Loading...
The Financial Express

COVID-19 postpones ‘first day of school’ indefinitely for 140m children

UNICEF says


| Updated: August 26, 2021 00:25:50


Nayla, 7, a student in a primary school, asks her teacher a question during class at the local village hall in Bandung, West Java province, Indonesia. -UNICEF photo Nayla, 7, a student in a primary school, asks her teacher a question during class at the local village hall in Bandung, West Java province, Indonesia. -UNICEF photo

The COVID-19 pandemic has postponed the first day of school, a landmark moment for students and their parents, for an estimated 140 million young minds around the world.

UNICEF, the United Nations Children’s Fund, came up with the information a new analysis released as summer break comes to end in many parts of the world.

An estimated eight million of these students have been waiting for their first day of in-person learning for over a year, as their schools have been closed throughout the pandemic.

"The first day of school is a landmark moment in a child's life—setting them off on a life-changing path of personal learning and growth. Most of us can remember countless minor details—what clothes we wore, our teacher's name, who we sat next to. But for millions of children, that important day has been indefinitely postponed," said UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore.

"As classes resume in many parts of the world, millions of first graders have been waiting to see the inside of a classroom for over a year. Millions more may not see one at all this school term. For the most vulnerable, their risk of never stepping into a classroom in their lifetime is skyrocketing," Henrietta Fore said.

According to a statement issued by UNICEF on Tuesday, schools globally were fully closed for an average of 79 teaching days last year.

“However, for 168 million students, after the pandemic began, schools were shuttered for nearly the entire year.”

“Even now, many children are facing an unprecedented second year of disruption to their education. The associated consequences of school closures – learning loss, mental distress, missed vaccinations, and heightened risk of drop out, child labour, and child marriage – will be felt by many children, especially the youngest learners in critical development stages,” according to the statement.

“While countries worldwide are taking some actions to provide remote learning, at least 29 per cent of primary students are not being reached. In addition to lack of assets for remote learning, the youngest children may not be able to participate due to a lack of support using the technology, a poor learning environment, pressure to do household chores, or being forced to work.”

“Studies have shown that positive school experiences during this transition period are a predictor of children’s future social, emotional and educational outcomes. At the same time, children who fall behind in learning during the early years often stay behind for the remaining time they spend in school, and the gap widens over the years. The number of years of education a child receives also directly affects their future earnings.”

“Unless mitigation measures are implemented, the World Bank estimates a loss of $10 trillion in earnings overtime for this entire generation of students. Existing evidence shows the cost of addressing learning gaps are lower and more effective when they are tackled earlier, and that investments in education support economic recovery, growth and prosperity.”

UNICEF urged governments to reopen schools for in-person learning as soon as possible and to provide a comprehensive recovery response for students.

In association with the World Bank and UNESCO, it also called for focusing three key priorities for recovery in schools:

Targeted programmes to bring all children and youth back in school where they can access tailored services to meet their learning, health, psychosocial well-being, and other needs;

Effective remedial learning to help students catch up on lost learning;

Support for teachers to address learning losses and incorporate digital technology into their teaching.

"Your first day of school is a day of hope and possibility—a day for getting off to a good start. But not all children are getting off to a good start. Some children are not even starting at all," said Fore.

"We must reopen schools for in-person learning as soon as possible, and we must immediately address the gaps in learning this pandemic has already created. Unless we do, some children may never catch up."

“In the following weeks, UNICEF will continue to mobilise its partners and the public to prevent this education crisis from becoming an education catastrophe. Online and offline campaigns will rally world leaders, teachers, and parents around a common cause: reopen schools for in-person learning as soon as possible. The future of the world’s most vulnerable children is at stake.”

Share if you like

Filter By Topic