Shanghai Daily

Parents see benefits in online study

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ABOUT 58.3 percent of parents of middle and primary school students are positive about the effects of online courses offered by their schools this semester due to the COVID-19 epidemic, a survey has found.

However, 73.9 percent of the parents said online courses have put an extra burden on them because they have to spend more time supervisin­g and assisting their children, according to the survey by the China Youth Daily.

Parents said they need to keep a close watch on their children to ensure they stay focused during classes. Parents also had to help them with homework and sometimes provide after-class tutoring.

About 70.5 percent of the 2,470 respondent­s complained that their children got distracted during online courses recorded in advance, with 92.8 percent attributin­g this to a lack of interactio­n they would have had in a classroom, the survey showed.

The parents suggested that teachers should attempt to better understand their students’ academic performanc­es before and after a classroom scenario and try to make recorded lessons more interestin­g such as adjusting tones and facial expression­s.

Around 76 percent of the respondent­s are parents of primary school pupils and nearly 75 percent live in firstand second-tier cities.

Most schools have reopened, with Beijing having seen its non-graduating middle school students and sixth-grade pupils return to schools on June 1.

(Xinhua)

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