Syria-Reconstruction/Education

Syria faces challenges in resuming education system following conflicts

  • English
  • Español

Shotlist


Damascus, Syria - Recent (CGTN - No Access Chinese Mainland/Orient TV/Syria Alshaab TV/Zanoubia TV/Alhurra TV/ANN TV/Al Jazeera/ Al-Arabiya TV)
1. Various of damaged school buildings, facilities
2. Various of children at school
3. Various of interior of classroom, facilities
4. Various of students in classroom
5. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Lina Jord, principal, local school (partially overlaid with shot 6):
"The maximum salary for a teacher is roughly 260,000 to 400,000 Syrian pounds, which comes to 30 U.S. dollars per month. Teachers can do almost nothing with this salary. The cost of transportation for a teacher to come to school might amount to 150,000 Syrian pounds a day. So many have to walk for over an hour to their schools."
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
6. Various of people printing, sorting documents
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
7. Children at school
8. Various of damaged facilities at school
9. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Zain, fifth-grade student (full name not given/partially overlaid with shot 10):
"In this area, we set up two nets near each other. Sometimes we place them opposite to each other so we can play football. The more we participate in sports class and running, the more we can get warm."
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
10. Children playing ball game
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
11. Children playing ball game
12. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Hind Abdulaziz, third-grade student (partially overlaid with shot 13):
"When I arrive at school every day in the morning, I would be a bit warm. But I feel colder when I sit on the chair. So I start to do my writing while standing, then it will be better."
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
13. Heating radiator in classroom
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
14. Various of students, teachers at school
15. People walking in school building

Storyline


Resuming a safe and stable education system for young people in Syria is a major challenge for the new government in Damascus, as years of crisis destroyed facilities across the country.

More than 7,000 schools have been destroyed in the 13-year-long civil war, leaving around 2 million children out of education. This has produced an entire generation of children who have never been enrolled by schools.

As a new transitional government took shape in Damascus following the ouster of President Bashar al-Assad in December 2024, the economic and security challenges still facing the war-torn nation have become clear.

The political turmoil added to the crisis in education, as inadequate resources make it difficult to repair damaged schools. And this, in turn, piles pressure on schools that are still functioning.

The inadequate resources of the government have made it difficult to provide any funds for repairs or improving the functioning schools.

Many teachers do not attend their classes everyday as transportation is too expensive compared to what they earn.

"The maximum salary for a teacher is roughly 260,000 to 400,000 Syrian pounds, which comes to 30 U.S. dollars per month. Teachers can do almost nothing with this salary. The cost of transportation for a teacher to come to school might amount to 150,000 Syrian pounds a day. So many have to walk for over an hour to their schools," said Lina Jord, principal of a local primary school in Damascus.

The students are suffering no less than their teachers, with a lack of heating, long power outages, and an absence of proper entertainment.

"In this area, we set up two nets near each other. Sometimes we place them opposite to each other so we can play football. The more we participate in sports class and running, the more we can get warm," said a fifth-grade student.

"When I arrive at school every day in the morning, I would be a bit warm. But I feel colder when I sit on the chair. So I start to do my writing while standing, then it will be better," said Hind Abdulaziz, a third-grade student.

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  • ID : 8411606
  • Dateline : Recent
  • Location : Syrian Arab Republic
  • Category : Other
  • Duration : 2'25
  • Audio Language : Arabic/Nats
  • Source : China Global Television Network (CGTN)
  • Restrictions : No access Chinese mainland
  • Published : 2025-01-10 20:37
  • Last Modified : 2025-01-11 15:35:00
  • Version : 1
  • ID : 8411606
  • Dateline : Reciente
  • Location : Siria
  • Category : Other
  • Duration : 2'25
  • Audio Language : Árabe/Nats
  • Source : China Central Television (CCTV)
  • Restrictions : No acceso a la parte continental de China
  • Published : 2025-01-11 14:37
  • Last Modified : 2025-01-11 15:35:00
  • Version : 1

Syria-Reconstruction/Education

Syria faces challenges in resuming education system following conflicts

Dateline : Recent

Location : Syrian Arab Republic

Duration : 2'25

  • English
  • Español


Damascus, Syria - Recent (CGTN - No Access Chinese Mainland/Orient TV/Syria Alshaab TV/Zanoubia TV/Alhurra TV/ANN TV/Al Jazeera/ Al-Arabiya TV)
1. Various of damaged school buildings, facilities
2. Various of children at school
3. Various of interior of classroom, facilities
4. Various of students in classroom
5. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Lina Jord, principal, local school (partially overlaid with shot 6):
"The maximum salary for a teacher is roughly 260,000 to 400,000 Syrian pounds, which comes to 30 U.S. dollars per month. Teachers can do almost nothing with this salary. The cost of transportation for a teacher to come to school might amount to 150,000 Syrian pounds a day. So many have to walk for over an hour to their schools."
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
6. Various of people printing, sorting documents
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
7. Children at school
8. Various of damaged facilities at school
9. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Zain, fifth-grade student (full name not given/partially overlaid with shot 10):
"In this area, we set up two nets near each other. Sometimes we place them opposite to each other so we can play football. The more we participate in sports class and running, the more we can get warm."
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
10. Children playing ball game
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
11. Children playing ball game
12. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Hind Abdulaziz, third-grade student (partially overlaid with shot 13):
"When I arrive at school every day in the morning, I would be a bit warm. But I feel colder when I sit on the chair. So I start to do my writing while standing, then it will be better."
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
13. Heating radiator in classroom
++SHOT OVERLAYING SOUNDBITE++
14. Various of students, teachers at school
15. People walking in school building


Resuming a safe and stable education system for young people in Syria is a major challenge for the new government in Damascus, as years of crisis destroyed facilities across the country.

More than 7,000 schools have been destroyed in the 13-year-long civil war, leaving around 2 million children out of education. This has produced an entire generation of children who have never been enrolled by schools.

As a new transitional government took shape in Damascus following the ouster of President Bashar al-Assad in December 2024, the economic and security challenges still facing the war-torn nation have become clear.

The political turmoil added to the crisis in education, as inadequate resources make it difficult to repair damaged schools. And this, in turn, piles pressure on schools that are still functioning.

The inadequate resources of the government have made it difficult to provide any funds for repairs or improving the functioning schools.

Many teachers do not attend their classes everyday as transportation is too expensive compared to what they earn.

"The maximum salary for a teacher is roughly 260,000 to 400,000 Syrian pounds, which comes to 30 U.S. dollars per month. Teachers can do almost nothing with this salary. The cost of transportation for a teacher to come to school might amount to 150,000 Syrian pounds a day. So many have to walk for over an hour to their schools," said Lina Jord, principal of a local primary school in Damascus.

The students are suffering no less than their teachers, with a lack of heating, long power outages, and an absence of proper entertainment.

"In this area, we set up two nets near each other. Sometimes we place them opposite to each other so we can play football. The more we participate in sports class and running, the more we can get warm," said a fifth-grade student.

"When I arrive at school every day in the morning, I would be a bit warm. But I feel colder when I sit on the chair. So I start to do my writing while standing, then it will be better," said Hind Abdulaziz, a third-grade student.

ID : 8411606

Published : 2025-01-10 20:37

Last Modified : 2025-01-11 15:35:00

Source : China Global Television Network (CGTN)

Restrictions : No access Chinese mainland

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