The Daily Telegraph

Children rely on sign language after lockdown affected speech

Generation of students left with major developmen­tal issues as result of the pandemic, report finds

- By Mark Ludlow

TEACHERS are being forced to improvise with sign language to communicat­e with primary school students whose language skills have been severely impacted by lockdowns, according to a new report. The report by The Associatio­n of School and College Leaders, a teaching union, found the pandemic had left a generation of students with major developmen­tal issues including a lack of toilet training, anxiety in social spaces and depression.

The report, written by Tim Oates , the group director of Cambridge University Press and Assessment, found the recovery from lockdowns would take five to 10 years to work its way through the education system.

“It will be a long slog, not a walk in the park,” he said. “There are serious dangers in simply assuming that schools are ‘back to normal’ – they are not – and assuming they will easily be able to meet the needs of young people affected by lockdowns and pandemic.”

The pandemic affected different cohorts of students in different ways, the report found. It said teachers were “needing to improvise with sign language for five year-olds with severely underdevel­oped language to older children absent through anxiety”.

“While secondary schools are reporting an increase in reading difficulti­es among Year 7 pupils, poor personal organisati­on and challengin­g patterns of interactio­n, staff in primary schools are reporting very serious problems of arrested language developmen­t, lack of toilet training, anxiety in being in social spaces, and depressed executive function,” it said.

“These problems are real, widespread and significan­t.

“We should urgently apply remedies to these problems and ensure the problems are diminished – hopefully to zero – rather than accept and accommodat­e them.”

The report draws upon Cambridge’s own research on the impact of lockdowns on the “Covid generation” and recommends better assessment and monitoring to understand how each child has been affected.

Mr Oates warned that dealing with the impact of the pandemic will require a “protracted, grinding effort” and an evidence-driven response co-designed by schools, union and government.

Pepe Di’lasio, general secretary of the Associatio­n of School and College Leaders, said the report showed while the headlines had moved on from Covid, the impact on schools and children remained a day-to-day reality.

He said: “Schools continue to see high rates of pupil absence and they have many pupils with complex needs.”

He added: “We urge the new government to work with us on developing targeted, well-funded policies that respond to the challenges outlined in this report.”

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