• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • Sport
  • Cricket
  • Odisha
covid orphaned children

Corona Times: Lessons For Young Children

6 years ago
Jagannath temple

Odisha Budget 2026-27 Proposes Shree Jagannath Museum & Library In Puri

2 minutes ago
39 Poachers Held With Arms In Odisha’s Similipal After AI Camera Alert

39 Poachers Held With Arms In Odisha’s Similipal After AI Camera Alert

17 minutes ago
‘Trust Deficit’ Between Bengal Govt, ECI Forces Supreme Court To Appoint Judicial Officers For SIR Duty

‘Trust Deficit’ Between Bengal Govt, ECI Forces Supreme Court To Appoint Judicial Officers For SIR Duty

18 minutes ago
Person Accused Of Causing Death Due To Reckless Driving Cannot Seek Pardon By Reaching Settlement With Victim’s Kin: Meghalaya HC

Person Accused Of Causing Death Due To Reckless Driving Cannot Seek Pardon By Reaching Settlement With Victim’s Kin: Meghalaya HC

27 minutes ago
Five Arrested In Cuttack Press Colony Firing Incident As Police Crack Murder Mystery

Five Arrested In Cuttack Press Colony Firing Incident As Police Crack Murder Mystery

28 minutes ago
SIR in Odisha from April

SIR Process In Odisha & 21 Other States & UTs Expected To Start In April: ECI

30 minutes ago
Is The No-Handshake Policy A Sham? Former England Captain Claims Players Chat Behind Closed Doors

Is The No-Handshake Policy A Sham? Former England Captain Claims Players Chat Behind Closed Doors

1 hour ago
Odisha CM Mohan Majhi Presents Rs 3.10 Lakh Cr Budget With Focus On Inclusive & Balanced Growth

Odisha CM Mohan Majhi Presents Rs 3.10 Lakh Cr Budget With Focus On Inclusive & Balanced Growth

2 hours ago
Youth Congress Stages Topless Protest At AI Summit, Chants Anti-Modi Slogans

Youth Congress Stages Topless Protest At AI Summit, Chants Anti-Modi Slogans

2 hours ago
Odisha Vigilance Nabs PEO While Taking Bribe From Mechanic

Odisha Vigilance Nabs PEO While Taking Bribe From Mechanic

2 hours ago
Starliner Flight That Left Sunita Williams Stranded At ISS A ‘Type A Mishap’: NASA

Starliner Flight That Left Sunita Williams Stranded At ISS A ‘Type A Mishap’: NASA

2 hours ago
No Near-Collision Between MEMU Trains In Odisha, ECoR Clarifies

No Near-Collision Between MEMU Trains In Odisha, ECoR Clarifies

3 hours ago
  • Home
  • About us
  • Career
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Usage
Friday, February 20, 2026
No Result
View All Result
OdishaBytes
  • Home
  • Odisha
    • Policy & Politics
    • City
  • India
  • Sport
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Hockey
    • IPL
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • Movie Review
    • Television
    • Bollywood
    • Hollywood
    • Ollywood
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Food
    • Health
    • fashion
  • World
  • More
    • News You Can Use
    • Good News
    • Viral Videos
    • Tech
      • Cars & Bikes
      • Mobile & Gadgets
      • Review
  • Home
  • Odisha
    • Policy & Politics
    • City
  • India
  • Sport
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Hockey
    • IPL
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • Movie Review
    • Television
    • Bollywood
    • Hollywood
    • Ollywood
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Food
    • Health
    • fashion
  • World
  • More
    • News You Can Use
    • Good News
    • Viral Videos
    • Tech
      • Cars & Bikes
      • Mobile & Gadgets
      • Review
No Result
View All Result
OdishaBytes
No Result
View All Result
Home Guest Column

Corona Times: Lessons For Young Children

by Pritish Acharya
May 21, 2020
in Guest Column, OB Special
Reading Time: 6 mins read
covid orphaned children

Picture courtesy Pixabay

491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

During corona pandemic, the problems faced by schoolgoing children are critical and serious. Their class exams generally get over in March. The new academic session begins in April before the summer vacation. When schools reopen by June end the children are usually familiar with their class, syllabus and textbooks. This softens their academic pressure. This April the new session could not commence. Examinations of Class X and XII were not over, when classes were disrupted in March due to COVID-19 outbreak.

