Intentar ORO - Gratis
Covid's Troubled Children
India Today
|March 07, 2022
They have paid a high price for safety in the pandemic. As they return to school, how do we compensate for the two lost years of schooling and childhood?
Four-year-old Devyani (name changed) could hardly contain her excitement when told she would be going to school on February 21. She had joined kindergarten last year in a South Delhi school, but could attend classes only online, where she would first greet her teacher and then every one of her classmates. However, when her father took her to first day of school and her class teacher came out to meet her, Devyani shrank back, and asked her father, “Where did she come from?” Having seen her teacher only on a computer screen, the young child had trouble dealing with her in person.
Covid wasn’t easy for eight-year-old Tara (name changed) either. While her architect parents were busy working from home, she would kill time watching cartoon shows and consuming packet after packet of chips, biscuits, Maggi noodles and other junk food. By the time her parents realised their daughter had a problem, she had piled on a whopping 10 kilos during the lockdown. “It affected her studies and she became reluctant to attend online classes,” recalls her mum. “When we took her to the doctor and had blood tests done, we were told she was low on several vitamins and essential minerals.” Putting Tara on a healthy diet proved a big challenge —junk food had become the lonely child’s comfort food.
In Mumbai, 12-year-old Aditya (
Esta historia es de la edición March 07, 2022 de India Today.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE India Today
India Today
Built of Change
Two new exhibitions in Delhi celebrate the extraordinary range of work by the late SATISH GUJRAL
2 mins
February 02, 2026
India Today
WAGING JUSTICE AGAINST ABUSE
With domestic violence and sexual abuse against women and children a sordid reality, Majlis Legal Centre takes this ogre head on and provides victims with the wherewithal and strength to emerge stronger from their ordeals
1 mins
February 02, 2026
India Today
BAREFOOT WAY OF EARNING A LIVING
By removing education as a barrier to learning skills such as solar engineering, Barefoot College has empowered rural folk to make a livelihood for themselves and train others too
2 mins
February 02, 2026
India Today
RURAL SALVATION
BAIF's work among the rural masses since the late 1960s, especially in dairying and women's empowerment, has helped lift thousands out of poverty
2 mins
February 02, 2026
India Today
BIG SHOES TO FILL
The BJP gets its youngest president as the party hints at generational change. But there will be no idling time, Nitin Nabin will have to hit the road running
7 mins
February 02, 2026
India Today
ENSURING DIGNITY FOR THE AGED
Aaji Care, an assisted-living centre for senior citizens, is raising standards of palliative care in three major cities and bringing long-overdue respect to caregivers
2 mins
February 02, 2026
India Today
THE GIFT OF SIGHT
Trained medics and top doctors operating the latest machines have restored the eyesight of millions, mostly for free. Day in, day out, this is what Aravind Eye Hospital does to remain true to its founding vision
2 mins
February 02, 2026
India Today
A Dance Awakening
Dr Sonal Mansingh on curating the ongoing Festival of New Choreographies - Kala Yatra 2026 (Jan. 13-29) in Delhi, which brings together 10 eminent dance institutions and gurus from across India
1 mins
February 02, 2026
India Today
Beyond the SPOTLIGHT
SUMANA RAMANAN's The Secret Master is a fine study of Hindustani vocalist Arun Kashalkar, revered outside of the mainstream
1 mins
February 02, 2026
India Today
FIXING BROKEN CITIES
From national policy advocacy to ground-up capacity-building, Janaagraha shows how patient institutional reform can reshape Indian cities at scale
2 mins
February 02, 2026
Translate
Change font size

