GENEVA / UKRAINE CHILDREN LEARNING LOSS

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29-Aug-2023 00:01:45
Many of Ukraine’s 6.7 million children between three and 18 years-olds will be missing out again on their education when the new school year starts later this week as indiscriminate attacks on schools have persisted since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. UNTV CH

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STORY: GENEVA / UKRAINE CHILDREN LEARNING LOSS
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SOURCE: UNTV CH
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LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS

DATELINE: 29 AUGUST 2023, GENEVA, SWITZERLAND

SHOTLIST:

1. Med shot, exterior, UN flag alley, UN Geneva
2. Wide shot, speakers behind podium, attendees and cameramen at the press conference, screens with speakers
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Regina de Dominicis, UNICEF’s Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia:
“Attacks on schools have continued unabated throughout the war in Ukraine. Just last week, teacher were amongst casualties of an attack on a civilian area in the city of Romny. The attack ripped through a school where teachers were preparing lessons for the new academic year.”
4. Med shot, attendees and cameramen at the press conference, screen with speaker
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Regina de Dominicis, UNICEF’s Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia:
“These senseless and reckless attacks have left many Ukrainian children deeply distressed and without a safe place to learn. Just one in three schoolchildren in Ukraine are learning in person full time. We know that three quarters of children of preschool age in frontline areas are not attending kindergarten.”
6. Wide shot, attendees and camerawoman at the press conference, screens with speakers
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Regina de Dominicis, UNICEF’s Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia:
“More than 1,300 schools have been totally destroyed and there are others that have been heavily damaged and are therefore not ready to be reopened for the academic year.”
8. Med shot, speakers behind podium, screen with speaker
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Regina de Dominicis, UNICEF’s Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia:
“Our priority is the rehabilitation of school shelters from kindergarten to primary, exactly to fight against this bottleneck of security and safety. So, I visited myself a couple of them. Especially in kindergarten, I was amazed at how well they were organized. So the children know exactly that if there is a bomb alarm they need to quickly go down.”
10. Wide shot, attendees and camerawoman at the press conference, screens with speakers
11. Med shot, camerawoman and cameraman at the press conference

STORYLINE:

Many of Ukraine’s 6.7 million children between three and 18 years-olds will be missing out again on their education when the new school year starts later this week as indiscriminate attacks on schools have persisted since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

“Attacks on schools have continued unabated throughout the war in Ukraine. Just last week, teachers were among casualties of an attack on a civilian area in the city of Romny. The attack ripped through a school where teachers were preparing lessons for the new academic year,” said Regina de Dominicis, UNICEF’s Regional Director for Europe and Central Asia when briefing reporters on Tuesday at the United Nations in Geneva.

For de Dominicis “the war in Ukraine has become a war on children, and yet when it ends, children and young people will be essential to the country’s recovery and future.”

“These senseless and reckless attacks have left many Ukrainian children deeply distressed and without a safe place to learn,” said UNICEF’s Regional Director. “Just one in three schoolchildren in Ukraine are learning in person full time. We know that three quarters of children of preschool age in frontline areas are not attending kindergarten.”

As a result, so UNICEF, children in Ukraine are showing signs of widespread learning loss, including a deterioration in learning outcomes of the Ukrainian language, reading and mathematics as the war preceded by the COVID-19 pandemic have left students facing a fourth year of disruption to education.

According to Regina de Dominicis, “more than 1,300 schools have been totally destroyed and there are others that have been heavily damaged and are therefore not ready to be reopened for the academic year.”

Latest survey data showed that up to 57 per cent of teachers reported a deterioration in students’ Ukrainian language abilities, up to 45 per cent report a reduction in mathematics skills, and up to 52 per cent report a reduction in foreign language abilities.

The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) also pointed out that more than half of the millions of children who have fled Ukraine are not enrolled in national education systems in their host countries at the beginning of this school year.

Pre-schoolers and secondary-age students are the most likely to miss out on their education. Language barriers, difficulty in accessing school, and overstretched education systems are among the reasons for low enrolment rates.

Refugee children, so UNICEF, who are not enrolled in local schools are likely attempting to study online, either via the Ukrainian curriculum or through other distance learning platforms. Some refugee children may have completely abandoned their education.

UNICEF supports children’s mental health through counselling and psychosocial support, provides learning materials including those on mine safety, and continues to rehabilitate school shelters.

“Our priority is the rehabilitation of school shelters from kindergarten to primary, exactly to fight against this bottleneck of security and safety. So, I visited myself a couple of them. Especially in kindergarten, I was amazed at how well they were organized. So, the children know exactly that if there is a bomb alarm they need to quickly go down,” said Regina de Dominicis.
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