The guidelines include safe operations, wellness and protection and compensating learning.
UN provides guidelines for opening schools after corona virus. UNESCO, UNICEF, WFP and World Bank issued these guidelines. It is about safe reopening of schools amidst ongoing closures affecting nearly 1.3 billion students worldwide.
The agencies also warn that the widespread closures of educational facilities in response to the COVID-19 pandemic present an unprecedented risk to children’s education and wellbeing. It affects the most marginalized children who rely on school for their education, health, safety and nutrition. The guidelines offer practical advice on how to keep children safe when they return to school.
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“Rising inequality, poor health outcomes, violence, child labour and child marriage are just some of the long-term threats for children who miss out on school,” said Henrietta Fore, UNICEF Executive Director. “We know the longer children stay out of school, the less likely they are to ever return. Unless we prioritize the reopening of schools – when it is safe to do so – we will likely see a devastating reversal in education gains.”
Not enough evidence
The new guidelines note that there is not yet enough evidence to measure the impact of school closures on disease transmission rates. Moreover, the adverse effects of school closures on children’s safety and learning are well documented. Gains made in increasing access to children’s education in recent decades risk being lost and, in the worse cases, reversed completely.
“In the poorest countries, children often rely on schools for their only meal of the day. Many schools now closed because of COVID-19. Almost 370 million children are missing out on these nutritious meals which are a lifeline for poor families. They are also being denied the health support they normally get through school. This could do lasting damage. So, when schools reopen it is critical that these meal programmes and health services are restored. It can also help to draw the most vulnerable children back to school,” said David Beasley, WFP Executive Director.
The best interests of children and overall public health considerations – based on an assessment of the associated benefits and risks to education, public health and socio-economic factors – must be central to national and local authorities’ decisions to reopen schools, the guidelines say.
Schools must assess themselves
Schools must look at how they can reopen better. This is with improved learning and more comprehensive support for children at the school. It includes health, nutrition, psycho social support and water, sanitation and hygiene facilities.
As countries grapple with when to reopen schools, UNESCO, UNICEF, WFP and World Bank – as part of the Global Education Coalition – urge governments to assess the benefits of classroom-based instruction compared to remote learning. It also asks to assess the risk factors related to reopening of schools. It is important as the inconclusive evidence is available around the infection risks related to school attendance.
These guidelines provide all-round guidance for governments and partners to facilitate the reopening of schools for students, teachers and families. We share one goal: to protect and advance the right to education for every learner,” said UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay.
The guidelines include:
· Policy reform: Policy implications address all dimensions of the guidelines. These include clear policies for school opening and closure during public health emergencies. It also include reforms needed to expand equitable access for marginalised and out of school children. Further, it strengthens and standardizes remote learning practices.
· Financing requirements: Address the impact of COVID-19 on education and invest in strengthening education systems for recovery and resilience.
· Safe operations: Ensure conditions that reduce disease transmission, safeguard essential services and supplies and promote healthy behaviour. This includes access to soap and clean water for safe handwashing. It also includes procedures on when staff or students feel unwell, protocols on social distancing and good hygiene practices.
· Compensating learning: Focus on practices that compensate for lost instructional time. It includes strengthening pedagogy and build on hybrid learning models such as integrating approaches in remote and distance education. This must include knowledge on disease transmission and prevention.
· Wellness and protection: Expand the focus on students’ well-being and reinforce the protection of children. It is through enhanced referral mechanisms and the provision of essential school-based services including healthcare and school feeding.
· Reaching the most marginalised: Adapt school opening policies and practices to expand access to marginalised groups. It focuses previously out-of-school children, displaced and migrant children and minorities. Diversify critical communications and outreach by making them available in relevant languages and in accessible formats.
Reintegrating Students
“Once schools begin to reopen, the priority becomes reintegrating students into school settings safely and in ways that allow learning to pick up again, especially for those who suffered the biggest learning losses. This is a critical moment as it is the launching pad for a new normal that should be more effective and equitable. To manage reopenings, schools will need to prepare logistically with the teaching workforce ready. And they will need to have plans specifically for supporting learning recovery of the most disadvantaged students. The guidelines offer a framework for moving forward that the major UN agencies are aligned around,” said Jaime Saavedra, World Bank Global Director for Education.
Thus, UN provides guidelines for opening schools after corona virus.
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