1 of 11
When the pandemic shut Philippine schools, a group of teachers living near the indigenous Aeta people became so concerned about the impact on the children of the isolated community that they initiated a novel approach to help them - learning by rickshaw. | Jerico Lansang, a local government worker and parent of an Aeta student, drives a makeshift learning center on a rickshaw to the Aeta community.
Image Credit: REUTERS
2 of 11
While many students across the Philippines have been able to take online classes, the Aeta villages in a mountainous area north of Manila are largely without internet access - or even television reception - for distance learning.
Image Credit: REUTERS
3 of 11
"We had to think of an alternative way to bring the lessons to the children," said Christopher Semsem, one of the teachers behind the project from the Villa Maria Integrated School.
Image Credit: REUTERS
4 of 11
So using old bookshelves and wooden boards, the teachers built a makeshift learning centre complete with a large monitor mounted on top of a motorcycle rickshaw that can bring learning to the villages in the rural province of Pampanga.
Image Credit: REUTERS
5 of 11
Teachers pre-record videos on their mobile phones that are played on the monitor to assist with lessons while avoiding the need for face-to-face contact with the children.
Image Credit: REUTERS
6 of 11
So far Aeta students had responded enthusiastically to the courses and their parents were relieved classes had resumed, the teachers say.
Image Credit: REUTERS
7 of 11
There is debate among anthropologists about the origins of the Aeta, but many have moved to permanent settlements after deforestation upended their traditional nomadic way of life.
Image Credit: REUTERS
8 of 11
School Principal Marizen Tolentino said the rickshaw initiative was vital to help the children comprehend the modules.
Image Credit: REUTERS
9 of 11
"Some of our Aeta (students) cannot read ... How are they going to be able to answer the modules?" questioned Tolentino.
Image Credit: REUTERS
10 of 11
Since launching the initiative in early October, the rickshaw has visited five villages, reaching around 500 students from primary school to senior high, two to three times a week.
Image Credit: REUTERS
11 of 11
The project by the teachers is entirely voluntary, though the local government provided the rickshaw and driver. | A public school teacher uses a megaphone to call students at the makeshift rickshaw learning center.
Image Credit: REUTERS