A health issue quickly grew into a bigger issue involving children’s rights. Talk about the effectiveness of the National Commission for Protection of Child Rights’ (NCPCR) involvement in defending children’s rights in this regard.
AI-driven personalized learning tailors educational experiences to meet individual student needs, offering many benefits. One major advantage is customized learning paths. AI can analyze a student's strengths and weaknesses, creating lessons that focus on areas where they need improvement. This meanRead more
AI-driven personalized learning tailors educational experiences to meet individual student needs, offering many benefits. One major advantage is customized learning paths. AI can analyze a student’s strengths and weaknesses, creating lessons that focus on areas where they need improvement. This means students can learn at their own pace, making education more effective and enjoyable.
For example, a student struggling with math can get extra practice problems and interactive tutorials, while a student excelling in reading might receive more advanced texts to keep them challenged. This personalized approach helps all students achieve their best, regardless of their starting point.
Another benefit is instant feedback. AI tools can quickly grade assignments and provide feedback, helping students understand their mistakes and learn from them right away. This immediate response keeps students engaged and motivated.
However, there are challenges. One concern is the lack of human interaction. Learning with AI might reduce the opportunities for students to ask questions and receive guidance from teachers. Another issue is data privacy. To personalize learning, AI systems need to collect a lot of information about students, raising concerns about how this data is used and protected.
In summary, AI-driven personalized learning can greatly enhance education by tailoring lessons to individual needs, but it also comes with challenges like reduced human interaction and data privacy concerns.
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COVID 19, was an unprecedented health crisis that has resulted in nearly millions of deaths, disrupted healthcare infrastructures, ravaged economies, communities and pushed millions into clutches of poverty again. However, one aspect which was largely neglected until recently in the pandemonium is tRead more
COVID 19, was an unprecedented health crisis that has resulted in nearly millions of deaths, disrupted healthcare infrastructures, ravaged economies, communities and pushed millions into clutches of poverty again. However, one aspect which was largely neglected until recently in the pandemonium is the child rights crisis due to pandemic. Children who contract COVID-19 may appear to have less severe symptoms and lower mortality rates than other age groups. But in myriad other ways, the COVID-19 crisis has had and is having a devastating effect on children, with potentially far-reaching and long-term negative impacts.
Impact Of Covid-19 On Children
For years to come, children and young people will be living with the longer term, secondary impacts of this pandemic on them, and how the world chooses to respond to those will have a far-reaching impact on children’s lives. 1. Learning loss: The pandemic has resulted in the loss of learning and skills. The World Bank’s simulations at the end of 2020 showed that the Learning Poverty indicator is set to increase from 53% to 63%.
2. Child abuse: There has been an increase in early marriages, child labor, sexual exploitation, teenage pregnancies, endangering children’s physical and mental wellbeing (UNICEF report, 2020).
3. As the global death toll from COVID-19 increases, large numbers of children will be orphaned and vulnerable to exploitation and abuse. As per NCPCR 3,621 children were orphaned, 26,176 children lost either parent and 274 children were abandoned between April 1, 2021, to June 5, 2021. 4. Impact on marginalized: Marginalized communities were the worst affected. E.g., only 4% of rural SC/ST children were studying online regularly compared with 15% among other rural children as per the SCHOOL survey. 5. Malnutrition: There is reduced access to essential maternal, newborn, and child health interventions. The threat of malnutrition increased due to a halt in critical government schemes such as mid-day meals. 6. The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted grave weaknesses in many countries’ protections for children, including inadequate healthcare and social protection systems, overcrowded detention facilities, and the lack of emergency action plans for large-scale school shutdowns. 7. Illegal adoptions: The children who were orphaned during the pandemic were being illegally adopted disregarding rules as per the JJ act and NCPCR guidelines. These illegally adopted children are in danger of being trafficked or used for child labour or sexual abuse.
Role Played By The National Commission For Protection Of Child Rights (Ncpcr) In Upholding Child Rights
Issues In Working Of National Commission For Protection Of Child Rights
Way Forward
The risks posed by the COVID-19 crisis to children are enormous. Governments have a responsibility not only to act urgently to protect children during the pandemic, but to consider how their decisions now can best uphold children’s rights long after the pandemic ends.
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