June has not been and will not be a regular month in Uruguay. 90 years ago, the construction of the legendary Centenario Stadium that would host the first World Cup was underway, running against the clock. June 2020 will also be a time of preparation and challenges. The reopening of rural educational centers that took place in April will gradually become generalized to urban educational centers, in a hybrid scheme that combines the in-person model with at-home activities. In 1930 Uruguay was the first country to host the World Cup; in 2020 it will, likewise, be the first country in the region to experience the reopening education systems. Uruguay faced the closure of educational centers, due to the pandemic caused by COVID-19, and the three challenges of remote emergency teaching - maintaining the teacher-student and school-families links, delivering educational content, and monitoring learning - in better conditions than any other country in the region. The digital transformation of the education process had an early impulse with the CEIBAL Plan that universally provided devices, content platforms, and learning management systems, in addition to training teachers in its use and promoting new pedagogical practices. Thus, in the face of the emergency, the system in general and the management and teaching teams responded quickly. The number of teachers and students who entered the learning management system quadrupled compared to pre-pandemic statistics: more than 75% of the students and over 84% of teachers connected to the platform. However, the access gap to this system among students in quintile 1 and 5 is 22 percentage points. Likewise, internet access at home is uneven (99% for households in quintile 5 compared to 70% for those in quintile 1, according to preliminary data from the 2019 Survey on Uses of Information and Communication Technologies). Additionally, the possibility of families accompanying their children is also uneven (23% of middle-class families have heads of household with a minimum of 13 years of education compared with 1.5% of the poorest). Exiting the emergency will present enormous challenges. Reopening in stages The recovery of in-person classes will be in stages. Activities that facilitate the conclusion and continuity of educational cycles, such as exams, will be resumed immediately. Also, those activities that address situations of educational vulnerability, accompaniment, and tutoring activities for those students who need it will also resume right away. The last stage will be the resumption of in-person administration and management activities in the central and local offices. For the opening of educational centers, a progressive strategy will be applied in three stages:
- As of June 1st, all the primary cycle educational centers that serve vulnerable populations and students on their last year of secondary education will begin to operate, excluding those located in Montevideo and the metropolitan area;
- As of June 15th, all initial education and early childhood services will begin, along with the rest of the primary education centers in non-urban areas and those that serve vulnerable populations in Montevideo and the metropolitan area. In middle school, there will be a generalized opened both to the rest of the educational centers in non-urban areas, and to seniors in Montevideo and the metropolitan area;
- Finally, on June 29, the reopening of all other primary, secondary and technical education centers, both public and private, is enabled throughout the country.