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LATIN AMERICA HIT BY SCHOOLING CRISIS

With most schools shut down, a generation of Latin American children could be left behind

- JULIE TURKEWITZ

Already, two of Gloria Vásquez’s children had dropped out of school during the pandemic, including her 8-year-old, Ximena, who had fallen so far behind that she struggled with the most basic arithmetic. “One plus one?” Ms Vásquez quizzed her daughter one afternoon.

“Four?” the little girl guessed helplessly. Now, Ms Vásquez, a 33-year-old single mother and motel housekeepe­r who had never made it past the fifth grade, told herself she couldn’t let a third child leave school.

“Where’s Maicol?” she asked her children, calling home one night during another long shift scrubbing floors. “Is he studying?”

Maicol, 13, certainly was not. Frustrated by the worksheets his teachers had been sending via text message — the closest thing to instructio­n his school had been able to give him in more than a year — Maicol had instead followed his uncle to work. Together, they hauled a giant wheelbarro­w through the streets, digging through trash, collecting bottles and cans to sell for a few cents a kilogram.

“I’m not learning anything,” he said as his mother scolded him, again, for going to work instead of studying.

Deep into the second year of the pandemic, Latin America is facing an education crisis. It has suffered the longest school shutdowns of any region in the world, according to Unicef, nearly 16 months in some areas. While many students in wealthy countries have returned to the classroom, 100 million children in Latin America are still in full or partial distance learning — or, as in Maicol’s case, some distant approximat­ion of it.

The consequenc­es are alarming, officials and education experts say: With economies in the region pummelled by the pandemic and connection­s to the classroom so badly frayed, children in primary and secondary school are dropping out in large numbers, sometimes to work wherever they can.

Millions of children in Latin America may have already left the school system, the World Bank estimates. In Mexico, 1.8 million children and young people abandoned their educations this school year because of the pandemic or economic hardship, according to the national statistics agency.

Ecuador lost an estimated 90,000 primary and secondary school students. Peru says it lost 170,000. And officials worry that the real losses are far higher because countless children, like Maicol, are technicall­y still enrolled but struggling to hang on. More than five million children in Brazil have had no access to education during the pandemic, a level not seen in more than 20 years, Unicef says.

Increased access to education was one of the great accomplish­ments of the last half-century in Latin America, with enrolment soaring for girls, poor students and members of ethnic and racial minorities, lifting many toward the middle class. Now, an onslaught of dropouts threatens to peel back years of hard-won progress, sharpening inequality and possibly shaping the region for decades to come.

“This is a generation­al crisis,” said Emanuela Di Gropello of the World Bank, urging government­s to get children into classrooms as quickly as possible. “There is no time to lose.”

The pandemic has taken an excruciati­ng toll around the globe. But by some measures, Latin America has been hit harder — and longer — than any other part of the world.

The region, with less than 10% of the global population, accounts for nearly one-third of the world’s total recorded Covid deaths, according to an analysis by

The New York Times. And with vaccinatio­n rates low in many countries — partly because wealthy nations secured shots for their own citizens first — the virus is still devastatin­g the region.

From the start of the pandemic, Latin America has endured some of the world’s worst outbreaks, yet several South American nations are now experienci­ng their highest daily death tolls of the crisis, even after more than a year of relentless loss. For some government­s, there is little end in sight.

But unless lockdowns end and students get back into the classroom soon, “many children may never return,” the World Bank warns. And “those who do go back to school will have lost months or even years of education.” Some analysts fear the region could be facing a generation of lost children, not unlike places that suffer years of war.

Even before the pandemic, graduating from high school in Ms Vásquez’s neighbourh­ood was no small feat.

She and her children live at the end of a dirt road, just beyond Bogota, Colombia’s sprawling, mountain-flanked capital, a

deeply unequal city in one of the most unequal regions in the world. Violence and crime are as common as the ice cream cart that circles the block each afternoon. For some children, the pandemic has been yet another trauma in a seemingly endless succession.

Many parents in the neighbourh­ood make their living as recyclers, traversing the city with wooden wheelbarro­ws hitched to their backs. And many of their children don’t have computers, internet or family members who can help with class work. Often there is one cellphone for the family, leaving students scrambling for any connection to school.

Ms Vásquez dropped out at 14 to help raise her siblings, and it has been her greatest regret. The motel she cleans is far from home, sometimes forcing her to leave her children for more than a day — 24 hours for her shift, with at least four hours of commuting. Even so, she rarely makes the country’s monthly minimum wage.

She had hoped her children — Ximena, 8, Emanuel, 12, Maicol, 13, and Karen, 15 — whom she calls “the motor of my life,” would leave the neighbourh­ood, if only they could get through this never-ending pandemic with their schooling intact. “I’ve always said that we have been dealt a difficult hand,” but “they have a lot of desire to learn,” she said.

Before the virus arrived, her children attended public schools nearby, wearing the colourful uniforms typical for Colombian pupils. Karen wanted to be a doctor. Maicol, a performer. Emanuel, a police officer. Ximena was still deciding.

By late May, the two boys were still officially enrolled in school, but barely keeping up, trying to fill out the worksheets their teachers sent via WhatsApp each week. They have no computer, and it costs Ms Vásquez 15 US cents (5 baht) a page to print the assignment­s, some of which are dozens of pages long. Sometimes, she has the money. Sometimes not.

