English, asked by Deepeshraj24102007, 7 months ago

aNSSan essay on my life in corona my first day of online class when i joined it was already to late for me to join maam scholed me the most frame some some questions from it

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

  • As the coronavirus spreads across the country, states and localities are facing mounting pressures to close school doors. Many states moved with swift action, but because the situation is evolving so rapidly, the exact number of closures is a moving target. As of today, there are at least 104,000 school closures affecting 47.9 million students.

  • Closing schools and transitioning to online learning is critical to stymying the spread of the virus, but experts agree that the transition won’t be easy. Among the many challenges—from providing meals for low-income students to finding child care for essential workers—relying on remote learning and online classes also exposes the country’s deep digital divides. Simply put, too many American children live without essential internet services.

  • According to 2017 data from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), 3.1 million households (14.1%) with school-aged children have no wired broadband connection at home. Though some of these families likely have a wireless subscription, these data plans aren’t sufficient for extended online learning.

Answered by KrishnaKumar01
0

Answer:

Answer:

As the coronavirus spreads across the country, states and localities are facing mounting pressures to close school doors. Many states moved with swift action, but because the situation is evolving so rapidly, the exact number of closures is a moving target. As of today, there are at least 104,000 school closures affecting 47.9 million students.

Closing schools and transitioning to online learning is critical to stymying the spread of the virus, but experts agree that the transition won’t be easy. Among the many challenges—from providing meals for low-income students to finding child care for essential workers—relying on remote learning and online classes also exposes the country’s deep digital divides. Simply put, too many American children live without essential internet services.

According to 2017 data from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), 3.1 million households (14.1%) with school-aged children have no wired broadband connection at home. Though some of these families likely have a wireless subscription, these data plans aren’t sufficient for extended online learning.

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