Baghdad (Iraq): In Baghdad's primary Green Valley school, pupils wearing face masks waited in a long queue early Monday, passing through a disinfection tunnel before entering their classes.
The school's deputy school principal stood on the other side of the tunnel, disinfecting the children's hands with sanitizer.
Millions of Iraqi students returned to classrooms Monday for the first time in a year and a half – a stoppage caused by the coronavirus pandemic - amid overcrowding and confusion about COVID-19 safety measures.
The break with in-person schooling in Iraq is among the longest in the world, affecting some 11 million students nationwide.
Iraq's Ministry of Education provided learning in the interim through an online platform, but the focus has mostly been on students in higher grades sitting final exams.
According to the World Bank, learning levels in Iraq – a country ravaged by decades of conflict and government negligence - are among the lowest in the Middle East and North Africa and are likely to decline even further because of the impact the COVID-19 pandemic has had on education service delivery, including prolonged school closures.
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With schools closed over 75% of the time since February 2020 and opportunities for remote learning limited and unequal, Iraqi children are facing another reduction of learning‑adjusted years of schooling, it warned in a report last month.
"Effectively, students in Iraq are facing more than a 'lost year' of learning," the report added.
Online teaching in Iraq faced many challenges, including poor internet connection, power outages, and the economic situation of many families.