JNS.org – Those Israeli parents who are still working face a near-mission impossible when it comes to making sure their children are keeping up with their schoolwork.

According to Joint Chairman of the Parents Leadership in Ra’anana Odelia Shindorf, herself a mother of two, “This is a lost school year.”

Remote learning, said Shindorf, “is causing despair. It’s not effective. But the main issue is loneliness. Parents are reporting tough feelings. We hear that from every home where there are high schoolers.”

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While the numbers prove high schools are COVID-19 hot spots, “The reports forget to take into account the long-term damage, the kids’ emotional difficulties, the lack of effective teaching, the sense of despair, and the system’s lack of preparedness,” said Shindorf.

Eyal Levanon, chairman of the Tel Aviv-Jaffa parent-teacher association and the father of an eighth grade student, concurred, saying, “The biggest concern is the emotional issue. The kids have been cut off from their environments, from their friends, from their classes and groups. The distance learning solution doesn’t meet emotional needs. We are raising a generation that could be hurt beyond the pedagogical [loss], in terms of emotional and mental health, as well.”

Israel, he added, “has to understand that it is losing a generation. It needs to put all the money it has or doesn’t have into bringing them back to school.”

School administrators are also facing new challenges—in particular that of running schools when both students and teachers are at home. Read more at Algemeiner