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Australia: Students stick to attendance guidelines as schools welcome kids back

Oceania/ Australia/ 12.05.2020/ Source: www.smh.com.au.

Balloons and confetti greeted year 3 students as they entered their classroom at Emu Plains Public School on Monday, enthusiastic to return to school grounds after five weeks of learning from home.

But it wasn’t the usual set-up: desks were arranged to allow for 1.5 metres between students, and teacher Kylie Hamersma supervised rather than taught lessons while students completed independent learning activities.

Most parents and students abided by the state government’s guidelines on the first day of its phased return to school plan, where 25 per cent of students attend school each day and complete one mode of remote learning.

Twenty-six per cent of secondary school students and 39 per cent of primary school students worked from inside school gates on Monday, which included students who were rostered to attend school as well as children of essential workers.

An average of 37 per cent of all public school students were on campus, which is more than the 15 to 17 per cent who showed up last week but far from the influx of students some principals were concerned would show up.

NSW Education Minister Sarah Mitchell on Monday said the Department of Education’s 2200 schools had been supplied with 550,000 hygiene products to prepare them for the return of students, including 20,000 rolls of toilet paper, 20,000 bars of soap and 40,000 bottles of hand sanitiser.

«The list is extensive and those supplies will continue to be rolled out across our school communities throughout this term,» she said. «Parents should have that reassurance knowing our schools are safe spaces, and we have prepared well for our students to go back to the classroom.»

Teacher Kylie Hamersma with her Year 3 students in their classroom at Emu Plains Public School.
Teacher Kylie Hamersma with her Year 3 students in their classroom at Emu Plains Public School.CREDIT:LOUISE KENNERLEY

NSW independent schools have crafted their own plans for the return of students to face-to-face teaching, with many reporting high attendance rates on Monday.

About 95 per cent of students who were rostered to attend Cranbrook School showed up, and 90 per cent of those scheduled for face-to-face learning at Trinity Grammar School went along.

«Numbers were at the upper end of our expectations, with almost all who were eligible to return to face-to-face [classes] attending, and more sent to school for remote learning supervision than before,» Trinity headmaster Tim Bowden said.

Only seven students were absent from Pymble Ladies College’s year 3 cohort, which was invited back on Monday, while the majority of rostered students attended MLC.

Meriden in Strathfield saw 99 per cent of year 12 and 95 per cent of year 7 back, with most of the senior school otherwise staying home. But about a quarter of the primary school students came to school, even though they were not rostered to attend.

North-west Sydney school Barker College, which invited all students back full-time from Monday after an extended school holiday, registered about a 90 per cent return rate.

Premier Gladys Berejiklian on Monday repeated her hope to have all school students back in public schools full-time by May 25 if the next two weeks progressed smoothly.

But she warned parents they should be prepared for schools to temporarily close due to new cases of coronavirus, as the state eases lockdown restrictions.

«That will be the new normal when it comes to education,» she said. «Your schools might be temporarily disrupted, but as far as the education system is concerned, we’d like to think that now that schools are back they will stay back for the duration of the pandemic.»

Source of the notice: https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/students-stick-to-attendance-guidelines-as-schools-welcome-kids-back-20200511-p54rra.html

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Australia’s back-to-school plans explained: the evidence about children and coronavirus

Oceania/ Australia/ 05.05.2020/ Source: www.theguardian.com.

The federal and Victorian governments are in disagreement over whether it is safe for students and teachers to return to school, as a number of other states prepare for their students to come back to class.

While New South Wales and Queensland are planning a phased return to on-site schooling, Victoria is holding steadfast against bringing students, other than those from essential workers, back into the classroom.

The matter blew up on Sunday when federal education minister Dan Tehan was forced to withdraw comments he made on the ABC questioning Victorian premier Daniel Andrews’ leadership over the split on the issue, stating Andrews should be listening to the national health panel, not just his chief health officer.

What is the federal advice?

The advice from the Australian Health Protection Principal Committee, on which the Victorian chief health officer also sits, says there is “very limited evidence” of transmission between children in a school environment.

On Sunday, chief medical officer Brendan Murphy pointed to research about school transmissions of coronavirus both locally in NSW and in Europe.

“Our advice is transmission between children in schools is not well established,” he said. “And in fact there is increasing data now, data from Europe and the NSW study, we think children are not high transmitters of the virus in the school environment.”

He said there is a potential risk for adults in the staffroom, and at drop-offs, and a range of mitigations have been recommended to reduce the risk.

