Africa urgently needs to get its pupils back to school

Africa urgently needs to get its pupils back to school

Africa urgently needs to get its pupils back to school
A teacher screens students as schools begin to reopen after the lockdown in Langa township, Cape Town, South Africa, June 8, 2020. (Reuters)
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Khadidiatou Fall, a 15-year-old Senegalese girl, was desperate to get back to school. Because of the coronavirus pandemic, hers was closed for most of last year. Though it offered online classes, limited internet access in Rufisque, her small hometown, meant she often missed important lessons. Her chances of making the most of her education were slipping away.
Khadidiatou is one of millions of African students whose education has been disrupted by the pandemic. Many African countries took early steps to contain the pandemic, including closing schools. Using Oxford tracking data, the latest “African Economic Outlook” from the African Development Bank (AfDB) reports that 50 percent of African countries announced school restrictions within three days of the first confirmed cases of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19). Within a month, all of them had done so.
Between Feb. 16 and Dec. 1, 2020, schools in Africa were closed for an average of more than 100 days. While the actual figure was much lower in some countries (below 50 in Madagascar, Benin and Zambia), it was much higher in others (more than 200 in Ethiopia and Uganda). On a regional basis, schools in Southern Africa were closed for the fewest days (85) and schools in East Africa were closed for the most (137).
Unlike in rich nations, schools in many African countries were unable to shift the curriculum online quickly. In Kenya, despite an 83 percent internet penetration rate, 80 percent of students failed to follow online classes because of unreliable broadband internet. Students may also lack access to internet-enabled devices — such as smartphones and laptops — to connect to online classes. Even when virtual learning sessions air on radio and television stations, unreliable electricity can disrupt learning.
As a result, countless African students lost an entire semester of learning during the last academic year. Not surprisingly, educational outcomes among students in low-income countries are suffering. Globally, the estimated lifetime earning loss from pandemic-related school closures translates to a loss of 43 to 61 percent of current gross domestic product in low-income countries, compared to just 6 to 8 percent in high-income countries.
Even within countries, these costs will not be borne equally. Already-vulnerable students — especially girls, children from poor backgrounds and those living in remote areas — will suffer the most, owing to lower access to digital services, the inability to afford internet-enabled devices and, in many cases, pressure to contribute to the family’s livelihood. Add to that the gap between how effectively public and private schools have been able to shift curricula online and the risk of a sharp increase in educational — and, ultimately, economic — inequality is high.
But prolonged school closures carry an even more immediate danger. When they are not attending school, poor and vulnerable children do not receive school meals — often a critical nutrition source. The World Food Programme (WFP) reports that more than 369 million children worldwide missed out on meals during peak school closures in April 2020. This included more than 75 million children in WFP and government-supported schools in Africa, mostly in Egypt, Uganda and South Africa.
The latest WFP data suggests that, today, more than 50 million students in Africa are still missing school meals. For many of these students, the school meal was the only one they had been receiving throughout the day and an important reason why they attended regularly. These students have also lost access to basic health and nutrition services that schools used to provide — and which they may not receive otherwise.
The specter of rising malnutrition is thus looming over Africa, which already accounts for the world’s largest share of undernourished and food-insecure people. The risks are most acute in Southern and Eastern Africa, which are also battling climate shocks and locust invasions. Households managed by women — who have been hit especially hard by job and income losses and COVID-19 infections — are especially vulnerable to malnutrition.
Emergency food aid can help alleviate the threat of malnutrition. But it will do nothing to cancel out the effects of prolonged school closures on human capital accumulation and inequality. Only reopening schools can do that.
Creative solutions can go a long way toward minimizing the associated public health risks. For example, to facilitate social distancing, large classes can be split into smaller ones, with teachers rotating in and out of the lesson or using support staff to increase coverage. Smaller classes could also be held on alternate days of the week.

Countless African students lost an entire semester of learning during the last academic year.

Hanan Morsy

In countries where schools cannot yet be reopened safely, policymakers should take steps to eliminate obstacles to virtual learning. As a 2020 AfDB report suggested, governments could work with private internet providers to deliver free data for educational services such as online learning platforms. Where possible, they could also provide smartphones or laptops to poor students, as Kenya and South Africa have done.
Innovative, adaptive solutions can help mitigate the risks of reopening schools. The costs of keeping them closed will only mount. For a continent that desperately needs to accumulate human capital to ensure its prosperity, and for African students like Khadidiatou, the price is already too high.

  • Hanan Morsy is Director of the African Development Bank’s Macroeconomic Policy, Forecasting, and Research Department. Copyright: Project Syndicate
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