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Belgrade: The Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development has given its consent to move from direct teaching to distance learning in a total of 69 schools in Serbia.
Source: Blic
Tanjug / AP Photo / Elise Amendola
According to “Blic”, these are the data that the schools sent to the school administrations until Monday, November 23, 2020.
Of that number, 46 schools switched to distance education in their entirety: 25 primary schools (1.9 percent) and 21 secondary schools (4.1 percent).
In 23 elementary schools (1.8 percent), second cycle students were approved to undertake distance education for a maximum of 14 days.
Some of the schools were approved to work remotely only in a separate class, as well as in certain groups of classes.
These are schools in school administrations in Jagodina, Leskovac, Nis, Pozarevac, Novi Sad, Zajecar, Kosovska Mitrovica.
School classes throughout Serbia could, due to the worsening epidemiological situation, undergo certain changes. Several options are being considered, the safest of which is that currently older classes go online and younger classes still go to classrooms.
When it comes to school institutions, as things stand now, the dilemma is whether the oldest grades of primary schools should go online, that is, from the fifth onwards. Under the current idea, high schools and universities would be online.
The youngest from the first to the fourth would continue to go to the classrooms and the kindergartens would remain open.
If the selective transition to online measure is adopted, as we have learned, it will be limited to 10 or 15 days.
The transition to the younger classes is difficult for both families and the state because parents are working and there is no one to take care of the children. However, on the other hand, according to the latest data, more and more schools are switching to online teaching.
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