When will the schedule for remaining exams be announced? When will the results come out? When and how will entrance exams for various higher and professional courses be conducted? How will admissions for higher classes, especially for medicine, engineering, etc., be coordinated? Further, when games and sports are as essential as learning of curricular subjects for an adolescent child, how will the ‘new normal’ of social distancing affect the physical and psychological upbringing of the child? All these are moot questions to ponder over. The reality is the modern system of schooling, which includes classroom activities, cooperative learning, admissions, examinations and resultant publications, in its entirety, is a kind of celebration and joyful ritual, which involves conglomeration and social gathering. However, the ‘new normal’ to encounter coronavirus is social distancing, a new terminology coined for meaning physical distancing without affecting social and psychological bonding. In such a critical time, what could be the way out for schoolgoers?

ADVERTISEMENT

As an alternative to overcome the crisis quite a few schools and educational authorities have come up with their idea of virtual classroom. This means, children and teachers would engage in classroom processes by using without violating social distancing norms. No doubt, it is a welcome measure, provided the Apps that facilitate use of technology are foolproof and free from any virus or ulterior designs. When it comes to universal education, virtual classrooms will further widen the gap between children and dilute the goal of equality of education. In India, where children come from asymmetrical social and class backgrounds, their access to technology and devices would be a matter of worry. If the number of children having no access to such technology exceeds the number of successful users, this could not be a foolproof way out. Forget the rural folks; even all urban students might not be able to take its advantage. This necessitates the going ‘to the basics’ for a remedy.

The first alternative for children could be to read whatever they wish to.  Even detective novels with a superman hero or detective with the ability to catch the ‘most venomous criminal’ could not be a bad reading for an adolescent child. Many of us have graduated through such ‘pernicious’ reading in our childhood to become serious literature readers. Such reading habits may possibly supplement the curricular learning of social sciences and languages. A class VIII child going to class IX in July might have difficulties to do self-study of science or mathematics, but s/he could easily manage social sciences and language textbooks. Study of social sciences and languages, however, should not be confined to textbooks. The child should go beyond textbooks, a basic need for connecting the textbook knowledge with the knowledge outside. For example, if the history of Indian national movement is in the school syllabus, by taking a cue from it the child could pursue self-study on the liberation movements in other former colonies like Korea or Vietnam. Similarly, self-study of a Hindi short story by Premchand  in language and literature section could motivate her/him to go for reading of a Premchand novel or writings of other authors. The 4G smart phone, Google and Wikipedia in the absence of a local or family library could also be of immense help. The fact of the matter is, of late, social sciences and languages are often ignored as ‘superfluous’ for ‘pursuing medicine or IIT, etc.’, both in school and parental domains. This has seriously affected the learning habits of children in recent times. That young children can handle social science and literature learning even without active supervision of teachers and engage themselves in reading and writing is a common fact. Many children, despite having a natural liking for these subjects, are ‘aggressively dissuaded’ from studying these subjects even in school, where these subjects are compulsory, except at a perfunctory level. Now the children could make use of this time in seriously pursuing those subjects, though they may subsequently go for professional courses. Knowledge is one and subjects are supplementary to one another. There is a cherished relationship between science and literature or mathematics and social sciences. A litterateur with some knowledge in mathematics will be always over cautious of verbosity, and a mathematician with a liking for literature will seldom tolerate any linguistic and grammatical error in his expression and articulation. This corona crisis time could be best used by young children for self-studying these easily ‘comprehensible subjects’ and demystify the ‘cultivated’ gaps between various school subjects.

In a school curriculum, like the curricular areas, there are ‘other’ curricular areas, such as health and physical education and art education.  The ‘other’ curricular areas are often ignored by categorizing them as ‘extra’ curricular and ‘unnecessary’ appendixes. Painting, music, clay modeling, magic performances, storytelling and puppetry are a few examples of such ‘other’ curricular areas.  One could take even shoe mending, gardening and room cleaning in it. Outdoor sports are not suggested here, because of the ‘new normal’ reality of social distancing. The child could pursue any of these art forms on her own. Expertise in all these areas could never be the goal. But, a sense of appreciation for all these visual, literary and performing art forms as supplementary to a child’s holistic growth could be a sensible achievement in all times to come.

It is seen that very often parents prove to be an impediment in the way of these achievements.  The child’s sensibility gets hurt. The child may be very young. But, if his uniqueness and independent identity is not duly cared for, he rebels and might get reduced to a ‘spoilt child’.  Comparing him or her with other children, declaring him either to be less capable than his friends or far more capable than his compatriots like a ’superman’ or chiding him for his looks or behaviour could push him to that category. Now when the schoolgoer is at home 24×7 in the presence of parents, the issue of parenting will be constantly evaluated. Surprisingly, the formally-educated parents may not be in an advantageous position than the ‘illiterate’ and ‘uneducated’ ones in this regard. The traditional wisdom of parenting may ensure a better comfort zone to children. For example, parents with a single child may surely feel the brunt more than their counterparts.

