There are reports that senior school students in 121
institutions in the China, long vilified for giving the world the worst
pandemic ever, are back in front of chalk boards and digital displays.
Today’s development is the first time since a shut down in
January.
“School is finally reopening!” posted one user of Weibo,
China’s Twitter-like short messaging platform, an AFP report says
“This is the first time that I’m so happy to go back to
school, although I have to sit a monthly examination on the 8th.”
Teenagers sat at individual desks spaced a metre (3.3 feet)
apart, seeing their teachers in the flesh after months of distance learning.
Wednesday’s back-to-school was the latest step in a gradual
normalising of life in Wuhan and surrounding Hubei province.
It is China Wonder indeed, because the city, where the
coronavirus appeared late last year before spreading around the world, was
locked down for 76 days and only reopened last month.
Only the province’s oldest students were present on
Wednesday — vocational students and seniors who are due to take the
make-or-break university entrance exams.
Return dates have generally not been confirmed for junior
and middle school students, although some localities have allowed their return
as well.
Officials in Wuhan say students and staff must all have had
virus tests before going back to school, and campuses have been disinfected and
cleaned.
In preparation for reopening, some schools spaced out their
desks and organized smaller class sizes, according to local media.
It is China Wonder because thermal scanners greeted
everyone walking through school gates, and anyone with a high temperature was
not allowed in.
State-run China Daily said some places arranged staggered
arrival times for teachers and students.
Armed police officers were seen standing guard at the
entrance of Wuhan No.17 Middle School, with officers also pictured outside
other schools around the province.
Elsewhere in China, schools that have been closed or
online-only since January began gradually reopening last month, with Beijing
and Shanghai letting some students return last week.
China’s major cities are gradually returning to normal
after imposing strict travel restrictions and closing huge swathes of the
economy to control the spread of the virus.
In recent months infections nationwide have dwindled, and
there have been no new cases reported in Hubei province for over a month.
Over a five-day holiday to start the month, there were 115
million domestic trips, with many tourist sites reopening — although with
limited attendance.
Shanghai Disneyland will reopen next week, the
entertainment giant said Tuesday, with enhanced safety measures including
temperature screening and social distancing.
However, most foreigners are still banned from entering the
country as China works to contain infections being brought in from overseas.
Chinese nationals returning home must undergo 14 days of
quarantine.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Your comments are priceless!