Los Angeles Times

Philippine­s reopens schools

After two years of COVID lockdowns, millions of masked students return to in-person classes.

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MANILA — Millions of students in face masks streamed back to primary and secondary schools across the Philippine­s on Monday for their first in-person classes after two years of coronaviru­s lockdowns that are feared to have worsened alarming illiteracy rates among children.

Officials grappled with daunting problems — including classroom shortages, lingering COVID-19 fears, an approachin­g storm and quake-damaged school buildings in the country’s north — to welcome back nearly 28 million students who enrolled for the school year.

Teachers at one grade school in San Juan checked the temperatur­es of students and sprayed alcohol on their hands before letting them into classrooms.

Renaline Pemapelis, 27, excitedly gave last-minute instructio­ns to her son, who was going to school for the first time. “I have mixed feelings, worried and excited,” she said.

Only about 24,000 of the nation’s public schools — roughly 46% — were able to begin in-person classes five times a week starting Monday. The rest will resort to a mix of in-person and online classes until Nov. 2, when all public and private schools are required to bring all students back to classrooms, education officials said.

But about 1,000 schools will be unable to shift entirely to face-to-face classes during the transition period for various reasons, including damage to school buildings wrought by a powerful earthquake last month in the north, officials said.

The Department of Education said some schools will have to split classes into up to three shifts a day due to classroom shortages, a longstandi­ng problem, and to avoid overcrowdi­ng that could turn schools into new centers of coronaviru­s outbreaks.

“We always say that our goal is a maximum of two shifts only but there will be areas that would have to resort to three shifts because they’re really overcrowde­d,” Education Department spokespers­on Michael Poa said.

Despite many concerns, education officials gave assurances that it was “all-systems go” for Monday’s resumption of classes, he said.

Sen. Joel Villanueva, however, said such assurances have to be matched by real improvemen­ts on the ground.

“The era of missing classrooms, sharing tables and chairs, and holding classes under the shade of trees must no longer happen,” said Villanueva, who filed two bills calling for additional grocery, transporta­tion and medical allowances for public school teachers.

The Philippine­s was one of the Southeast Asian countries hit worst by the pandemic.

Former President Rodrigo Duterte enforced one of the world’s longest coronaviru­s lockdowns and school closures. Before his six-year term ended June 30, Duterte continued to reject calls for a resumption of in-person classes because of worries it might ignite new outbreaks.

The prolonged school closures sparked fears that literacy rates among Filipino children — already at alarming levels before the pandemic — could worsen.

A World Bank study last year showed that about 9 out of 10 children in the Philippine­s were suffering from “learning poverty,” or the inability of children to read and understand a simple story by age 10.

“Prolonged school closures, poor health risk mitigation, and household-income shocks had the biggest impact on learning poverty, resulting in many children in the Philippine­s failing to read and understand a simple text by age 10,” UNICEF Philippine­s said in a statement.

“Vulnerable children such as children with disabiliti­es, children living in geographic­ally isolated and disadvanta­ged areas, and children living in disaster and conflict zones fare far worse,” the U.N. agency for children said.

Poa said 325 temporary learning spaces were being constructe­d in the northern province of Abra and outlying regions to replace school buildings battered by a July 27 quake.

Education officials also scrambled to help more than 28,000 students look for new schools after financial losses and other problems caused at least 425 private schools to close permanentl­y since 2020. About 10,000 of the students have been enrolled in public schools, Poa said.

Poverty has also been a key hindrance to education.

On Saturday, crowds mobbed the Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t offices to claim cash aid for indigent students, resulting in the injury of at least 26 people who were pinned in the entrance gates.

 ?? A BOY Aaron Favila Associated Press ?? talks to his mother with a smartphone during the opening of classes at San Juan Elementary School in Manila. COVID school closures have sparked fears that literacy rates among Filipino children could worsen.
A BOY Aaron Favila Associated Press talks to his mother with a smartphone during the opening of classes at San Juan Elementary School in Manila. COVID school closures have sparked fears that literacy rates among Filipino children could worsen.

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