Covid legacy still affecting children, say teachers

Cash Murphy
BBC News, South East
Juliette Parkin/BBC Michelle Catterson, Executive Head at Moon Hall School in Reigate, stood in front of a wall featuring a sign welcome people to the school. Michelle has long black hair and is wearing a black suit jacket and white patterned shirt. Juliette Parkin/BBC
Michelle Catterson, headteacher at Moon Hall School, says children are still feeling the effects of a loss of normality

Children in the South East are still feeling the effects of Covid-19 five years on, school leaders have said.

In March 2020, the UK's 24,000 schools were closed for most children at the start of the pandemic, opening and closing multiple times in the months that followed.

Anne Longfield, who was the children's commissioner for England during this time, told the Covid inquiry that its impact will affect the most vulnerable children for years to come.

Michelle Catterson, headteacher at the Moon Hall School in Reigate, Surrey, for children with dyslexia, said pupils' "normality was gone - it was out of the window".

Ms Catterson said the increase in children having anxiety, school refusal and mental health referrals seen since the pandemic hasn't subsided with time.

She attributes this to the long-lasting impact of the pandemic.

"Children did not see their friends, their normality was gone - it was out of the window," Ms Catterson said.

"They didn't see the teachers. That routine, especially for children with special educational needs is really important.

"I think that has had a long-term detrimental impact to them."

Sarah Brinicombe/BBC Mary Gates, the headteacher at Edenbridge Primary School, pictured in a classroom at the school. She is stood in front of a wall with children's drawings and paintings. Mary is wearing a green dress, black jacket and blue lanyard. She has long blonde/brown hair.Sarah Brinicombe/BBC
Mary Gates, headteacher at Edenbridge Primary School, believes the pandemic was a "transformative time for us as school leaders"

The loss of routine is something that children at Edenbridge Primary School in Kent also struggled with.

Headteacher Mary Gates said this created learning gaps that "we're still seeing today".

Efforts are being made to redress this, she said.

"We recognised that social skills was a really big factor...[and] also speech and language development - particularly for our younger children, so we put a big focus on vocabulary, on speaking and listening opportunities within the curriculum," she said.

The school is "almost over teaching certain elements", she added.

Both Ms Catterson and Ms Gates agree that Covid-19 represented an incredibly challenging time.

Ms Catterson said that managing a pandemic "definitely didn't come up" in her training, while Ms Gates believes this period was ultimately "transformative" for school leaders.

Kent-based educational psychologist Dr Mickel Johnson said the enduring effects were most visible in children in Years One to Four.

Dr Johnson said: "The impact that we've noticed in our role is definitely the increased awareness of anxiety or difficulties in implementing social behaviours in the playground within the school environment."

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