The Indonesian government has said that it planned to immediately set up
makeshift schools in some 95 locations near refugee camps in tsunami-ravaged
Aceh to allow students in the tsunami-hit province to resume their education
activities.
Minister for National Education Bambang Sudibyo explained that school
activities in devastated areas during the first month will be focused more on
efforts to deal with psychological and emotional impacts on students, helping
them overcome the trauma of the disaster.
"We have also ordered surviving schools (in the province) to accept students
from other (damaged) schools, and to set up two shifts, one for the morning and
one in the afternoon," he was quoted by The Jakarta Post newspaper as saying.
The massive undersea quake and subsequent tsunami on Dec. 26 washed away many
school buildings in Aceh. The province's west coast areas bore the brunt of the
disaster.
According to one estimate some 420 school buildings across Acehwere destroyed
by the disaster, and some 1,000 teachers died.
The government plans to bring in new teachers from outside the province to
facilitate the rehabilitation of the school system in Aceh.
"We have received offers from several universities to send their students to
support the education process. State-owned Gadjah Mada University will send some
500 students to the provinceto teach," Bambang said.
The minister said that for the first few weeks school activities will be
focused on psychological healing for the children
"We will begin with the cognitive aspects after they have recovered from the
trauma, but we will do our best to ensure that they are not left behind compared
to students in the rest of the country," Bambang said.