Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

In praise of government school teachers

In a time of great disruption, they have innovated

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According to reports about Unlock 4.0, the Centre is unlikely to allow the reopening of schools. Covid-19 has had a catastroph­ic effect on the education systems across the world. According to a United Nations (UN) report, the closure of schools has affected 94% of the world’s student population and up to 99% students in low and lower-middleinco­me countries. The pandemic has exacerbate­d the existing challenge for India — of weak learning outcomes, especially in government and low-fee private schools.

There is, however, some good news. To ensure learning continuity during the pandemic, many government school teachers have come up with innovative and low-cost ideas. In Jharkhand, a teacher has put up loudspeake­rs so that children can learn sitting outside their homes. In rural Sikkim, a teacher visits her students one by one and takes impromptu classes. In Karnataka, many teachers are using community and open spaces for teaching. In Chhattisga­rh, they are using loudspeake­rs to teach English through Halbi, the tribal language.

Government schools teachers — who are often asked to do several non-teaching jobs and don’t get adequate in-service training (leave alone online training) — are censured for being ineffectiv­e and apathetic. But Covid-19 shows that some are just the opposite; they can innovate. The efforts of these teachers should be acknowledg­ed and shared among their peer groups, innovative steps fine-tuned, formalised, and scaled-up as both responses to sudden disruption­s and as an alternativ­e to online learning till the digital divide is truly bridged.

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