The Day

U.N. secretary-general: Closing schools around world could cause ‘generation­al catastroph­e’

- By ANTONIA NOORI FARZAN and SIOBHÁN O’GRADY

The world is facing a “generation­al catastroph­e” due to ongoing school closures, U.N. Secretary General António Guterres warned Tuesday, calling the coronaviru­s pandemic “the largest disruption of education ever.”

Allowing students to safely return to classrooms must be a “top priority” as countries get local transmissi­on under control, Guterres said in a video message released early Tuesday morning.

A policy brief published alongside Guterres’s message emphasized that suppressin­g transmissi­on of the virus is “the single most significan­t step” leaders can take toward reopening schools.

Guterres’ comments come as countries around the world wrestle with how to keep students engaged while limiting the risk of coronaviru­s transmissi­on, and as parents struggle with child-care challenges.

As of Aug. 2, more than 1 billion students in more than 160 countries were affected by school closures, according to data collected by the U.N. Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organizati­on, and more than 40 million children had missed out on the “critical preschool year,” Guterres said. Countrywid­e closures remain in place in 106 countries.

Prolonging that pause “could waste untold human potential, undermine decades of progress, and exacerbate entrenched inequaliti­es,” he said.

Guterres noted that parents, and particular­ly women, “have been forced to assume heavy care burdens in the home” as schooling moves online. Meanwhile, refugees, students with disabiliti­es and people who live in remote areas are less likely to be able to access virtual instructio­n.

In parts of Europe and Asia, where strict lockdowns and other measures helped lower coronaviru­s case counts, some schools have already reopened, often with extra precaution­s in place to limit the possibilit­y of transmissi­on between children. In Germany, a phased reopening of schools began Monday.

But U.S. educators reluctant to dive into in-person learning have pointed to these countries as examples of places where case numbers were generally far more under control than they currently are in much of the United States, where more than 4.7 million cases and 152,000 deaths have been confirmed thus far.

American schools typically reopen in August and early September after summer holidays and the White House is pushing for districts to launch in-person learning even as cases surge across much of the country.

“OPEN THE SCHOOLS!!!” President Donald Trump tweeted late Monday.

Nationally, school districts are taking a variety of approaches toward the upcoming academic year. Some are planning to reopen in person, others are opting entirely for online learning and some plan to use a mix of the two.

But many educators and parents say there is no right option for students.

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