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SCHOOLS REOPENING: Ministry Of Education Finally Hits On Phase Reopening

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Dr Kedrace Turyagyenda, the Director of Education Standards KAMPALA- The Ministry of Education and Sports has drawn strategies to ensure effective implementation of specific Standard Operating Procedures-SOPs for the phased reopening of the educational institutions. The reopening will mainly focus on finalists and candidate classes. The academic year was prematurely cut short on March 18, 2020, as a precautionary measure to control the spread of the Coronavirus (COVID-19). Over 15 million learners enrolled in schools at different education levels have been at home since the closedown. Now, as everybody waits for the president’s pronouncement on the fate of the 2020 Academic Year, it is already clear that having all learners back to school this year might be untenable thus focusing on how candidates can return to school. To this effect, the ministry working with the education COVID-19 taskforce has come up with several measures that must be followed in case schools are reopened. The strategy in draft proposes that the National Curriculum Development Centre review the curriculum requirements to ease the burden of full coverage by identifying the essential skills and knowledge that must be achieved in each subject at different levels. “NCDC shall also review accelerated learning programmes, some of which have been in use in emergencies in the country for example in refuge schools and advise school accordingly,” the strategy proposal reads in part. In the same development, there will be major reviews of the daily school routines to provide for shorter and core curriculum school days with classes scheduled between 8:00 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. However, a school with huge candidate classes which cannot be accommodated in available space will have options of teaching either in shifts or an alternate day attendance schedule. “Where applicable, the morning shift shall end at 12:30 p.m. and the afternoon start at 2: 00 p.m. An alternate day attendance schedule where different streams attend on alternate days as deemed appropriate in a bid to ensure that numbers are manageable,” the document states barring co-curricular activities with a break taken under the close supervision of a teacher. Furthermore, all schools that reopen for candidates-only shall operate as day or boarding but not both. However, the document remains silent on other key issues including transportation of learners to and from school and the earlier suggested possibility of conducting COVID-19 test on learners and staff. Dr Kedrace Turyagyenda, the Director of Education Standards, shares that as they wait for the pronouncement on whether the schools should be reopening or not, the inspection officers have already embarked at the dissemination of the Standard Operating Procedures – SOPs and observing needs of several schools regarding the set measures. The inspection team, Dr Tulyagyenda adds, they are also advising schools on how they will plan for the teaching of the candidates and timetable drafting among other aspects. Dr Tulyagyenda notes that preliminary results from several districts indicate that reopening for candidates might be possible, however, she notes that there are challenges in both public and private schools including but not limited to lack of basic sanitation facilities and space to cater for the would-be streamed learners. Meanwhile, the ministry is also preparing to roll out the second phase of the homeschooling programme with the national curriculum development centre currently develop reading materials for the entire academic which will be given out to all learners across the country. The said programme will be supported by broadcasted radio and TV lessons. Currently, the government has embarked on the procurement process of at least 9 million radio sets to be given to every household and 137,466 solar-powered television sets to villages across the country. According to the timelines, distribution is expected before mid-September. Several countries like Kenya have since called for a dead academic year while others like Rwanda are still studying the situation to take decisions on whether learners will return to school this year or not. URN

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