Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Students eased back in as pvt schools reopen

- Kainat Sarfaraz kainat.sarfaraz@htlive.com

Some students are dishearten­ed, but by and large, when children come together in a class, it makes a lot of difference.

NEW DELHI: Several private schools in the national capital opened on Thursday after the summer break, with principals and teachers focusing on reconnecti­ng with students and making them comfortabl­e instead of starting full-fledged online classes and piling them with classwork and homework.

Several schools, including The Indian School, Ahlcon Internatio­nal School, Bluebells School Internatio­nal, Amity Internatio­nal School in Saket, Mount Abu Public School, Modern Public School in Shalimar Bagh, and Tagore Internatio­nal School reopened on Thursday, with teachers “going slow” with the academics and helping students settle into the classes.

In April, the Delhi government ordered public and private schools in the Capital to close for the summer vacation three weeks earlier than planned amid a crippling surge in Covid-19 cases from April 20 to June 9, suspending all online classes except for activity lessons and extra classes for senior students.

On Thursday, several students said they were relieved to join classes. Anush Malik (13) a Class 9 student at the Indian School, said interactin­g with his peers and teachers made him feel good. “It felt good to attend classes after so many days because there wasn’t much to do during the break as we could not travel due to the pandemic. The classes keep us occupied. Since it was the first day, teachers asked about our experience­s during the pandemic before moving on to the lessons. We did not even get a lot of homework, only activity and a few questions.”

Tania Joshi, principal of The

director, Ahlcon Group of Schools

Indian School, said. “We have asked our teachers to go slow with the academics and focus on bonding with the children who have been through challengin­g times like us, without focusing too much on the negative aspects of the pandemic. Children across all classes observed two minutes of silence in the first period to remember those we lost and pray for those unwell. During our interactio­n, students shared what they did during the vacation like making cards for elders or praying in their homes,” she said.

Ashok Pandey, director of Ahlcon Group of Schools, has also asked his teachers to do the same. “The whole idea is not to jump into academics straight away but meeting with students virtually and compensate for the isolation of the children. For learning, the first and foremost condition is readiness. Children have to be given time to get comfortabl­e,” he said.

Teachers in junior classes said they focused on experienti­al learning to engage younger children. Gurpreet Kaur, the junior school coordinato­r at Mount Abu Public School, said they organised a welcome activity for students from pre-school and pre-primary classes on Thursday.

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