UNICEF: No remote learning for at least 463 million children

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Almost one-third of the world’s 1.5 billion schoolchildren affected by the COVID-19 shutdown of their schools were unable to use remote learning, a UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) report said on Thursday.
“For at least 463 million children whose schools closed due to COVID-19, there was no such a thing as remote learning,” said Henrietta Fore, UNICEF executive director. “The sheer number of children whose education was completely disrupted for months on end is a global education emergency.”
“The repercussions could be felt in economies and societies for decades to come,” she said in a release accompanying the report.
It used a globally representative analysis of the availability of home-based technology and tools needed for remote learning among pre-primary, primary, lower-secondary and upper-secondary schoolchildren.
The report considered access to television, radio and the internet. Then it took into account the availability of curriculum delivered across those platforms during school closures.
Even when children have the technology and tools at home, they may not be able to learn remotely through those platforms due to competing factors in the home, including pressure to do chores, being forced to work, a poor environment for learning and lack of support in using the online or broadcast curriculum, the report said.





