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The findings revealed that 59% of respondents felt that their children suffered learning loss due to the pandemic, and 72% of Bengaluru parents are willing to send their children back to school. They believe that a complete school experience is possible only with the reopening.
The survey was conducted amongst 10,500 metro and non-metro parents whose wards study in classes 1-10.
Keeping in mind the health and safety of children, LEAD’s survey indicated that for 22% of parents, vaccination of school staff is a top priority. Besides, 55% of metro parents rated social distancing as most critical, followed by healthcare facilities (54%); whereas parents from non-metros said sports and social distancing were equally important (52%). Voicing challenges faced by children and parents during the pandemic recalled how they used to juggle between ‘work from home’ and ‘school from home’ in the initial days. The study found that 47% of metro parents spent between 3-4 hours a day in their children’s school as compared to 44% in non-metros. Further, the survey indicated that the majority of parents (63%) feel that engagement in a physical classroom leads to better social interaction amongst children.
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Schools need to be treated as essential utilities and parents must send their children back to school with a positive and open mind. Let us prepare to welcome them back to school by undertaking all the necessary precautions and safety measures.”
Higher dissatisfaction among non-metro parents
Only 40% of parents in non-metros said that their children studied on a personal computer, while close to 60% of metro parents indicated that their child learned on a computer/laptop even after a year into the lockdown. Most students from non-metros attended schools via smartphones, which often added to the worries of parents.
Data also indicates that the virtual learning environment of children has been a more worrying factor for non-metro parents than metro parents when it comes to skillsets for the future. 53% of metro parents rated problem-solving and logical reasoning as the most important skill, as against 47% non-metro parents. Similarly, more than 50% of metro parents felt digital literacy was an important skill, as against just 45% of non-metro parents. Vocational exposure and skills, ethical and moral listening, and coding and computational skills, were some of the other skills that parents in metros believed were important.
Some common areas of concerns
While 70% of parents of both metros and non-metros said both the parents were involved in their children’s learning activities, the share of ‘only mothers’ being involved in their studies was higher in metros (21%) as compared to non-metros (18%), indicating increased responsibilities, especially for working women.