Australia’s chief medical officer Brendan Murphy (left) with the prime minister Scott Morrison.
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 Australia’s chief medical officer Brendan Murphy (left) with the prime minister Scott Morrison. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP

What does the NSW study say?

The NSW study, released last month, assessed the initial 18 cases between March and April of teachers and students testing positive for coronavirus.

The study looked at 735 students and 128 staff who were close contacts of the 18 cases. No teacher or staff member contracted coronvirus from those cases, and one child from a primary school and one child from a classroom may have contracted coronavirus from one of the initial 18 cases.

“The findings from this detailed investigation are preliminary. However, they do suggest that spread of Covid-19 within NSW schools has been very limited.”

What do international studies say?

Murphy admits that studies have been limited, but has pointed specifically to studies out of Europe to support the AHPPC position.

study out of the Netherlands reported children are less likely to get infected from the virus from adults, and adults are much less likely to pass it on to children, except in a home environment.

UK study of a child who returned from the French Alps with coronavirus, and subsequently went to three schools while asymptomatic and did not transmit the virus argued it could lend evidence to the notion the transmission rate for children might be different to adults.

An analysis of over 100 studies that have been done on coronavirus transmission stated there is limited evidence of children transmitting the virus, but more data is needed.

“The role of children in transmission is unclear, but consistent evidence is demonstrating a lower likelihood of acquiring infection, and lower rates of children bringing infections into households,” the analysis states.

However, German research released last month suggested children can be as infectious as adults.

Why does Victoria disagree with the federal government’s position?

Victoria’s chief health officer Brett Sutton
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 Victoria’s chief health officer Brett Sutton says children at school with minimal symptoms could end up contributing to community transmission. Photograph: James Ross/AAP

Victoria’s chief health officer Brett Sutton has said he doesn’t disagree that infection rates among children are lower, but he viewed keeping schools closed as a measure to lower overall community transmission, particularly for teachers, staff and parents.

“I know there haven’t been significant outbreaks in schools … but again it may be that kids who are very minimally symptomatic could transmit to other children, and it can be a contribution to community transmission,” he said.

“I’ve also been very clear that I don’t see schools as a dangerous place to be, but to the extent that kids learning from home can contribute to suppressing transmission at a community level, I think that’s a useful thing to consider.”

Andrews has said his decision on schools will be based on Sutton’s advice and Sutton has refused to reconsider his advice on sending children back to school until the state of emergency is reviewed on 11 May.

There have been indications that students in Victoria could stay learning from home for the entirety of term two.

Source of the notice: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2020/may/05/australias-back-to-school-plans-expose-schism-around-children-and-coronavirus

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Australia, Tom Hanks: Niño sufre de «bullying» escolar porque su nombre es Corona

Redacción: El Caribe

Tom Hanks se ha convertido en la imagen de la esperanza en tiempos del coronavirus, tras haber superado junto a su mujer, Rita Wilson, el COVID-19 y haber relatado todo el camino, siempre con optimismo. No nos extraña que un niño que está sufriendo acoso por culpa de la pandemia haya querido ponerse en contacto con el actor en busca de consuelo.

Según recoge el medio australiano 7 News, un chico de 8 años llamado Corona De Vries escribió una carta a Hanks contándole que los niños de su colegio le están haciendo bullying por cómo se llama: «Escuché que tu mujer y tú cogisteis el coronavirus. ¿Estáis bien? Me encanta mi nombre pero en el colegio la gente me llama coronavirus. Me pone muy triste y enfadado que la gente me llame eso». El niño explicó que sus padres le pusieron ese nombre por la capa más externa del Sol.

Días después de recibir el mensaje, Tom Hanks respondió a Corona con esta preciosa carta, escrita por supuesto a máquina de escribir (las colecciona): «Querido amigo Corona: ¡Tu carta nos ha hecho sentir maravillosamente a mi esposa y a mí! Gracias por ser un amigo tan bueno, los amigos hacen que sus amigos se sientan bien cuando están de bajón. Te vi en televisión, aunque ya estaba de vuelta en Estados Unidos, bien de salud. Aunque ya no estoy enfermo, tu carta me hizo sentir mucho mejor. Sabes, eres la única persona que conozco que tenga el nombre de Corona, como el anillo alrededor del Sol, una corona».

Además de la carta, Hanks le envió como regalo la misma máquina de escribir con la que la escribió, que curiosamente es de la marca Corona, y que fue la que utilizó mientras se curaba del coronavirus (y que esperamos haya desinfectado a conciencia antes de mandarla). «Pensé que esta máquina de escribir te puede servir. Me la había traído a la Gold Coast, y ahora ha vuelto, contigo. Pregunta a un adulto cómo funciona. Y úsala para responderme». Cierra la carta, esta vez a mano, con un «Tienes un amigo en mí. Gracias otra vez».

