Education experiences of slum communities in COVID-19.
Daniel Magumba

Daniel Magumba

The continued spread of COVID-19 has virtually brought most service sectors to a grinding halt. The Education sector is one of those sectors which, inevitably, have had to greatly slow down. With over 290.5 million learners affected by school closures across the world, the threat of a drastic decline in learning outcomes forced nations to improvise ways of ensuring that learning continues. In Uganda, the Ministry of Education and Sports (MoES) came up with an Education Preparedness and Response Plan (EPRP) to guide this distance learning initiative; with the hope that the learners would be able to study from their homes supported by their parents. Under this Plan, learning materials would be provided to learners through the leadership at community level. Lessons would also be broadcasted live on television and radio to supplement the content in the printed learning materials. Learning would also be accessed online in keeping with the present digital era.

An assessment of the extent to which the EPRP’s distance learning initiative achieved its intended  was undertaken in a Nested Study under the ALERTs Study conducted in the slum communities of Kabalagala-Kataba and Ki-Mombasa Bwaise located within the Kampala Central Business District.

Overall the findings of this nested study are showing that these slum communities had not benefited much from the distance learning programme at primary school level.  Only 20% of the learners had accessed printed learning materials sent from MoES and the high poverty levels in these communities make it impossible for households to afford a television or radio, which disadvantages learners’ access to lesson broadcasts. Less than 10% of the learners accessed the broadcasts and the online option of learning is hardly feasible for learners of whom 10% have access to a mobile phone or computer.

Parental participation and supervision were also severely constrained at less than 5% due to a number of factors – including illiteracy and the need to eke a living. The biting economic conditions, worsened by the lockdown, made the search for a livelihood the primary focus for residents in these communities who predominantly earn from the informal sector. Learning amidst such livelihood challenges was hardly possible and only 20% of the learners at primary school level got involved in the distance learning programme. The lack of meaningful local participation in the rollout of this programme, coupled with slum environmental challenges including sexual and gender-based violence, crime, drug and alcohol abuse significantly contributed to the low involvement of the learners and their caregivers.

Distance learning continues, but children from slum communities remain unable to tap into its benefits. One of the key recommendations from this study is that the conceptualisation and implementation of the learning continuity programme should be done with adequate community participation in order for it to fit the local context in the slums. Government would also need to provide radios to households in these low-income communities to ensure access to lesson broadcasts – these were promised sometime back and would greatly support learning if availed.  Parents, caregivers and local leaders would also need to be engaged, sensitised about the programme and supported to enable their active participation in monitoring their childrens’ involvement in the learning. Some aspects of the programme could be made school-based and involve schools within the community since they have necessary data pertaining to the learners and their parents which would ease the distribution of the materials and the monitoring of the programme. Because distance learning will inevitably be needed for as long as the COVID pandemic is still raging, government will need to revisit policy issues undergirding the rollout of this response to ensure its effectiveness and efficiency.

About the Author

Daniel has over 20 years’ experience in the education sector; he is currently Graduate Scholar and Education Lead on the ALERTs Study. He can be reached on dmagumba@gmail.com

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Catherine Nakidde Nzesei

BSc. | MA | MPH | PhD ongoing

Associate Director of Programmes

Catherine Nakidde Nzesei is the Centre’s Associate Director of Programmes – providing leadership and support to the Programmes Unit across all projects, teams and associates.

Catherine is a public health specialist with graduate training in public health, health promotion and international development. A recipient of the 2022 Commonwealth Scholarship, she embarked on a PhD in public pealth at UCL which is driven by her passion for health system strengthening – and building on previous work around Strengthening Health Professional Regulation in Uganda and Kenya. Catherine’s PhD examines systems and processes for continuous quality improvement of healthcare professional training.

Catherine’s professional interests revolve around leveraging impact from effective systems and empowering vulnerable population categories to enable them to fulfil their potential – whether in a professional, community or personal setting. Some of her previous work has focused on understanding the experiences of refugees and slum dwellers in the COVID-19 pandemic as well as health system resilience. Since inception, Catherine has directly supported for several Centre projects including those on Reproductive Maternal Newborn Child and Adolescent Health (RMNCAH), refugee health and wellbeing, Quality Improvement (QI) and livelihoods.