Now that we have found ourselves here, what can we do to get back on course? But before I try to answer this question the best way I can, let’s deconstruct the upshot the pandemic left in its trail.
As expected, a lot of research has shed light on the growing effect of COVID-19 on learners all around the world; whether short-term or long-term effects but it is alarming to note that not many of these studies have focused on students ages 5 and below. Given that these younglings will by this time only have acquired the adequate communicative abilities to request food and play and other things alike in between, what indicators are there to let policymakers know the needs they have when it comes to their learning, other than when said prescribed learning begins to show its effectiveness or non-effectiveness – which may be visible during or after this learning stage. When it comes to this aspect, they usually have no say in how they want to learn until they begin to show their teachers if the learning was productive or counterproductive and this is largely due to the fact that their language for expressing intricate needs such as these, has not yet been developed.
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