Inmates watching a Math class on Prospathodas TV, or Trying TV. Photos: AP
Setting up a television channel from scratch isn’t the most obvious or easiest thing for a math teacher to do – especially without prior technical knowledge and for use inside a prison.
But that is exactly the task Petros Damianos, director of the school at Greece’s Avlona Special Youth Detention Center, took on so his students could access the lessons that coronavirus lockdowns cut them off from.
Greek schools have shut, reopened, and closed again over the past year as authorities sought to curtail the spread of the virus. Like their peers across much of the globe, the country’s students adapted to virtual classes.
In a Greek Detention Center, an Official Uses TV to Teach Prisoners
February 28, 2021
Prisoners sitting in a room while they watch a recorded music lesson in Avlona prison, north of Athens, Greece. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)
Share
share
The URL has been copied to your clipboard
0:00
0:06:00
0:00
Pop-out player
The director of a detention center in Greece is using television to teach the young men there who have no other way to get an education.
Petros Damianos is the director of the school at Greece’s Avlona Special Youth Detention Center. He started the school in 2000. The men held at the detention center are between the ages of 18 to 25. Attendance at the voluntary school became popular. By September 2020, 96 percent of the prisoners had signed up.
AVLONA, Greece - Setting up a television channel from scratch isn’t the most obvious or easiest thing for a math teacher to do especially without prio.
A math teacher in Greece has figured out a way to make sure that the education of young inmates is not ignored: TV classes in a detention center. School is “a bit more human than the rest of the prison,” said one inmate. “It’s a bit like family.”
The Latest: UK invests in studies of long COVID-19 syndrome
by The Associated Press
Last Updated Feb 18, 2021 at 5:58 am EDT
LONDON The British government is backing four new studies to investigate why some people continue to have symptoms months after becoming sick with COVID-19.
The Department of Health on Thursday announced 18.5 million pounds ($26 million) in funding for research into the causes, symptoms and effects of the phenomenon known as “long COVID.”
While most people recover from the coronavirus in a few weeks, about one in 10 still have symptoms 12 weeks later. Researchers around the world are trying to understand the causes and dozens of symptoms that include breathlessness, headaches, fatigue and “brain fog.”