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Year Ender 2020: A year of struggle, innovation for teachers and students

The over 10-month-long shutdown inspired creative ways to teach thousands of students who could not log on to online classes because they did not have access to smartphones and computers in several villages across the country.

Edited by: India TV News Desk New Delhi Published : Dec 30, 2020 20:20 IST, Updated : Dec 30, 2020 20:21 IST
Year Ender 2020: A year of struggle, innovation for
Image Source : INDIA TV

Year Ender 2020: A year of struggle, innovation for teachers and students

The year 2020 was full of struggle and innovation for teachers and students as they adapted new ways of learning amid the coronavirus pandemic. From turning walls of mud houses into blackboards to taking classes through loudspeakers on moving carts, from 'mohalla' classes to using public announcement system of panchayat bhawans, the year gave more than just education.

The over 10-month-long lockdown inspired teachers to take up creative ways of making children learn in the best possible way. Many students could not log on to online classes because they did not have access to smartphones and computers in several villages across the country. 

An exemplar in such tough times came from Jharkhand where government school teachers in Dumka's Dumarthar village found a new way to impart education to students who did not have access to smartphones. They created blackboards on the walls of students' houses to teach them while maintaining social distancing.

READ MORE: NEET Exam 2020: SC refuses to entertain batch of petitions seeking postponement of entrance

"We started with an initiative called 'shiksha aapke dwaar' (education at your doorstep) to provide education to children who did not have access to smartphones and internet. More than 100 blackboards have been created on walls to teach students at their houses," said Tapan Kumar, a teacher in Dumarthar.

Every day, Indra Mukhi Chhetri, a maths and science teacher in Sikkim's Ravangala, visited homes of several students she identified and reached out to around 40 students in a week from class 1 to 5.

"Even if I take online classes, these students either do not have devices or Internet connectivity. Some of them may have access but then how do I maintain equality, others might feel left out. So I used to spend about 20 minutes with each student in a week.

"I collected their notebooks and write lessons for them, which they have to finish over the course of the week. I also brief the parents on what needs to be done," she said.

Ghanshyambhai, a teacher in Gujarat's Janan village, used the public announcement system of the village panchayat to share stories, songs, guidelines for parents on how to deal with children during the lockdown period, importance of exercising and much more.

"I also announced when I will be at Panchayat Bhawan so students or parents who want to clear any doubts or to interact can see me there, while maintaining social distancing," he added.

READ MORE: JEE, NEET 2020: SC dismisses review petition against August 17 order allowing exams

Teachers in Chhattisgarh conducted Mohalla (neighbourhood) classes in areas with low infection rates.

"We set up mini classrooms, with small groups of students, in community spaces. The teachers spent a couple of hours in each room, engaging with all students at least twice a week," one of the teachers said.

Another teacher in Chhattisgarh, Rudra Rana, used his motorcycle to conduct classes.

"The children were not able to go to study as schools were closed. So I thought why not bring the school to them. Even though schools continue to be shut, online classes are not viable for most rural students. I used a portable umbrella and a chalk board to take classes when I went to the village," he said.

In Haryana's Kanwarsika village, the morning bell announcing the start of a teaching session used to ring, not in the local school, but from a van equipped with a loudspeaker.

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"Students settled down inside homes and in courtyards facing the street. First they recited a prayer following the teacher on loudspeaker and then they attended lessons of one subject each day," Noor Bano, a teacher with the government school in Nuh district, said.

In a newly-acquired daily practice, students in Haryana's Jhamri village opened their textbooks at the sight of the cart that arrived near their homes, filling the vacuum left by closure of schools due to the lockdown and lack of digital infrastructure such as feeble internet connectivity.

"I arranged for a loudspeaker system on a cart. The teachers were asked to turn-wise go with the cart and park it at a feasible location and impart lessons from there. It doesn't match up to the classroom learning levels but will at least ensure that students' don't drop out," said Satyanarayan Sharma, who runs a school in the village in Jhajjar district.

The lockdown induced by COVID-19 in March prompted schools and colleges to move to the virtual world for teaching and learning activities and exposed the existing digital divide in the country. (With PTI inputs)

READ MORE: KCET Exams NOT to be postponed, plea rejected by Karnataka High Court

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