News / Africa

    Liberian Schools to Reopen After Ebola Shut Down

    Students who can no longer attend schools and universities because the government temporarily closed them due to Ebola, take to the streets to protest, at NGO headquarters, Monrovia, Liberia, Sept. 29, 2014. (Benno Muchler/VOA)
    Students who can no longer attend schools and universities because the government temporarily closed them due to Ebola, take to the streets to protest, at NGO headquarters, Monrovia, Liberia, Sept. 29, 2014. (Benno Muchler/VOA)
    James Butty

    Liberian authorities said schools closed since July over the Ebola outbreak will reopen February 2.

    Anthony Nimely, Deputy Minister of Education for Administration, Research and Development, said the decision followed the recent decline in the number of new Ebola cases. 

    “We have been paying attention to the whole epidemiology of the disease. We’ve seen that the incidences have gone down drastically in a lot of places. And so, in consultation with different authorities including the health authorities, we thought that we needed to take the chance to open schools so that children can get back to the learning process,” he said.

    Nimely also said schools must reopen to ease the growing problem of an overaged student population. But, he said, the students will be made to follow already established Ebola preventive procedures.

    “The first thing is that we’re going to ensure that the physical environment itself is disinfected in terms of fumigation; we’re going to make sure that every school has a hand washing station,” Nimely said.

    Nimely said monitors will also be posted at schools to make sure students wash their hands before entering their respective classrooms.

    “We are also considering the fact that we can have an isolation center where students and teachers will be tested.  And, after they are tested and we suspect that there is temperature or fever, we can hold them in isolation and have a referral to the nearby hospital,” Nimely said.

    He said authorities might have to extend the school day to make up for lost time because of the closure.

    “The curriculum has certain of hours to run the school year. So, what we will do is to have adjusted the timing to ensure that the number of hours required for a complete exhaustion of the school curriculum. So, we might have longer hours in school so that we can be able to catch up on the assignments that were lost [by the school closure],” Nimely said.

    Nimely said the reopening of schools will be done in phases because some districts in the country are Ebola-intensive while others are not.

    Butty interview with Anthony Nimely
    Butty interview with Anthony Nimelyi
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    Comment Sorting
    Comments
         
    by: Wilson Cisco from: Pennsylvania
    January 18, 2015 11:09 PM
    Hi, this is a very good thing to do, that is for our children to go back to school, but are we considering the hardship in the country when it comes to Money issue? Most of the parents have not been working during the Ebola outbreak in the country, and we are about to open school abruptly like this? Are we considering the the financial standing of 80 to 90 percent of the parents that suppose to buy uniform copybooks and pay school fees for the these? What good will the hurry, hurry do us when most of our kids are not in school because of NO MONEY?let us think about this.

    by: pewee monibah from: monrovia-liberia
    January 14, 2015 10:34 AM
    i am a student of the college of agriculture and forestry.
    the issue of Ebola has prolong our academic calender and some of us were unable to study during the struggle against Ebola.so i am appealing to government to set up preventive measures as we starve to get back to school .

    by: rebecca ogolla from: rongo
    January 10, 2015 2:30 AM
    that's quit encouraging

    by: Jonathan from: Savoy, Illinois USA
    January 07, 2015 8:54 AM
    Functional and sanitized restroom/toilet in school should be look at closely. When thing we're relatively normal even the best private schools did not have restrooms or toilets that were functional and sanitized, the University of Liberia included

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