Remote learning has to overcome obstacles to reach disadvantaged groups .....143
Teachers need to be a focus of support .............................................................................. 146
Flexible approaches to assessment try to take student needs into account ... 146
Content needs to be adapted and attention given to socio-emotional
well-being ............................................................................................................................................147
Conclusion ......................................................................................................................................... 149
In the course of a few weeks, the COVID-19 pandemic
overwhelmed many national health systems. It led
governments to impose partial or full lockdowns and curtail
economic activity, threatening billions of livelihoods. One
key measure to limit the risk of contagion was school and
university closures. COVID-19 thus precipitated an education
crisis, fuelled by the deep and multiple inequalities discussed
in this report. While these inequalities have long existed,
many were obscured in classrooms. Lockdowns and school
closures suddenly brought them into sharp relief.
Under unfamiliar and very challenging conditions, countries
in the region have responded with urgency, demonstrating
commitment and resilience to continue provision through
largely remote learning modalities. Yet education is not
immune to the moral dilemmas other sectors have faced
during this period. Millions of people had to make difficult
decisions: Individuals had to decide whether to respect
or evade quarantine restrictions, medical staff needed to
choose among patients’ competing needs and authorities
had to decide how to allocate economic support.
The disruption of learning also confronted education
policymakers with the ‘do no harm’ principle – the
requirement that no plan or programme should be put in
place if it might actively harm anyone at all. Unfortunately,
just as countries look to the future to make an opportunity
out of a crisis, it has become apparent that many of the
attempted solutions risk leaving many children and young
people further behind.
According to the second round of the UNESCO-UNICEF-
World Bank joint survey of ministries of education on
national responses to COVID-19, carried out between
July and September 2020, in which 23 countries from the
region took part, a range of equity-oriented measures
were taken. In particular, 76% provided support to learners
with disabilities (e.g. sign language in online learning
programmes) and 52% provided flexible and self-paced,
asynchronous learning platforms. But a minority of
countries supported access to infrastructure for learners
in remote areas (43%), designed learning materials
for speakers of minority languages (38%) or provided
additional support to poorer households, including cash
transfers (38%).
While basically all responding countries took measures to
minimize the impact of school closures on the well-being
of students, relatively few countries did this following
a system-wide approach. The preferred approach was
psychosocial and mental health support to learners, for
instance through online counselling, which two in three
countries offered. For instance, 40% of countries offered
support to make up for interrupted school meal services
and only 25% expanded their child protection services.
This chapter reviews how countries in the region have
addressed issues of coverage, access to technology, digital
skills, learner support and instructional practices, with
special reference to groups at risk of exclusion.
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