Corona De Vries / Fuente externa

Tom Hanks revela que padece coronavirus y que será aislado junto a su esposa en Australia

“Querido amigo Corona”

En respuesta, Hanks también le envío una carta al pequeño, al que llamó “querido amigo Corona”

“Tu carta nos hizo muy felices a mi esposa y a mí. Gracias por ser tan buen amigo. Los amigos les hacen a sus amigos sentirse bien cuando no lo están”, escribió el ganador de dos Oscar y cuatro Globos de Oro.

“Tú eres la única persona que he conocido que se llame Corona, como el anillo alrededor del sol, como una corona”, agregó.

La carta estaba además escrita en una máquina de la marca L.C. Smith & Corona Typewriters Inc., que Hanks usó durante su tiempo de cuarentena en Australia.

Y Hanks decidió regalársela al niño.

“Pensé que esta máquina de escribir te vendría bien”, explicó en la misiva. “Me la había llevado a Gold Coast y ahora está ahí de vuelta, contigo. Pregúntale a alguien mayor cómo funciona. Y úsala para escribirme de nuevo”, lo invitó.

Según la familia de Corona, el pequeño había querido contactar a Hanks por conocerlo por shaberle dado voz a Woody en las películas de Toy Story.

Fuente: https://www.elcaribe.com.do/2020/04/25/nino-sufre-de-bullying-escolar-porque-su-nombre-es-corona/#

 

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¿Es importante limpiar el celular regularmente mientras dure la pandemia? Un experto contesta

Oceanía/Australia/01/04/2020/Autor y fuente:  Redacción Entre Noticias/rubenluengas.com

En promedio, tocamos los teléfonos inteligentes más de 2.600 veces al día.

Su móvil es una de las cosas con las que tiene que tener más cuidado para evitar verse infectado con covid-19, según explicó a Daily Mail un especialista en enfermedades infecciosas e inmunología de la Universidad Griffith (Australia), Nigel McMillan.

En promedio, tocamos los teléfonos inteligentes más de 2.600 veces al día. Por su parte, el coronavirus puede sobrevivir sobre vidrio y plástico, materiales que se utilizan en esos dispositivos, durante más de una semana. Por lo tanto, el experto aconseja considerarlos “como una extensión de su mano, así que recuerden que están transfiriendo lo que esté en su mano al teléfono”.

“No lo pongas en lugares al azar, si puedes evitarlo. […] Límpialo cada vez que lo toque otra persona, ya que el virus podría vivir mucho más tiempo de lo que crees”, advirtió McMillan, y aconsejó utilizar para la desinfección el mismo antiséptico que se use para las manos o el limpiador de lentes, que contiene al menos un 60 % de alcohol.

“Alternativamente, necesitan alcohol isopropílico o alcohol desinfectante. Los sprays y toallitas húmedas también funcionarán en caso de necesidad, ya que contienen detergente”, señaló.

Desinfectar las manos es una de las medidas más importantes para prevenir la propagación del covid-19. Los médicos recomiendan hacerlo frecuentemente con jabón o con desinfectantes con alcohol en más de un 60 %. Aparte de eso, aconsejan minimizar los contactos no necesarios y no salir de casa y, si esto resultara imposible, cubrirse la cara al toser o estornudar y evitar tocársela con los manos.

 

Fuente e imagen: http://rubenluengas.com/2020/03/experto-explica-por-que-es-importante-limpiar-el-movil-regularmente-mientras-dure-la-pandemia/

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Nueva Zelanda despenaliza el aborto

Oceanía/Nueva Zelanda/22-03-2020/Autor y Fuente: www.dw.com

Con esta nueva ley, las mujeres podrán obtener «más rápidamente consejo y tratamiento», según el gobierno.

El parlamento de Nueva Zelanda aprobó este miércoles (18.03.2020) una ley que despenaliza el aborto, que hasta ahora se podía castigar, en este país de reputación progresista, con una pena de hasta 14 años de cárcel.

Una ley aprobada en 1961 estableció que la interrupción voluntaria de un embarazo era un delito que podía llevar a la cárcel.

Aunque esa ley nunca se aplicó, el ministro de Justicia, Andrew Little, consideró que era necesario cambiarla.

«De ahora en adelante, los abortos serán considerados como una cuestión médica», explicó el ministro en un comunicado.

