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To forge bonds, Ukraine tries to bring kids back into schools – safely

As Ukraine’s 5.1 million school-age children go back to their studies for the fall, the reality of war is becoming part of academic considerations. And this year, a third of Ukrainian students are going back to in-person classes full time – if their schools are properly protected.

“A school can only fit as many children as can fit in a [bomb] shelter,” explains Damian Rance, UNICEF’s advocacy chief in Ukraine.

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Another academic year is starting amid war in Ukraine, and some students are going back into classrooms. Schools have to fortify their facilities, but educators and parents view the in-person experience as worth the risk.

But Ukrainians are undaunted. Their commitment to education is visible in efforts to repair schools and provide online learning to children both in Ukraine and abroad as refugees.

Local officials, parents, and teachers stress that it is not only about education. Just as important is the chance for children to be outside the family environment and make friends. For those who have lost relatives, hidden in basements as rockets rained down, or experienced the prolonged absence of parents serving on the front, it’s a lifeline.

“We all want to be in the classroom,” says Lydia Rusan, who gave up refugee status in Switzerland to return to Irpin, Ukraine, to teach. “All the children want to be with their classmates. They don’t want to study online because they miss each other. The most important thing for them is to be together.”

It was the bomb shelter at Irpin Lyceum No. 17 that clinched Anna Onyshenko’s decision to enroll her son Ivan there for the new school year.

She knows that the shelter doesn’t guarantee anything. “There is no such thing as 100% safe in Ukraine,” says Ms. Onyshenko, an accountant.

But as Ukraine’s 5.1 million school-age children go back to their studies for the fall, the reality of war is becoming part of academic considerations. More than 300 educational institutions have been destroyed due to Russia’s attacks against Ukraine. Ten times as many have been damaged. A Russian drone attack on a school in the border region of Sumy recently killed four people.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Another academic year is starting amid war in Ukraine, and some students are going back into classrooms. Schools have to fortify their facilities, but educators and parents view the in-person experience as worth the risk.

And this year, a third of Ukrainian students are going back to in-person classes full-time – if their schools are properly protected. “A school can only fit as many children as can fit in a shelter,” explains Damian Rance, UNICEF’s advocacy chief in Ukraine, during the reopening of another Irpin school completely rebuilt after being destroyed by Russian artillery and missile strikes.

But Ukrainians are undaunted. Their commitment to education is visible in efforts to repair schools and provide online learning to children both in Ukraine and abroad as refugees.

Local officials, parents, and teachers stress that it is not only about education. Just as important is the chance for children to be outside the family environment and make friends: an opportunity rendered even more precious by the horrors of war. For those who have lost relatives, hidden in basements as rockets and shells rained down, or experienced the prolonged absence of parents serving on the front, it’s a lifeline.

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