Corona is a new problem; no one experienced it at least in last hundred years. The Spanish Flu of 1918-20 could be somewhat comparable to it; it wiped out nearly 40 to 50 million people. Spain, a neutral nation during the First World War, regularly reported spread of the flu,  while the Allied Nations and Centrist Powers deliberately hid its spread in their respective territories, lest they would prove to be ‘weak’ nations. Spain was chided as the ‘birthplace’ of the disease.  Hence, it was named ‘Spanish Flu’, though Spain was distantly related to its origin or spread. In the end, it became clear that those who hid the truth to sustain their ‘ultra-nationalist myth’ were bigger sufferers of the flu. This reminds one of the proverb, ‘history repeats itself’, when the US President called it (corona) the ‘China Virus’, and the religious minorities, whether they are Haredi Jews in New York  or Muslims in India in general, are pointedly blamed as ‘carrier’ and ‘deliberate disseminator’ of the pandemic. The young students could learn many lessons from this – the bad effect of hiding the truth and of spreading untruth and making scapegoats for hiding one’s administrative failure. Comprehending this and reading between the lines may ensure the children’s interest in social sciences.

However, there is a lesson more important than all these. The elderly people in the Indian family may not have any memory of Spanish Flu, which was called the ‘Bombay Fever’ and had taken a heavy toll in India.  Still the elder generation is definitely far richer than the younger generation in terms of many other challenges and experiences. The young children could provoke the elders to share them. Such transfer of experiences may enrich the young and sustain the old joyfully and meaningfully at a time when the worldwide news of corona affecting the old more could be very depressing and frustrating to the senior citizens. Such news has become another ‘new normal’. If Spanish Flu had affected the youth, corona’s softest targets are the elderly. History is repeating itself, but in new and newer forms. The schoolgoers are crisis-ridden because of the pandemic, but they could also be source of life and living for everyone at home, if they care to give a patient hearing to others’ experiences. That would not only engage them, but also help them explore many new lessons of life skills.

It is a fact that, like Spanish Flu or Black Death (1347-51), the corona pandemic will also go away. It is only a matter of time. Then only those, who would have fiercely fought it, would relish their lives. They may be health workers or elderly people or trapped migrant workers or young children. The contribution of young children should in no way be adjudged as insignificant, for they refuse to feel depressed and never hesitate to create congenial spheres for others including the elderly generation.  This engagement would no doubt be meaningful as well as very educative to them.

 

Tags: coronavirusCOVID19
Share196Tweet123
ADVERTISEMENT
Pritish Acharya

Pritish Acharya

The author is Professor of History of NCERT and posted at Regional Institute of Education, Bhubaneswar

Related Posts

From Sadhu Meher To Preeti Panigrahi: Odisha’s Trailblazers Light Up Bollywood & Hollywood

From Sadhu Meher To Preeti Panigrahi: Odisha’s Trailblazers Light Up Bollywood & Hollywood

by OB Bureau
February 15, 2026

Bhubaneswar: Odisha, known for its rich cultural heritage, is steadily emerging as a cradle of talent for the global entertainment...

Small Herds, Big Change: How Goat Rearing Is Transforming Women’s Lives In Odisha

Small Herds, Big Change: How Goat Rearing Is Transforming Women’s Lives In Odisha

by Monalisa Patsani
February 11, 2026

Goat rearing has emerged as a vital livelihood option in the tribal and rural regions of Keonjhar and Mayurbhanj districts...

From Rigid Fiscal Leash To Flexible Debt Glide Path, Is FRBM Act Losing Relevance?

From Rigid Fiscal Leash To Flexible Debt Glide Path, Is FRBM Act Losing Relevance?

by Pradeep Biswal
February 10, 2026

The Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act, 2003, was designed as a "legal leash" on public spending for both...

Bhubaneswar Roads To Nowhere: Why Flyovers & Wider Roads Fail To Fix Congestion

Bhubaneswar Roads To Nowhere: Why Flyovers & Wider Roads Fail To Fix Congestion

by Piyush Rout
February 8, 2026

In 2024, Odisha saw a change in state administration, yet the persistent problems plaguing the capital city —waterlogging, traffic congestion,...

SAI International School SAI International School SAI International School
OdishaBytes

Copyright © 2026 Frontier Media

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • News Feed

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Odisha
    • Policy & Politics
    • City
  • India
  • Sport
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Hockey
    • IPL
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • Movie Review
    • Television
    • Bollywood
    • Hollywood
    • Ollywood
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Food
    • Health
    • fashion
  • World
  • More
    • News You Can Use
    • Good News
    • Viral Videos
    • Tech
      • Cars & Bikes
      • Mobile & Gadgets
      • Review

Copyright © 2026 Frontier Media