«Con la ley precedente, las mujeres que deseaban abortar debían superar numerosos obstáculos», recordó el ministro.

Con esta nueva ley, las mujeres podrán obtener «más rápidamente consejo y tratamiento», agregó. La nueva ley fue aprobada por 68 votos contra 51.

ct (afp, ap)

Fuente e Imagen: https://www.dw.com/es/nueva-zelanda-despenaliza-el-aborto/a-52822972

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China to relax its internet restrictions for 100,000 students hit by Australia’s coronavirus travel ban

Asia/ China/ 18.02.2020/ Source: www.theguardian.com.

China has agreed to relax its internet restrictions, after lobbying from the higher education sector, so international students can study online while they are banned from Australia during the coronavirus outbreak.

Currently more than 100,000 Chinese students, who already have Australian student visas and were planning on commencing their studies this month, are stranded outside of Australia as a result of the government’s 14-day travel ban from mainland China.

On Wednesday, Australia’s Global Reputation Taskforce – an emergency council of universities and education providers – met with education minister Dan Tehan and trade minister Simon Birmingham to discuss how they could limit the potential $8bn hit to the economy.

Phil Honeywood, the chair of the taskforce, told Guardian Australia the ministers had secured new pathways for online courses – which would let isolated students keep their Australian enrolments.

But he warned that a visa approval freeze means Australia could “absolutely lose out” to competitors as Chinese students could easily “go down the road” and obtain student visas for the US, the UK or Canada instead.

The government has not yet announced if the travel ban will be extended by another fortnight, but education providers are “not optimistic” and preparing for the worst.

Honeywood, who is also the head of the International Education Association of Australia, said internet restrictions would be lifted for students, so they could reach university portals for lecture recordings and slides, among other sites.

“There have been challenges over many years with online learning into China but the Chinese government has acknowledged that a more effectual arrangement is appropriate because of the isolation,” he said.

“We’ve been able to make good progress on online learning options into China. There have been really worthwhile negotiations with the Chinese embassy. A number of platforms have been agreed to to deliver online courses to students who are offshore still.

“Not all courses will be suited to online delivery. There will be issues with which units of study can be provided, for what period of time. [But] it is definitely a better situation than we were facing a couple of weeks ago.”

But the universities are concerned that new visa delays, combined with the travel ban, mean Australia could lose out to other countries.

New student visa approvals have been frozen by the department of home affairs since 1 February, even for students who have already been accepted by Australian universities.

Acting immigration minister Alan Tudge confirmed to the Australian that the department was “not finalising applications for individuals currently in mainland China” due to “enhanced border measures”.

International students contributed $34bn to the Australian economy last year. Australia’s main competitors for Chinese students, Canada, the US and the UK run on a different academic year, starting in September, meaning they are less disrupted by the coronavirus outbreak this year.

“The issue we have got is visas allegedly bring processed but not approved,” Honeywood said.

“A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush. If you’re a student, and you can’t get an Australian student visa to travel, any time you can go down the road to the Canadian embassy or the US embassy and they are still happily approving visas.

“Chinese students, even if they can’t travel to Australia now, once they have been given a student visa to come and study in Australia, they can once the virus is contained.

“But because no visas have been approved, they are thinking ‘How long is this going on for? Even when the virus is contained, I can’t come to Australia to study because of the whole visa process. I’ll go to Canada and the UK and delay my start date.’”

Honeywood said education minister Tehan was working with immigration minister Tudge “to get some clarification about what might be possible in that visa approval space”.

Meanwhile, individual universities are also offering alternate course schedules for affected students. Melbourne’s Monash University has already pushed back the start date of its semester by a week, while the ANU in Canberra has announced a semester during the traditional winter break to allow Chinese students to catch up on courses.

Other universities, such as the University of New South Wales, have recently changed to a trimester system, and are encouraging students to defer their enrolment to the next trimester, which starts around the beginning of June.

Honeywood said the universities “have to abide by the chief medical officer’s determination” on the length of the travel ban, but that Australia’s higher education sector was uniquely vulnerable to the delay.

“More than other study destination country, we are caught by geographic location and the fact that our academic year starts at the start of the calendar year,” he said.

“Whereas our main competitors, like Canada, the US and UK, their academic year doesn’t start until later, in September. They aren’t faced with a large influx of Chinese students wanting to commence studies until later this year. Australia and New Zealand are in a particular set of circumstances which no other competitor study destinations have.”

