How in-person summer school programs helped Ukrainians

For Ukrainian ninth grader Nastia, summer school this year has been a revelation.

After 3 1/2 years of war, and with her city of Kharkiv under incessant Russian drone and missile attack, Nastia had grown used to having only online classes and learning remotely through a computer screen.

But this summer, that sterile pattern has been broken. A new program of in-person schooling has provided both catch-up classes and a salve to the trauma of war through the unexpected delight of personal interaction.

Why We Wrote This

In-person schooling is better, it’s agreed. For students and teachers, the stresses of life in a war zone create even more needs that schools can help address. In-person summer programs in eastern Ukraine did just that.

As the start of another online school year approaches, students and teachers alike say the face-to-face summer experience and renewed socialization have been instrumental to their well-being.

Each day, Nastia “runs to these activities, because she knows what she is missing out on, and knows what she receives here,” says her mother, Svitlana Gdanska.

“It wouldn’t be correct to say it takes her stress away, but it takes her mind away,” says Ms. Gdanska. “She is very vocal about her feelings, about what she is going through, related to the war.”

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