The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Philippine­s to reopen limited in-person classes

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MANILA: The Philippine­s will reopen up to 120 schools for limited in-person classes for the first time since the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic in a pilot approved by President Rodrigo Duterte, officials said Monday.

While nearly every country in the world has already partially or fully reopened schools for faceto-face lessons, the Philippine­s has kept them closed since March 2020.

“We have to pilot face-toface (classes) because this is not just an issue for education, it’s an issue for the children’s mental health,” presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque told reporters.

“It’s also an issue for the economy because we might lose a generation if we don’t have face-to-face (classes).”

Under guidelines approved by Duterte Monday, up to a hundred public schools in areas considered “minimal risk” for virus transmissi­on will be allowed to take part in the twomonth trial.

Twenty private schools can also participat­e.

Classrooms will be open to children in kindergart­en to grade three, and senior high school, but the number of students and hours spent in face-to-face lessons are limited.

Schools wanting to take part will be assessed for their preparedne­ss and need approval from local government­s to reopen. Written consent from parents will be required.

“If the pilot class is safe, if it is effective, then we will gradually increase it,” said Education Secretary Leonor Briones.

Duterte rejected previous proposals for a pilot reopening of schools for fear children could catch Covid-19 and infect elderly relatives.

But there have been growing calls from the UN’s children fund and many teachers for a return to in-person learning amid concerns the prolonged closure was exacerbati­ng an education crisis in the country.

It is not clear when the pilot will begin or which schools will be included.

A “blended learning” programme, which involves online classes, printed materials and lessons broadcast on television and social media, will continue.

France Castro of the Alliance of Concerned Teachers told AFP the decision was “long overdue”.

Fifteen-year-olds in the Philippine­s were at or near the bottom in reading, mathematic­s and science, according to data from the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD).

Most students attend public schools where large class sizes, outdated teaching methods, lack of investment in basic infrastruc­ture such as toilets, and poverty have been blamed for youngsters lagging behind.

We have to pilot face-to-face (classes) because this is not just an issue for education, it’s an issue for the children’s mental health.

Harry Roque

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 ?? — AFP file photo ?? Registered teachers wearing face masks and shields against Covid-19, conduct tele-conferenci­ng with struggling students helping them in their school lessons through online distant learning at a local government-sanctioned online tutorial class in Taguig City, south of Manila on March 3 this year.
— AFP file photo Registered teachers wearing face masks and shields against Covid-19, conduct tele-conferenci­ng with struggling students helping them in their school lessons through online distant learning at a local government-sanctioned online tutorial class in Taguig City, south of Manila on March 3 this year.

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