2 Aralık 2013 Pazartesi

Syrian refugees put strain on Jordan schools amid fears for "lost generation"

As the Jordanian nationwide anthem blares from a crackling loudspeaker, followed by a song in honour of King Abdullah, hundreds of girls in blue uniform in the schoolyard sing along.


But these are Syrian not Jordanian pupils, starting up the afternoon shift at the Rufaida al-Aslamia college, named after the initial Muslim nurse. Moments just before, an atmosphere of organised chaos had reigned on a warm afternoon as one set of ladies left and the other arrived. The teachers, all ladies in headscarves, shepherded the Syrian girls into rows in which they carried out perfunctory arm stretches before breaking into song.


Almost 80 Jordanian schools – most of them in the bad governorates (counties) in the north – have introduced two daily school sessions to cope with the influx of Syrians that have stretched Jordan’s public assets to breaking stage, such as health and schooling. Jordanians have been generous to the latest wave of refugees, but a lot of are starting to grumble about the strain on their hospitals and colleges.


Around 85,000 Syrians are presently registered for school in Jordan, in addition to 21,000 Syrians in refugee camps (in contrast with one.3m Jordanians). But 140,000 Syrians of college age are between the 544,000 registered Syrian refugees in Jordan. Most dwell in urban places, though about one hundred,000 are in Zaatari camp, properly Jordan’s fifth largest city. Irbid, near to the Syrian border, is Jordan’s third biggest city and is host to more than 126,000 registered Syrian refugees.


At Rufaida school, Jordanians attend from 8am-12pm while Syrians come in the afternoon (12.thirty-4pm). Final year, 30 new teachers had been employed, 36 this 12 months. Double shifts had been launched a year ago to cope with the influx of refugees, reflecting the determination of donors and the Jordanian government to steer clear of a “misplaced generation” of embittered youth whose schooling has been lower quick by civil war.


UNHRC, the UN refugee agency, final week warned that hundreds of thousands of Syrian youngsters currently traumatised by war are facing a life of “catastrophe” in exile, with out education or normal childhood freedoms.


The training campaign is largely funded by the UN, which aims to direct a huge chunk of the $ 5bn (£3bn) it is attempting to raise for the Syria crisis to children’s requirements. Unicef, the UN children’s company, estimates that a hundred colleges require to run double shifts to cope with demand, in contrast with the recent 77.


At first, Jordanian and Syrian women were mixed with each other at Rufaida, but that ended amid stress among the two groups. Some Jordanians accused the refugees of taking areas from locals and voiced resentment when courses had been shortened from 45 to 35 minutes. Various educational amounts also posed a problem, according to Jordanian teachers.


“The level [of education] of Syrians is lower than Jordanians, in English, mathematics, science. It’s really difficult for them, English is the most difficult,” explained Zenab al-Horani, a maths instructor


English is taught as a 2nd language in Jordan, but not in Syria. Some of the Syrian kids had been aggressive, a symptom of the psychological anxiety they had endured, she said. “We were told to allow them speak about their circumstance, give them the freedom to talk, let them release the stress so we could soak up it.”


The crisis has created a surge in demand for teachers, posing difficulties of top quality. To deal with this, Unicef has assisted to fund teacher education as donors are aware of the need to have to support Jordan cope with the strain on its public assets. But the principal challenge was to get Syrian young children into college.


In Irbid, Unicef partnered with Conserve the Kids, to enhance attendance. Initially, Syrian dad and mom appeared to really feel little urgency about receiving their children into school as they believed the crisis would be shortlived and they would be going house quickly. With the crisis in its third 12 months, however, that optimism has evaporated.


Other aspects have disrupted school registration, including the lack of places.To persuade mothers and fathers to send kids to school, Conserve the Young children resorted to sending close to thirty volunteers door-to-door in regions where refugees had congregated in Irbid, specifically close to the university.


Some kids did not want to be separated from their mothers and fathers after traumatic experiences. Lack of income was an additional issue, as was distance. Some children have been currently operating in supermarkets or marketing sweets at traffic junctions to deliver in funds.


“We had volunteers knocking on doors in a huge back-to-school campaign,” mentioned Ala’ al-Qu’ran, a social worker for Save the Kids in Irbid. “In the starting, it was extremely hard to convince mother and father that schooling is essential, specifically folks from rural regions. It took numerous sessions to persuade them of the long-term importance of schooling.”


To make up for the loss of income from kids and support with school costs, Saudi and Kuwaiti donors have supplied income for rent, for illustration. The back-to-school campaign has led to 17,000 Syrian college young children currently being registered in the Irbid area in the past two many years. But colleges can’t cope with additional demand: the waiting record for Syrian youngsters for school areas in the area has four,000 names. In some schools, containers have been brought in to house added young children.


At Rufaida, there is no denying the enthusiasm of a class of Syrian twelve-year-olds in an English lesson. Hands shoot up as the teacher asks for examples of “comparatives” following writing, “the laptop is not as huge as the old computer” on a green board with a piece of chalk. A single soon after one more, the girls stand up to give examples in halting sentences.


In a maths class, a teacher writes up fractions and ladies take turns to work out which of two numbers – 11/four or 31/two – is larger. Sandy, a shy 10-year-previous, goes up to the board to scribble the answer. One of five young children, she lives in a third-floor apartment of two rooms and a kitchen/hallway in the university district. “I have a whole lot of close friends, I like Arabic class and I like to read through stories about SpongeBob (a cartoon character),” she says.


Her household comes from Homs, Syria’s third greatest city, which has been dubbed the “capital of the Syria revolution”. They arrived in Jordan a 12 months and a half in the past, walking the last 40kms (24 miles) with a group of 60 men and women, surviving on biscuits and cheese for a week.


Save the Young children, persuaded her parents, Abdul and Yousra Azez, to send their young children to school following they had missed a 12 months. The children, aged seven to 13, appear cheerful but it is unclear how long they will stay in Jordan. Abdul, who sold a little a plot of land to finance their escape, has turn into despondent and says he would like to get to Turkey and sooner or later Europe, “the place they respect people and animals”.


He says Syrian communities in Irbid are starting to discriminate against each and every other, claiming that Syrians from Dera’a favour every other when distributing relief supplies such as clothes and milk, as do Syrians from other regions. For Abdul, the inability to get operate – registered refugees are not allowed to function – is grinding him down.


“We escaped death in Syria, but we are dying right here,” he explained. “I know it is quite harmful to attempt to get to Europe but it is far better than staying here.”



Syrian refugees put strain on Jordan schools amid fears for "lost generation"

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