurt. We make it a game; you can do a countdown. You get a sticker, it just becomes a part of the classroom routine,” said Cleo Hirsch, director of priority initiatives at Baltimore City Schools.

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The no-symptom lower nasal swab test is quick and simple for students returning to class for in-person learning.

“We wanted to look for a test that was easy and that students and staff could self-administer,” Hirsch said.

And now comes a salvia-based PCR test for high school students. How it works: Saliva is collected in a tube when students show up for class. The results come within 24 hours on an app.

“We know that the older students are more likely to react to the virus like adults because they are older and they're close to being adults,” Baltimore City Schools CEO Sonja Santelises said.