A woman teacher and 10-year veteran of the profession, who did not want to be named, was clearly frustrated.
"I find it harder to control the class," she admitted outside the makeshift school of 50 primary-age children in cyclone-affected Kunchankone, one of the worst-hit townships in Myanmar's Yangon Division.
Two months after Cyclone Nargis struck, leaving more than 138,000 dead or missing, teachers are seeing first-hand the problems children face in returning to their studies. Almost half her students show signs of difficulty concentrating on their lessons.
"They don't seem to hear or respond to my questions very often in class," the teacher said.
While playing outside, some of the children rush back into the makeshift school, comprised of nothing more than bamboo and plastic sheeting, at the slightest sight of a dark cloud or hint of rain.
"I don't know how to help them," the teacher said.
Dealing with trauma
According to Michael Bociurkiw, a spokesman for the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) in Bangkok, "One of the best ways to help children to return to normalcy is to get them back into the classrooms."
As well as helping children get back to some sort of normality, being in school protects children from further harm that may follow a natural disaster, such as the risk of trafficking or child labour.
Physically, they [students] are sitting in the class, but spiritually they are not here. Their minds are far away. |
"Physically, they [students] are sitting in the class, but spiritually they are not here. Their minds are far away," said one teacher working at the Basic Education High School of Tawkyaung, Kunchankone Township.
Students who lost family members to the storm often performed poorly compared with other students who had been less affected, he said.
But it is not just the children who are suffering. Teachers, particularly in the cyclone-affected areas of Labutta and Bogale, mostly female, were also badly traumatised by the storm that killed more than 113 of their colleagues.
Eight weeks on, some teachers complain of a lack of energy or the inability to concentrate on their work, with even a gust of wind throwing them off-track.
"I'm uncomfortable while it's raining when I see water building up around the school during my lecture," Than Win, another local teacher, who lost his wife and a three-year-old daughter in the category four storm, said.
"I simply stop. Only when I realise it's due to the rain do I resume," the 32-year-old teacher said - further evidence that before being able to support the children, the teachers will need help.
"We expect psycho-social training would be able to start soon for the teachers in the cyclone-ravaged areas," an official from UNICEF/Myanmar told IRIN in Yangon, the former Burmese capital.
Photo: Lynn Maung/IRIN |
Under a grey sky, a temporary school of tents and tarpaulins in Kunchankone township |
"This draft module is now finished and is being reviewed by the Ministry of Education," the agency official said.
In addition, UNICEF has developed a "Tip-for-Teachers" booklet, which was approved by the Ministry of Education, translated into the local language and is now being printed for distribution. It contains detailed instructions on psycho-social support and the recovery of affected children.
Education losses
Meanwhile, government estimates of the physical toll on education in Myanmar continue to come in.
According to the latest figures, in Yangon Division, some 1,815 or 48 percent of public school buildings were totally or partially damaged, with Kungyangon, Thongwa and Twantay townships suffering the most.
In the southern Ayeyarwady delta, just over 2,000 or 43 percent of all public school buildings were totally or partially damaged, with Bogale, Labutta and Mawlamyinegyun townships the worst affected.
Moreover, 123 monastic schools were partially damaged.
Approximately 40 government-sponsored early childhood care, youth development centres and community learning centres were damaged.
Another 242 private early childcare establishment were also damaged or destroyed, while 80 administrative offices experienced roof and partial damage and 461 university buildings and higher education administrative offices lost their roofs.
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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions