Berliner Boersenzeitung - Early holiday, more fans: Philippines schools adapt to climate change

EUR -
AED 4.187692
AFN 81.52281
ALL 99.308609
AMD 445.021751
ANG 2.054819
AOA 1046.060528
ARS 1326.735128
AUD 1.778927
AWG 2.052208
AZN 1.942723
BAM 1.96349
BBD 2.301946
BDT 138.518614
BGN 1.96133
BHD 0.429691
BIF 3342.818704
BMD 1.140116
BND 1.498497
BOB 7.877959
BRL 6.487718
BSD 1.14008
BTN 97.320458
BWP 15.714757
BYN 3.730732
BYR 22346.26419
BZD 2.2901
CAD 1.583222
CDF 3280.112763
CHF 0.944173
CLF 0.027778
CLP 1065.951457
CNY 8.308825
CNH 8.310114
COP 4814.650835
CRC 577.067809
CUC 1.140116
CUP 30.213061
CVE 110.93768
CZK 25.057578
DJF 202.621779
DKK 7.489652
DOP 67.324269
DZD 150.94108
EGP 57.848659
ERN 17.101733
ETB 149.473561
FJD 2.574324
FKP 0.855348
GBP 0.856393
GEL 3.124362
GGP 0.855348
GHS 17.455613
GIP 0.855348
GMD 82.088723
GNF 9867.70023
GTQ 8.780506
GYD 238.519445
HKD 8.844093
HNL 29.419357
HRK 7.559313
HTG 148.86961
HUF 406.964677
IDR 19158.501196
ILS 4.124887
IMP 0.855348
INR 97.348593
IQD 1493.551331
IRR 47998.863789
ISK 145.764209
JEP 0.855348
JMD 180.426682
JOD 0.808461
JPY 163.803862
KES 147.649294
KGS 99.70354
KHR 4578.704327
KMF 493.104288
KPW 1026.114005
KRW 1639.908397
KWD 0.349731
KYD 0.950034
KZT 587.047026
LAK 24654.998515
LBP 102009.807837
LKR 341.611519
LRD 228.016076
LSL 21.291702
LTL 3.366465
LVL 0.689645
LYD 6.230776
MAD 10.551814
MDL 19.67733
MGA 5144.775565
MKD 61.684625
MMK 2393.328481
MNT 4045.501137
MOP 9.108796
MRU 45.126204
MUR 51.681868
MVR 17.569611
MWK 1976.88627
MXN 22.237388
MYR 4.986909
MZN 72.967786
NAD 21.297788
NGN 1834.127069
NIO 41.954878
NOK 11.906968
NPR 155.710191
NZD 1.912641
OMR 0.438433
PAB 1.14008
PEN 4.183658
PGK 4.620932
PHP 64.068836
PKR 320.315882
PLN 4.28598
PYG 9119.358087
QAR 4.151204
RON 4.996675
RSD 117.931213
RUB 93.79415
RWF 1614.403576
SAR 4.276502
SBD 9.524881
SCR 16.189269
SDG 684.643561
SEK 11.045132
SGD 1.49823
SHP 0.895952
SLE 25.884803
SLL 23907.633881
SOS 651.580195
SRD 42.048644
STD 23598.089378
SVC 9.974674
SYP 14823.574645
SZL 21.297779
THB 38.205692
TJS 12.062008
TMT 4.001805
TND 3.415829
TOP 2.670269
TRY 43.835122
TTD 7.744435
TWD 37.111943
TZS 3066.911131
UAH 47.678379
UGX 4179.203844
USD 1.140116
UYU 47.594955
UZS 14764.496363
VES 94.985213
VND 29667.516001
VUV 138.090545
WST 3.151197
XAF 658.550803
XAG 0.034457
XAU 0.000343
XCD 3.08122
XDR 0.819694
XOF 656.140581
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.446408
ZAR 21.29474
ZMK 10262.411907
ZMW 31.836112
ZWL 367.116732
  • JRI

    0.1400

    12.74

    +1.1%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    9.35

    +0.43%

  • SCS

    -0.0600

    9.89

    -0.61%

  • NGG

    -0.2200

    72.04

    -0.31%

  • BCC

    -0.5800

    95.51

    -0.61%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.46

    +0.04%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    10.16

    +0.1%

  • RIO

    -1.1300

    60.56

    -1.87%

  • RELX

    0.3800

    53.55

    +0.71%

  • RBGPF

    60.8800

    60.88

    +100%

  • BCE

    -0.3600

    21.65

    -1.66%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.33

    -0%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    37.43

    -0.19%

  • AZN

    0.0200

    69.57

    +0.03%

  • BTI

    -0.4000

    42.05

    -0.95%

  • BP

    0.1900

    29.19

    +0.65%

Early holiday, more fans: Philippines schools adapt to climate change
Early holiday, more fans: Philippines schools adapt to climate change / Photo: Jam STA ROSA - AFP

Early holiday, more fans: Philippines schools adapt to climate change

Kindergarten teacher Lolita Akim fires up five standing fans with three more at the ready as she fights to hold the attention of her pint-sized pupils in Manila's soaring heat.

Text size:

Last year, heatwaves forced millions of children in the Philippines out of school. It was the first time that soaring temperatures had caused widespread class suspensions, prompting a series of changes.

This school year started two months earlier than usual, so the term ends before peak heat in May. Classes have been rearranged to keep children out of the midday heat, and schools are equipped with fans and water stations.

The moves are examples of how countries are adapting to the higher temperatures caused by climate change, often with limited resources.

As a teacher, Akim is on the frontlines of the battle to keep her young charges safe and engaged.

"In this weather, they get drenched in sweat; they become uneasy and stand up often. Getting them to pay attention is more difficult," she said of the five-year-olds in her care at the Senator Benigno S. Aquino Elementary School.

Some six million students lost up to two weeks' worth of classroom learning last year as temperatures hit a record 38.8 degrees Celsius (101.4 degrees Fahrenheit), according to the education department.

Schools reported cases of heat exhaustion, nose bleeds and hospitalisations as students struggled through lessons in classrooms without air conditioning.

Scientists say that extreme heat is a clear marker of climate change, caused largely by burning fossil fuels like coal, oil and gas.

Last year's heat was further exacerbated by the seasonal El Nino phenomenon.

But even this year, nearly half Manila's schools were forced to close for two days in March when the heat index -- a measure of temperature and humidity -- hit "danger" levels.

"We've been reporting (the heat index) since 2011, but it's only been recently that it's become exceptionally warm," national weather service specialist Wilmer Agustin told AFP, attributing it to "El Nino and climate change".

This year, conditions in most of the country will range between "extreme caution" and "danger" on the government's heat alert system, he said, "especially in April and May".

On Friday, scores of schools in Manila were shuttered as temperatures were expected to hit 34C, while the national weather service said the heat index for at least five provinces would hit the danger level.

- 'Significant' impact -

During last year's closures, alternative learning helped make up some of the gap.

But "the overall impact on students' education was significant", said Jocelyn Andaya, assistant education secretary for operations.

So this year, a series of measures have been instated to avoid further learning loss.

Classroom sessions have been shortened to four hours a day -- avoiding the searing midday sun -- and water stations were installed in each classroom as well as at least two oscillating wall fans.

Some newer schools have heat-reflective roofs, and bigger ones now employ nurses.

Just three percent of students affected by last year's heatwaves were able to access online classes, so this year printed material was prepared for students if they must stay home.

Even so, Benigno Aquino school principal Noel Gelua cautioned that "there is no real alternative to face-to-face learning."

But there are limits to what can be done, given the education department has a budget of just 10 billion pesos ($174 million) for climate adaptation, infrastructure and disaster readiness.

The Philippines also has a perennial classroom shortage, with 18,000 more needed in the capital alone.

Manila's public schools do two shifts per day, with about 50 students in each 63 square-metre (678 square-foot) room, exacerbating the heat problem.

Fifth-grader Ella Azumi Araza, 11, can only attend four days a week due to the shortage.

On Fridays, she studies in her family's nine-square-metre cinderblock home on a bed she shares with her younger brother, who suffers from epilepsy.

Three electric fans are always on in the windowless, single-room structure.

As hot as it is at home, her mother Cindella Manabat still frets about conditions at school, saying that she comes home coughing.

"I make her carry a jug of water to prevent dehydration," she said.

- 'Difficult to teach' -

Across the street from Benigno Aquino, eighth-graders at President Corazon C. Aquino High School aimed tiny, rechargeable fans at their bodies while taking an algebra quiz.

Two of the four ceiling fans in the room had given out and the remaining two were clearly not enough for the 40 students.

"It is very difficult to teach in the heat," their teacher Rizzadel Manzano said.

"Motivating them is really a challenge."

A school uniform requirement was ditched earlier this year, and students now wear sweatpants and T-shirts donated by the city, principal Reynora Laurenciano told AFP.

Both schools are located in a densely populated slum area called Baseco, where conditions at home can be even more dire, she added.

"If you ask them, they consider (school) a safer place," Laurenciano said.

(Y.Berger--BBZ)