Both girls had dropped out altogether. Ximena lost her spot at school just before the pandemic last year because she had missed classes, a not-so-uncommon occurrence in Colombia’s overburden­ed schools. Then, with administra­tors working from home, Ms Vásquez said she couldn’t figure out how to get her daughter back in.

Karen said she had lost contact with her instructor­s when the country went into lockdown in March 2020. Now, she wanted to return, but her family had accidental­ly broken a tablet lent to her by the school. She was terrified that if she tried to re-enrol, she would be hit with a fine her mother had no money to pay.

The family was already reeling because Ms Vásquez’s hours at the motel had been cut during the crisis. Now they were four months behind on rent.

Ms Vásquez was particular­ly worried about Maicol, who struggled to make sense of worksheets about periodic tables and literary devices, each day more frustratin­g than the last.

Lately, when he wasn’t recycling, he’d go looking for scrap metal to sell. To him, the nights out with his uncle were a welcome reprieve, like a pirate’s adventure: meeting new people, searching for treasure — toys, shoes, food, money.

But Ms Vásquez, who had forbidden these jaunts, grew incensed when she heard he was working. The more time Maicol spent with the recycling cart, she feared, the smaller his world would become.

She respected the people who gathered trash for a living. She had done it when she was pregnant with Emanuel. But she didn’t want Maicol to be satisfied with that life. During her shifts at the motel, cleaning bathrooms, she imagined

The family was already reeling because Ms Vásquez’s hours at the motel had been cut during the crisis.

her children in the future, sitting behind computers, running businesses.

“‘Look,’ people would say, ‘those are Gloria’s kids,’” she said. “They don’t have to bear the same destiny as their mother.”

Over the last year, school began in earnest only after she came home from work. One afternoon, she pulled out a study guide from Emanuel’s teacher, and began dictating a spelling and grammar exercise.

“Once upon a time,” she read.

“Once upon a time,” wrote Emanuel, 12. “There was a white and grey duck —” “Grey?” he asked.

When it came to Maicol’s more advanced lessons, Ms Vásquez was often lost herself. She didn’t know how to use email, much less calculate the area of a square or teach her son about planetary rotations.

By mid-June, Colombia’s Education Ministry said all schools would return to in-person courses after a July vacation. Though the country is enduring a record number of daily deaths from the virus, officials have determined the cost of staying closed is too great.

But as school principals scrambled to prepare for the return, some wonder how many students and teachers will show up. At Carlos Alban Holguin, one of the schools in Ms Vásquez’s neighbourh­ood, the principal said some teachers were so afraid of infection that they had refused to come to the school to pick up the completed assignment­s their pupils had dropped off.

One recent morning, Karen woke before dawn, as she often does, to help her mother get ready for her shift at the motel. Since leaving school last year, Karen had increasing­ly taken on the role of parent, cooking and cleaning for the family, and trying to protect her siblings while their mother was at work.

At one point, the responsibi­lity was so much that Karen ran away. Her flight lasted just a few hours, until Ms Vásquez found her. “I told my mother that she had to support me more,” Karen said. “That she couldn’t leave me alone, that I was an adolescent and I needed her help.”

In their shared bedroom, while Ms Vásquez applied makeup, Karen packed her mother’s blue backpack, slipping in pink Crocs, a fanny pack, headphones and a change of clothes.

On the television, a news anchor described the protests rattling the country, with demonstrat­ors furious over growing poverty and inequality. Dozens of people had died.

Ms Vásquez had gone out to march one day, too, blowing a plastic horn in the crowd and calling on the authoritie­s to guarantee what she called a “dignified education.”

But she hadn’t returned to the streets. If something happened to her at the marches, who would support her children? “Do you want me to braid your hair?” Karen asked her mother.

At the door, she kissed Ms Vásquez goodbye. Then, after months of hardship, came a victory. Ms Vásquez received messages from Maicol’s and Emanuel’s teachers: Both schools would bring students back, in person, in just a few weeks.

And she finally found a spot for Ximena, who had been out of school entirely for more than a year. “A new start,” Ms Vásquez said, giddy with excitement.

Karen’s future was less certain. She had worked up the courage to return the broken tablet. Administra­tors did not fine her — and she applied to a new school.

Now, she was waiting to hear if there was space for her, trying to push away the worry that her education was over. “I’ve been told that education is everything, and without education there is nothing,” she said. “And, well, it’s true — I’ve seen it with my own eyes.”

 ??  ?? ABOVE
Gloria Vásquez combs her daughter’s hair at their house in Soacha, Colombia.
ABOVE Gloria Vásquez combs her daughter’s hair at their house in Soacha, Colombia.
 ??  ?? LEFT
Karen Vásquez cleans dishes as her younger sister brushes her teeth at their home in Soacha, Colombia.
LEFT Karen Vásquez cleans dishes as her younger sister brushes her teeth at their home in Soacha, Colombia.
 ??  ?? Maicol Vásquez plays near his home in Soacha, Colombia.
Maicol Vásquez plays near his home in Soacha, Colombia.
 ??  ?? Maicol Vásquez with a magnet and bucket he uses to find metal to sell in Soacha, Colombia.
Maicol Vásquez with a magnet and bucket he uses to find metal to sell in Soacha, Colombia.
 ??  ?? Gloria Vásquez studies with her sons at their house in So
Gloria Vásquez studies with her sons at their house in So
 ??  ?? oacha, Colombia.
oacha, Colombia.

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