LOGIN DASHBOARD

    COVID19

    Photo Essays

    4 MIN READ

    The digital divide in Jhapa

    Parwat Portel, January 6, 2021, Kathmandu

    The digital divide in Jhapa

      Share this article

    How students and teachers of Dhulabari Higher Secondary School coped with distance learning in 2020

    (The Record)

    How will we remember 2020? The Record is republishing stories from a curated series of visual stories commissioned by photo.circle that presents the work of visual storytellers based across Nepal who began documenting their communities since the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic. In late March, when Nepal went into lockdown in response to the Covid-19 pandemic, educational institutions across the country were shut down. For four months, Nepal’s 8.2 million children were unable to attend school. Even before the pandemic, Nepal’s education system was already in crisis, with high drop-out and low graduation rates, sparse attendance, and insufficient resources. The crisis did facilitate the adoption of distance learning in schools across Nepal, but it hasn't been without its challenges. The pandemic shut down Mechinagar’s Dhulabari Higher Secondary School for three months in March. It was only in June that the school decided to conduct classes over the internet. For some students, the online classes brought back a semblance of routine and resumed their interrupted education, but others, especially those who can’t afford mobile phones, laptops or the internet, were forced to find different ways to adapt. 

    The new normal

     For Garima Niraula, 15, classes start at 9 AM. The ninth-grader jumps from Nepali classes to Social Science to Science, Mathematics, and Accounting. Other than during the 20-minute lunch break, she is constantly in front of the laptop. In the evenings, she works on her homework and sends it to her teacher via Facebook Messenger. 

    Garima Niraula

    “If the internet goes off, I miss a lot, and I worry,” says Garima. But her family makes sure Garima is comfortable and has enough time for her classes and homework. “They pay the internet bill on time, they leave me alone to study and I don’t have to do household chores,” she says. 

    Click picture for enlargement.

     

    Over 650 students from grade seven to ten attend Dhulabari Higher Secondary School’s online classes. However, students from financially weaker backgrounds have not been able to attend these classes as they don’t have internet service or computers at home. 

    “I understand that I am lucky to get this opportunity. Some of my friends don’t get to study online like I do,” says Garima.

    Radios fill the gap, but barely

    It is 8:30 AM and Janaki Kafar, 16, of Mechinagar has just finished cleaning the local Hanuman Temple. At exactly 9 AM, local children gather around, set up jute mats, and sit. They pull out their notebooks, books, pens. Janaki turns on the radio and for the next two-and-a-half hours the students listen to classes delivered over the radio. 

    When the Covid-19 pandemic started, Dhulabari Higher Secondary School switched to online classes for middle and high school students, but Janaki has not been able to take advantage. “I don’t have a mobile or the internet,” says Janaki. Her family lives on the banks of the Tami River, and they have been struggling financially since her father lost his job due to the Covid-19 lockdown. “It is difficult for my father to even feed us,” she says. 

    Click picture for enlargement.

     

    Janaki’s school understands that many of its students suffering economic hardships cannot afford online classes for their children. They’ve thus formed a group that has raised funds and distributed radios. “I really wanted to attend those online classes, but it is only wishful thinking,” says Janaki.  Rajkumari Sharma, parent to one of the students, says that while the school’s idea was good, it should have been better thought through. 

    “It would have been easier if there was a teacher to guide the students along with the voice on the radio,” says Sharma. “For now, they listen and then they forget. I am not sure how effective that actually is.” That does not discourage Janaki. She is keen to learn, so every day, she finishes her chores early and sits down to listen to the radio and read along. Janaki’s motivation and drive is now inspiring 40 other kids in her neighbourhood to do the same.

    Adapting to change

    For 20 years, Ramesh Kumar Dahal, 50, has stood in front of blackboards teaching the next generation. Lately, however, a smartboard has replaced the blackboard. When Dhulabari Higher Secondary switched to online teaching, Dahal decided he needed to adapt. 

    “I used to be scared of technology, but time and necessity change people,” he says. Every morning, Dahal arrives early to the school and prepares for classes and presentations. At exactly 9 AM, the classes start. The smartboard initiative was funded by the provincial government, which also provided basic training to teachers on how to use the smartboard.  

    Caption

     

     

    While online classes were originally designed for all students, only those with an internet connection, a computer, or a smartphone have been able to attend. “This is not an equal system, and we are leaving the other students behind,” says Dahal. 

    Damodhar Dhungel, who is also a teacher, has been conducting classes for those who cannot attend online classes via the local Radio Sathi station. He says that while the radio initiative is good, it comes with its own set of challenges. “It is hard to listen, concentrate, and follow a radio lecture,” he says. “And there is no one around to clarify when students don’t understand.” *This story was produced for the Nepal Photo Project with support from the photo.circle 2020 grant.

    ::::::::



    author bio photo

    Parwat Portel  Parwat Portel is a journalist with Kantipur Media Group. This story was produced for the Nepal Photo Project with support from the photo.circle 2020 grant.



    Comments

    Get the best of

    the Record

    Previous Next

    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

    COVID19

    Features

    2 min read

    More frontline medics succumb to Covid-19

    The Record - November 22, 2020

    Even as health workers continue to sacrifice their lives in the line of duty, the government continues to turn a blind eye to their problems

    Features

    7 min read

    Living with garbage

    Marissa Taylor - August 12, 2021

    Year-round, Teku residents live with the putrid smell that comes from the mounds of garbage dumped at the municipal waste station. Come the rains, the stench becomes unbearable—yet nobody cares.

    Features

    12 min read

    For the airport yet to come

    Sabin Ninglekhu - July 22, 2020

    For the ordinary residents of Nijgadh, the airport has already come—as the fear and uncertainty that now pervade the everyday, of being displaced and dispossessed

    Perspectives

    5 min read

    Leaving no one behind

    Biswash Chepang - June 3, 2022

    The central promise of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals is to ‘leave no one behind’. But with just eight years left to achieve the target and local participation still minimal, is the UN pledge achievable?

    Photo Essays

    2 min read

    Dashain crowds and Covid-19

    Deewash Shrestha - October 16, 2020

    Because the national strategy for tackling the virus has been all over the place, people remain scared and confused, but they have decided to get on with their lives anyway

    COVID19

    News

    4 min read

    Covid19 Roundup, 7 April: Oli defends govt, flight suspension extended & board exams postponed

    The Record - April 7, 2020

    A daily summary of Covid19 related developments that matter

    COVID19

    Features

    7 min read

    Exploited abroad, unemployed at home

    Ishita Shahi - March 22, 2021

    Women migrant workers fled abusive conditions to come home, but with no jobs and no savings, many of them are preparing to leave again.

    Interviews

    7 min read

    Bhawana Shrestha: ‘There is a highly unmet need for safe and effective non-hormonal contraception’

    The Record - November 1, 2021

    Meet Bhawana Shrestha, the Nepali microbiologist who is developing an antibody-based non-hormonal form of contraception that could revolutionize birth control.

    • About
    • Contributors
    • Jobs
    • Contact

    CONNECT WITH US

    © Copyright the Record | All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy