Teacher turns walls into blackboards to close school gap
Teacher turns walls into blackboards to close school gap
The local school shut down after strict COVID-19 restrictions were imposed across the country in March 2020
Teachers in the eastern village of India have turned walls into blackboards and roads into classrooms, in a bid to narrow the learning gap that has occurred due to elongated school closure in the country.
According to Reuters, Deep Narayan Nayak, 34, a teacher in the tribal village of Joba Attpara in Paschim Bardhaman district of the eastern state of West Bengal, has painted blackboards on the walls of houses and taught children on the streets for the past year. The local school shut down after strict COVID-19 restrictions were imposed across the country in March 2020.
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On a recent morning, children wrote on one such wall with chalk and peered into a microscope as Nayak watched over them.
"The education of our children stopped ever since the lockdown was imposed. The children used to just loiter around. The teacher came and started teaching them," Kiran Turi, whose child learns with Nayak, told Reuters.
Reuters report that Nayak teaches everything from popular nursery rhymes to the importance of masks and hand-washing to about 60 students and is popularly known as the "Teacher of the Street" to the grateful villagers.
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Schools across the country have gradually begun reopening starting last month. Some epidemiologists and social scientists are calling for them to open fully prevent further loss of learning in children.
An August survey of nearly 1,400 schoolchildren done by a scholars' group found that in rural areas, only 8% were studying online regularly, 37% were not studying at all, and about half were unable to read more than a few words. Most parents wanted schools to reopen as soon as possible, it said. read more
Nayak said he was worried that his students, most of whom are first-generation learners and whose parents are daily wage-earners, would away from the education system if they didn't continue with school.
"I would see children loitering about the village, taking cattle for grazing, and I wanted to make sure their learning doesn't stop," he told Reuters.
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