Groups representing students, parents and Guidance Counsellors join together to advocate for students
Dublin 01.07.2020 – COVID-19 poses serious threats to the Education Sector. ISSU, NPCPP, UNICEF and IGC are calling for an urgent and proactive response from the new Minister for Education, Norma Foley, to address the challenges ahead for students, parents/guardians, guidance counsellors and school staff returning to school in August.
It is of paramount importance in the weeks ahead that policy-makers/decision-makers must address the key issue of resourcing in schools for:
- Transitions – to support students to achieve educational/developmental milestones. To progress young jobseekers into education, apprenticeships, employment.
- Health and Wellbeing – the mental health of young people is a concern and they will need enhanced individual support to cope with increased levels of anxiety, grief, fear, isolation and the re-socialisation needed on the return to the routine of the school environment.
- Curriculum – modifications must take place to cater for all students’ diverse needs.
As we prepare for the reopening of schools, we are calling for a strategic response that hinges on the key issues of these enhanced resources.
Speaking for parents, Noel Keenan, Vice President of NPCPP stated: “This pandemic will exacerbate existing educational inequalities. Parents and guardians have legitimate concerns regarding academic progression, given that a significant period of time for learning was lost during the closure of schools.” ISSU and NPCPP issued a joint survey to their members this week.
According to Beatrice Dooley, IGC President: “Guidance counsellors, already under acute pressure, will be overwhelmed with a tsunami of anxious students post rentrée. An immediate reversal of austerity-era cuts to our allocations is now urgently needed”. Yet, the IGC’s recent survey of second-level schools/colleges of further education (IGC, 2020), shows out of the 301 respondents, in 64 schools guidance counsellors currently deliver non-guidance counselling classroom teaching and spend 6.84 hours weekly on time-tabled classroom teaching.
Reuben Murray, President of the ISSU, affirms that: “The syllabus of each subject must be adapted to reflect the deficits in key elements of their course that students have encountered, specifically 5th year and 2nd year students. Since COVID, we have taken on more than people realise, some of us were carers and minders yet are still expected to get school work done.”
Peter Power, Executive Director of UNICEF Ireland states: “An entire generation of children has seen its education disrupted. When children return to school, they must be guided through the adjustment. UNICEF is calling for a commitment from Government that the special supports children need will be put in place now, with particular consideration given to the needs of vulnerable or disadvantaged children. UNICEF’s Framework for the Reopening of Schools contain recommendations on compensating learning, wellness and protection and reaching the most marginalised. This is also an opportunity to reimagine. Schools must look at how they can reopen better.”
ENDS
###
Notes to Editors
Participant organisations
UNICEF – United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund
NPCPP – The National Parents Council Post Primary
ISSU – Irish Second-Level Students Union
IGC – Institute of Guidance Counsellors
About UNICEF
UNICEF works in the world’s toughest places, to reach the world’s most disadvantaged children. Across more than 190 countries and territories, we work for every child, everywhere, to build a better world for everyone. For more information about UNICEF and its work for every child, visit our website Follow us on Twitter and Facebook
For more information, please contact:
Aedín Donnelly, Communications and Media Manager for UNICEF Ireland, aedin@unicef.ie, Tel: +353 1 809 0291, Mob: +353 85 1395272