EU Reporter
Published 2 months ago
When a teacher told Syrian mother Um Wajih that her 9-year-old son s German had deteriorated during his Berlin school s six-week shutdown, she was saddened but not surprised, writes Joseph Nasr. Wajih had picked up German fast, and we were very proud of him, said the 25-year-old mother of two. I knew that without practice he would forget what he had learned but I couldn t help him.
Her son now faces another year in a welcome class for migrant children until his German is good enough to join native peers at a school in Berlin s poor neighbourhood of Neukoelln.
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Migrant children and teenagers in Germany are disproportionately affected by the country s longer than average lockdowns, experts say. They warn that the widening education gap between migrant pupils and their native peers could derail efforts to integrate the hundreds of thousands of asylum seekers in Germany. My son had picked up German fast, and we were very proud of him, said Um Wajih, a Syrian mother of two. But then came the pandemic.
During the six-week shutdown that started in March last year, Wajih s son wasn t able to attend his Berlin school in person. Consequently, the 9-year-old s German worsened significantly, a teacher told her. Wajih was saddened but not surprised.
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BERLIN When a teacher told Syrian mother Um Wajih that her 9-year-old son’s German had deteriorated during his Berlin school’s six-week shutdown, she was saddened but not surprised.
“Wajih had picked up German fast, and we were very proud of him,” said the 25-year-old mother of two.
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Try refreshing your browser, or Germany s lengthy pandemic school closures hit migrant pupils hardest Back to video
“I knew that without practice he would forget what he had learned but I couldn’t help him.”
Her son now faces another year in a ‘welcome class’ for migrant children until his German is good enough to join native peers at a school in Berlin’s poor neighborhood of Neukoelln.