In Pictures: Kashmir’s community schools for children in remote areas
Aeshwarya Tiwari | July 21, 2020 | 02:27 PM IST
NEW DELHI: Among the trees, on a sun-lit patch of grass, over two dozen students sit cross-legged, their books open before them, resting on their school bags. In front of them, a teacher leans on a portable whiteboard.
On July 9, the central government’s policy think-tank, NITI Aayog, shared this image of an open-air “community school” from Baramulla, Kashmir, on its social media account. The post added that around 30,000 children were attending such schools in the district.
Since the COVID-19 outbreak resulted in the closure of schools, nearly all states have embraced online classes as the alternative. The Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir did too, launching the ‘ Aawo Padhen ’ mission to ensure continuity of learning online.
However, there are thousands of children without access to devices or the internet, necessary for learning online. Plus, Kashmir has been allowed only 2G internet service. In some areas, families lack even a radio or a television set.
To circumvent these problems, the education office of Baramulla started volunteer-driven community schools where a volunteer teacher starts running one outdoors while adhering to all the safety norms in place to prevent the spread of coronavirus.
The directorate of school education, Kashmir, has endorsed the community schooling system with the help of local Auqaf Committees and Panchayat Raj Institutions (PRIs) for areas where students don’t have internet, television, radio, or any other devices to study. According to All India Radio , a public broadcaster, 26 schools in the Baramulla district have been chosen on a pilot basis for community trial schools.
“DCs/ directors of school education permit “community classes” on a voluntary basis for kids with no access to TV/radio, internet and smartphones in “green areas with anticovid19 protocols like face masks, social distancing; sanitizer and soap under close supervision of parents!” tweeted Asgar Hassan Samoon, principal secretary, school education and skill development.
DCs/ directors of school edn permit “community classes” on Voluntary basis for kids with no access to TV/radio, internet & smart phones in “green areas with anticovid19 protocols like face masks, social distancing; sanitizer & soap under close supervision of parents! pic.twitter.com/JFFA4eKUU8
— Dr Asgar Hassan Samoon IAS (@AsgarSamoon) July 20, 2020
In the Community Schooling System, a teacher in a particular area establishes a community level school and all the students in that particular village or mohalla will get the academic as well as psychological help from the teacher.
According to the AIR report, the teaching spots are chosen on the basis of their accessibility, feasibility, and suitability for learning.
(All images courtesy Ishfaq Bashir, Directorate of School Education, Kashmir)
-
One City, Two Worlds: Online classes in Kolkata’s govt and pvt schools
- Why a university student sued the Kerala Government for a laptop
Write to us at news@careers360.com
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Featured News
]- NMC proposal to let MSc, PhDs teach at medical colleges will ‘dilute academic standards’: Resident doctors
- ‘Academic apartheid’: Non-doctors denounce NMCs’ new rules for medical faculty recruitment
- New UGC regulations may create rubber-stamp VCs, conflict with states: JNU professor
- Why NMC bid to expand medical faculty pool is drawing fire from both doctors, non-medical postgraduates
- Data Science, Maritime and Property Law: Top LLB, LLM colleges launch courses in niche frontiers
- Music, arts and Harry Potter: How top law colleges are using films and fiction to teach legal concepts
- Manipal Law School director: ‘Our LLM courses focus on data privacy, IT laws and other emerging areas’
- Litigation to corporate law: A first-generation lawyer's journey from burnout to breakthrough
- AI and Law: Top law schools blend artificial intelligence into curriculum, with research and global insights
- GLC Mumbai: Asia’s oldest law college struggles with falling academic standards, fund crunch