The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Congested schools: A health time bomb amid Covid-19

- BY AMANDA NCUBE

With schools already open amid the Covid-19 pandemic, learners are expected to maintain social distancing to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s.

This will be difficult to implement in most schools in Matabelela­nd South province, where learners are congested.

One such school is Koodvale Primary School in ward 22 in Gwanda, where learners from Grade 1 to 7 share three classrooms.

The School Developmen­t Committee chairperso­n at Koodvale Primary, Michael Ndlovu, said they had to create learning space for the children walking long distances to schools in neighbouri­ng wards.

The school constructe­d one classroom block with three classrooms. ECD learners would have their lessons under a tree.

Grade 1 to 3 used one classroom while Grade 4 and 5 learners also used another, and Grade 6 and 7s would also share a classroom.

Now, they have also converted a hall nearby into a school.

“We have managed to split the classes so that learners alternate learning days, but we are unable to meet the recommende­d standard of 35 learners per class,” Ndlovu said.

“Some of our classes have 50 to 60 pupils because of limited learning space.”

Ndlovu was uncertain of the pupils’ safety at the school once there is an outbreak of the pandemic.

Talent Dube*, a teacher at the school, said it will be difficult to cover much ground and recover lost time.

“It’s going to be very difficult to recover the time, which learners lost out. We have split the classes into two groups which means one group learns today, and the second group comes in the following day, and they are taught the same concept. Having to teach the same thing on two consecutiv­e days means we are losing valuable time which we hardly have,” he says.

Ndlovu, who is also a parent, said he was uncertain of the safety of his children. He feared that schools will record an outbreak of the pandemic.

He felt the government must thoroughly monitor schools and allow them to open only if they meet the standard requiremen­ts of curbing the Covid-19 pandemic.

Ward 22 councillor Mary Mpofu said learning space is a major challenge in schools in her area. She said pupils are also exposed to poor learning conditions due to resource constraint­s.

Examinatio­n classes opened on March 15, while the rest of the classes resumed on March 22.

Matabelela­nd South provincial education director Lifias Masukume was also concerned about congestion in the province.

Gwanda Urban needs three more primary and two secondary schools to decongest existing schools. The town has four primary and two secondary schools.

“Despite this challenge of congestion, lessons have to go on, and we are putting in place strategies to ensure that pupils learn.

“For most of our schools, we usually had children sitting in rows of two from the front to the back, leaving just a little space in between. With social distancing, it means that each class has about 20 pupils. It means that about half or third of learners in each school are the ones who can learn,” Masukume said.

Dube said decongesti­ng classrooms will mean that teachers will have an extra workload as they will need to split their classes.

He said there was need for the government to have resourced schools with temporary infrastruc­ture which can be used to decongest classrooms.

“If some learners move outside to decongest classrooms, what will happen when it rains? Rural schools don’t have alternativ­e learning spaces except for maybe boarding schools. If e-learning is used as an alternativ­e learning platform, then the rural child will be left out. The education system introduced during the pandemic period shouldn’t leave out any child,” he said.

Dube said there is also need for the government to assist schools with funds and equipment to prepare for the reopening of schools amid the pandemic.

“The income of schools mainly comes from school fees, and schools have been closed for a long time. In the short time that schools opened at the end of last year, some parents didn’t pay fees. This means that some schools are opening with nothing in their coffers, which means they won’t manage to buy essential resources for the pandemic such as sanitisers and PPEs, among other things,” he said.

Dube felt the government should have consulted unions first before announcing an opening date for schools. He feared schools will become Covid-19 hotspots again.

Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education spokespers­on Taungana Ndoro said several schools in the country were indeed congested; however, they have to be innovative.

“We have been on a monitoring drive to ensure that even the congested schools adhere to the World Health Organisati­on protocols and guidelines from the ministry of Health and Child Care on the prevention and management of Covid-19. We have encouraged innovation in some of these schools to ensure that they utilise other spaces to ensure social distancing and also to have alternativ­e timetables,” he said.

Ndoro said there will be rotational schools’ attendance in classes where learners cannot exercise social distancing. On the days pupils are not at school, they will be engaged through open distance learning and e-learning.

⚫ This article was originally published by The Citizen Bulletin, a nonprofit news organisati­on that produces hard-hitting, hyperlocal reporting and analysis for the southweste­rn region of Matabelela­nd.

 ??  ?? Most schools have limited learning space
Most schools have limited learning space

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