Teachers have had no systematic training in dealing with emergency situations where schools are closed and children are confined to their homes: Study.
Anu Parthiban | April 17, 2022 | 05:04 PM IST
NEW DELHI: An overwhelming majority of children don’t access online, TV education, the Centre for Budget and Policy Studies (CBPS) survey finds. The CBPS has been implementing an action-research project titled the Bihar Mentorship Project (BMP) in ten selected schools in Patna and Muzaffarpur.
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It has been working in collaboration with the Government of Bihar in nine government and one NGO-run schools for the past two years. According to the surveys conducted with children, parents, teachers, the critical findings that emerged were:
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During the Covid-19 pandemic period, the Centre for Budget and Policy Studies developed learning materials in the form of letters that children could get when the schools were closed and initiated community-based learning sessions when the lockdown was lifted.
“Emergency response requires a systemic preparedness at the level of the school, children, communities and at the larger system level. This means that building resilient school systems to deal with emergency situations is the most critical action point in the entire agenda of ‘build back better’ as advocated by all actors during and post-pandemic,” it said. The main features of the toolkit are:
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