7 January 2022 11:53 am Views - 111
People languishing in long queues to buy essential items
We will have to learn to live with COVID. As we go along, the strains are becoming less virulent. This means that more people have a tendency to be infected... Nobody can predict the pattern of future variants. Therefore we need to get ready in a holistic manner.
HEALTH
“People should learn to coexist with COVID”
-Dr. Haniffa
He further said that there has to be a system to monitor patients at home. “The primary healthcare system needs to be improved. We will have to learn to live with COVID. In order to restore public health, decision makers have to earn public trust. Therefore the accurate number of cases, tests done per day, deaths and other figures should be communicated transparently.”
Further referring to the issue of COVID burials, Dr. Haniffa claimed that “the decisions were based more on fiction than science. Medicine is a matter of science. There was less accountability for most decisions taken amidst the pandemic. What is important is to balance life and allow people to live healthily.”
“ Hopeful about tourism in the coming year”
-Shiromal Cooray
“The future of tourism depends on how each country is reacting to the new variants,” said Shiromal Cooray, Chairman and Managing Director of Jetwing Travels Pvt. Ltd. “If things are controllable with boosters and vaccination drives we can be hopeful of a better year than last year. But we will have to watch and see.”
ECONOMY
“ Sri Lanka has reached the money printing threshold ”
-Prof. Abeyratne
When asked if money printing could save the day, Prof. Abeyratne replied in the negative and said that Sri Lanka has now exceeded the money printing threshold. “Money can be printed during an economic recession as long as inflation is under control. Printing money at this point will add up to create inflationary pressure.”
We cannot afford to shut down schools completely in the event a child tests positive for the virus. Children have textbooks and workbooks and schools should occupy children from 7.30am to 1.30pm.
EDUCATION
“Self-directed learning is the way forward ”
-Dr. Gamage
Speaking about distance education she said that it could be done in many ways. Referring to results from a statistical survey done by LIRNEasia involving over 2000 households, Dr. Gamage said 85% of students received some educational services. “However 7% of children were already out of schools and 63% of students received education digitally – this was either live online classes or via Whatsapp notes etc. Apart from that around 22% children received offline educational solutions. We should focus on the 15% of students who didn’t receive any sort of service. Nowadays, almost everybody has a smart phone and text books are detailed. Our students are not taught to self-learn. However we need to do a diagnostic survey and see how these children have progressed in subjects such as Mathematics and English for example. Schools have done their best but haven’t received correct policy instructions.”
“We also noticed that 37% of students were contacted by tuition providers while 34% have been contacted by schools and tuition providers both. Therefore schools and tuition providers have come together to cover almost all children,” she added.
When asked about what subjects could be replaced in the existing curriculum, she opined that the civics curriculum could be made better. “There’s an excellent environment curriculum for primary students but it’s totally distorted because of exams. Children between grades 1-9 should be allowed to learn through experience. We therefore need to focus more on authentic learning where children are allowed to explore, discuss and meaningfully construct concepts and relationships in contexts that involve real world problems.”
ENVIRONMENT
“Economic crisis would aggravate incidents of environmental destruction”
-Dr. Gunawardena
When asked about haphazard decisions such as elephant trenches to mitigate the human-elephant conflict Dr. Gunawardena alleged that the digging of elephant trenches is a mere attempt to extract gravel. “It is not a remedy to the so-called human-elephant conflict. It should be done in accordance with certain principles of animal behaviour. These trenches won’t last during the rainy season. Therefore this would create new problems...”
Expressing her views on educational reforms Dr. Gamage said that children are being tested on all subjects every term. “But most subjects are about experiential learning. What we need to reform in the education sector is to take away exams. I’m happy to see some progressive reforms on paper but these need to be implemented duly.”
She said that in the long term the country will have to look at a hybrid education system where some children will learn in school while others learn at home. “We cannot afford to shut down schools completely in the event a child tests positive for the virus. Children have textbooks and workbooks and schools should occupy children from 7.30am to 1.30pm. Therefore, parents can give them a quiet place to study. Specific subjects such as English and Mathematics need special attention but most other subjects could be studied through self-directed learning. The highest reform is to prepare children for self-directed learning.”