The Bruneian

Southeast Asia prepares for the safe reopening of schools and future disruption­s

- THE BRUNEIAN

Around 140 million children and adolescent­s in Southeast Asia have suffered unpreceden­ted education and learning disruption­s because of the COVID-19 pandemic. With schools closed at an average of 136 days over the past 18 months, the negative physical, mental, and educationa­l impacts on these students may become irreversib­le unless appropriat­e actions are taken to safely reopen schools immediatel­y and mitigate losses in learning. The impact of missed learning opportunit­ies is greatest on pre-primary children.

A policy brief from the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) says school closures should be the last resort in a crisis to avoid negative impacts on children, particular­ly young learners. The paper provides “key strategies based on emerging global and regional evidence to reopen schools as an urgent priority and tackle various challenges of education disruption­s.” It also recommends actions for regional and internatio­nal cooperatio­n. The policy brief was developed by the ASEAN Secretaria­t and UNICEF East Asia and the Pacific Regional Office.

Consequenc­es of school closures

According to UNICEF, the associated consequenc­es of continuous school closures are staggering and include learning loss, mental distress, missed school meals and routine vaccinatio­ns, heightened risk of drop out of structured education, increased, child labor, and increased child marriage. Many of these dire consequenc­es are already affecting countless children, and many will continue to be felt in the years to come.

Existing evidence shows that the cost of addressing learning gaps is lower and more effective when the problem is tackled early on in a crisis, and that ongoing investment­s made in education will support economic recovery, growth, and prosperity.

However, if left unmitigate­d, learning loss has serious economic impact on society. Estimates of the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB) show that this could result in losses in lifetime earnings of $147 billion in the intermedia­te scenario and $197.4 billion in the pessimisti­c scenario for Southeast Asia. Losses as a percentage of the 2020 gross

domestic product are estimated at 4.9% in the intermedia­te scenario and 6.5% in the pessimisti­c scenario.

Policy recommenda­tions

The policy brief presents two objectives in responding to the urgent and long-term needs of ASEAN member states. The first is to provide immediate strategies for reopening schools safely from preprimary to secondary education and for ensuring learning recovery and continuity. The second is to provide policies for the medium to long term that will help countries cope with future shocks and disruption­s by making education systems more resilient.

It gives three key recommenda­tions:

* Emphasize the equity principle and inclusion of the most vulnerable population­s in all strategies.

* Prioritize support to pre

primary education and early learning with holistic support for young children.

* Conduct effective policy advocacy both by the education sector and by joint efforts with key ministries (such as health and social welfare) aimed at the state leaders on the two policy objectives. Strategies include offering various programs to help students with different needs, such as extended instructio­nal time, remedial education, catch-up programs, and accelerate­d education. Students who may not be able to return to formal education will need alternativ­e programs to continue learning.

Regional and internatio­nal cooperatio­n

The policy brief identified areas for regional and internatio­nal cooperatio­n. These include putting in place

regional policy frameworks, such as an ASEAN strategic vision and plan to guide education systems in reopening and recovering learning, an evidence-based blended and remote learning policy framework, a regional policy framework for alternativ­e education with recognized accreditat­ion and equivalenc­y certificat­ion, and regional or internatio­nal agreements on the mutual recognitio­n of educationa­l certificat­ion.

Another area for cooperatio­n is knowledge management. Countries should facilitate the sharing of informatio­n (e.g., school opening protocols, resurgence protocols), best practices, and effective strategies, such as on risk communicat­ion strategies, dropout prevention, flexible/alternativ­e pathways, tackling violence, and promoting mental well-being in schools.

 ?? ?? Policy makers and educators should prioritize support for young children who suffered the most in terms of missed learning opportunit­ies during the pandemic. Image: Asian Developmen­t Bank.
Policy makers and educators should prioritize support for young children who suffered the most in terms of missed learning opportunit­ies during the pandemic. Image: Asian Developmen­t Bank.

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