Source of the notice: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/feb/13/china-to-open-up-its-internet-for-100000-students-hit-by-australias-coronavirus-travel-ban

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AUSTRALIA-CHINA The biggest crisis to hit international HE in Australia

Oceania/Australia/Universityworld

The coronavirus outbreak may be the biggest disruption to international student flows in history.

There are more than 100,000 students stuck in China who had intended to study in Australia this year. As each day passes, it becomes more unlikely they will arrive in time for the start of the academic year.

Of course, international affairs are bound to sometimes interfere with the more than 5.3 million students studying outside their home country, all over the world.

After the September 11 attacks in 2001, the United States closed its borders temporarily and tightened student visa restrictions, particularly for students from the Middle East. Thousands were forced to choose different study destinations in the following years.

In 2018, Saudi Arabia’s government instructed all its citizens studying in Canada to return home, in protest at the Canadian foreign minister’s call to release women’s rights activists held in Saudi jails.

A significant proportion of the 12,000 or so Saudi students in Canada left to continue their studies elsewhere, before the Saudi government quietly softened its stance.

So we have seen calamities before, but never on this scale. There are a few reasons for this.

Why this is worse than before

The current temporary migration of students from China to Australia represents one of the largest education flows the world has ever seen. Federal education department data show there were more than 212,000 Chinese international students in Australia by the end of 2019.

This accounts for 28% of Australia’s total international student population. Globally, there are only two study routes that involve larger numbers of students. The world’s largest student flow is from China to the United States and the second largest is from India to the US.

It’s also difficult to imagine a worse time for this epidemic to happen for students heading to the southern hemisphere than January to February, at the end of our long summer break.

Many Chinese students had returned home for the summer and others were preparing to start their studies at the end of February.

By comparison, the SARS epidemic in 2003 didn’t significantly dent international student enrolments in Australia because it peaked around April-May 2003, well after students had started the academic year.

Ending in July that year, the SARS outbreak infected fewer than half the number of people than have already contracted coronavirus. Even during the SARS outbreak Australia didn’t implement bans on those travelling from affected countries.

What will the impact be?

This crisis hits hard for many Chinese students, an integral component of our campus communities. It not only causes disruptions to their study, accommodation, part-time employment and life plans, but also their mental well-being.

A humane, supportive and respectful response from the university communities is vital at this stage.

Australia has never experienced such a sudden drop in student numbers.

The reduced enrolments will have profound impacts on class sizes and the teaching workforce, particularly at masters level in universities with the highest proportions of students from China. Around 46% of Chinese students are studying a postgraduate masters by coursework. If classes are too small, universities will have to cancel them.

And the effects don’t end there. Tourism, accommodation providers, restaurants and retailers who cater to international students will be hit hard too.

Chinese students contributed AU$12 billion (US$8 million) to the Australian economy in 2019, so whatever happens from this point, the financial impact will be significant. The cost of the drop in enrolments in semester one may well amount to several billion dollars.

The newly-formed Global Reputation Taskforce by Australia’s Council for International Education has commissioned some rapid response research to promote more informed discussion about the implications and impacts of the crisis.

If the epidemic is contained quickly, some of the 100,000 students stuck in China will be able to start their studies in semester one, and the rest could delay until mid-year. But there might still be longer-term effects.

Australia has a world-class higher education system and the world is closely watching how we manage this crisis as it unfolds.

Prospective students in China will be particularly focused on Australia’s response as they weigh future study options.

The world is watching

Such a fast-moving crisis presents a range of challenges for those in universities, colleges (such as English language schools) and schools who are trying to communicate with thousands of worried students who can’t enter the country.

Australian universities are scrambling to consider a wide range of responses. These include:

 

  • • Delivering courses online.
  • • Providing intensive courses and summer or winter courses.
  • • Arrangements around semester commencement.
  • • Fee refund and deferral.
  • • Provision of clear and updated information.
  • • Support structures for starting and continuing Chinese students, including extended academic and welfare support, counselling, special helplines and coronavirus-specific information guidelines.
  • • Support with visa issues, accommodation and employment arrangements.

A coordinated approach involving different stakeholders who are providing different support for Chinese students is an urgent priority. This includes education providers, government, city councils, international student associations, student groups and professional organisations.

This outbreak further raises awareness within the international education sector of the need for risk management and crisis response strategies to ensure sustainability.

Most importantly, we need to ensure we remain focused on the human consequences of this tragedy first. Headlines focusing on lost revenues at a time like this are offensive to international students and everyone involved in international education.

Fuente: https://www.worldsofeducation.org/en/woe_homepage

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