BENGALURU: Wipro’s billionaire promoter Azim Premji said schools in India should be opened after vaccinating all teachers quickly as the loss of the last one and a half years is too big to ignore for school-going children.
Three Tips for Personalizing in a Pandemic
“Why did it take a pandemic to see the humanity in teaching?”
यूपी के बेसिक स्कूलों में अब आनलाइन पढ़ाई के साथ मोहल्ला कक्षाएं, सार्वजनिक स्थानों पर होगी क्लास
उत्तर प्रदेश के प्राथमिक स्कूलों की जगह अन्य सार्वजनिक स्थानों पर अब मोहल्ला कक्षाएं भी चलेंगी। वहां छात्र-छात्राओं को नियमित बुलाया जाएगा और कोविड-19 प्रोटोकाल का अनुपालन करते हुए पढ़ाई कराई जाएगी। ये पहल प्रेरणा साथी के माध्यम से शिक्षक करेंगे। वहीं विद्यार्थियों की आनलाइन पढ़ाई भी जारी रहेगी।
Warning over Children as Indonesia suffers its worst Covid outbreak
The number of Covid infections and deaths among children in Indonesia has risen sharply over the past month, a senior paediatrician has said, as the country faces its most severe outbreak since the start of the pandemic.
560 child marriages stalled since pandemic began, FIR in 58 cases
Maharashtra’s intervention rose sharply in 2021 and 2020, when 200 and 360 cases were reported, respectively against 2019 and 2018, when 116 and 110 cases were noted.
Why schools need to reopen soon
An expert panel headed by eminent cardiac surgeon Dr Devi Shetty has strongly recommended the reopening of schools in Karnataka. The report ruled out the possibility of schools becoming infection hubs and asserted that no such instances have been proved anywhere in the world.
Postcard campaign in Mangaluru for reopening schools
The Sarakari Shaale Ulisi Belesi State Committee and Sri Durga Charitable Trust launched a postcard campaign in order to mount pressure on the Karnataka government to reopen government-run schools at the earliest. The campaign began at Upgraded Primary School at Daddalakadu. More than 1,000 parents voluntarily took part in the…
Karnataka education department looks to revive ‘Vidyagama’
The Karnataka government is likely to resume the ‘Vidyagama’ programme with some fine-tuning. Under the revitalised programme, teachers will meet students in small batches, instead of resuming offline classes in a full-fledged manner
When a bus stop becomes your school: How students are forced to learn in rural Karnataka
Without internet at home, students in remote areas have found it difficult to connect to online classes in the pandemic, forcing them to log into virtual classrooms in bus stops, roadsides and temple verandahs.