1 MONGOLIA RECEIVES NATIONAL PRODUCTIVITY MASTER PLAN (2026–35) TO DRIVE PRODUCTIVITY-LED GROWTH, RESILIENCE, AND SHARED PROSPERITY WWW.GLOBALNEWSWIRE.COM PUBLISHED:2026/01/29      2 78 FOREIGN NATIONALS FROM 12 COUNTRIES DEPORTED FROM MONGOLIA WWW.GOGO.MN PUBLISHED:2026/01/29      3 JAPANESE MILITARY MAPS REVEAL FIRST LOOK AT THE HIDDEN GREAT MONGOLIAN ROAD WWW.INDIANDEFENCEREVIEW.COM PUBLISHED:2026/01/29      4 SILVER ELEPHANT ANNOUNCES FAVORABLE TAX TRIBUNAL RULING IN MONGOLIA WWW.INVESTINGNEWS.COM PUBLISHED:2026/01/29      5 MELTING RESERVES OF POWER: MONGOLIA’S GLACIERS AND THE FUTURE OF ENERGY AND FOOD SECURITY WWW.RELIEFWEB.INT PUBLISHED:2026/01/28      6 MONGOLIA CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY REPORT 2025: OUTPUT TO GROW AT AN AAGR OF 4.3% BETWEEN 2026-2029, SUPPORTED BY INVESTMENTS IN TRANSPORTATION, ELECTRICITY, AND INFRASTRUCTURE - RESEARCHANDMARKETS.COM WWW.BUSINESSWIRE.COM PUBLISHED:2026/01/28      7 EMERGING CHANGES IN THE METHODS AND TACTICS OF HUMAN TRAFFICKING WWW.GOV.MN PUBLISHED:2026/01/28      8 MONGOLIA PLANS TO PRODUCE 90 MILLION TONS OF COAL THIS YEAR WWW.MONTSAME.MN PUBLISHED:2026/01/27      9 MINING SECTOR WEEK OPENS, PLANNED LEGAL REFORMS OUTLINED WWW.MONTSAME.MN PUBLISHED:2026/01/27      10 13 PEOPLE FREEZE TO DEATH IN MONGOLIA IN JANUARY WWW.XINHUANET.COM PUBLISHED:2026/01/27      МАНАЙ УЛС ДАХЬ ХАМГИЙН УРТ БУЮУ 12.6 КМ ДАМЖУУРГЫГ АШИГЛАЛТАД ОРУУЛЖЭЭ WWW.GOGO.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/01/29     ББСБ-УУДЫН ХЭРЭГЛЭЭНИЙ БОЛОН ЦАХИМ ЗЭЭЛИЙН ДАВХАРДЛЫГ БУУРУУЛАХ ШИЙДВЭР ГАРЛАА WWW.ITOIM.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/01/29     НИСЭХ БУУДЛЫН ӨРГӨТГӨЛИЙГ ЯАРАЛТАЙ ЭХЛЭХ ШААРДЛАГАТАЙГ ДАХИН ТОДОТГОВ WWW.MONTSAME.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/01/29     “ЗЭРЛЭГ АДУУГ ДАХИН НУТАГШУУЛАХ” ТӨСӨЛ ХЭРЭГЖИНЭ WWW.EGUUR.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/01/29     МОНГОЛ УЛСЫН ГАДААД ПАСПОРТ ХҮЧИРХЭГ БАЙДЛААРАА 73-Т ЖАГСЖЭЭ WWW.NEWS.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/01/29     АНУ-ЫН ХУДАЛДАА, ХӨГЖЛИЙН АГЕНТЛАГ МОНГОЛД 2.2 САЯ ДОЛЛАРЫН БУЦАЛТГҮЙ ТУСЛАМЖ ҮЗҮҮЛНЭ WWW.EAGLE.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/01/29     ЗЭСИЙН БАЯЖМАЛЫН ҮЙЛДВЭРИЙН ТӨСЛИЙН ХАМТРАГЧИЙГ ЭНЭ ОНЫ I УЛИРАЛД ШАЛГАРУУЛНА WWW.NEWS.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/01/29     АЖ ҮЙЛДВЭРИЙН САЛБАРЫН НИЙТ ҮЙЛДВЭРЛЭЛ ӨМНӨХ ОНЫ МӨН ҮЕЭС 4.8 ХУВИАР ӨСӨВ WWW.EAGLE.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/01/28     ЗГ: ЗЭС ХАЙЛУУЛАХ ҮЙЛДВЭРИЙН СОНГОН ШАЛГАРУУЛАЛТЫН ТАЛААР МЭДЭЭЛНЭ WWW.NEWS.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/01/28     12 УЛСЫН 78 ИРГЭНИЙГ АЛБАДАН ГАРГАВ WWW.EAGLE.MN НИЙТЭЛСЭН:2026/01/28    

Mongolian pupils go back to school and end long education exile www.france24.com

Guiding her younger brother from their yurt on the outskirts of Ulaanbaatar, 15-year-old Urangoo Basandorj could barely contain her excitement for Wednesday's return to school, as Mongolia's children mark the end of grinding months of exile from education.
The country of three million has taken some of the world's toughest and most enduring measures against the Covid-19 pandemic, shutting schools and kindergartens since January 2020 and plunging children into a purgatory of remote learning with patchy access to technology.
Nearly two-thirds of the population has been fully vaccinated yet Mongolia reported 3,726 new virus cases on Wednesday -- the highest daily increase since the pandemic hit the country, the health ministry said.
Still, masked students in blazers filed into a primary school in the capital Ulanbaatar, where classrooms were kitted out with temperature monitors, hand sanitiser and social distancing stickers.
"I heard the news about reopening schools and I was super excited... I was so happy and I dreamt (of) my classmates all night," Urangoo Basandorj told AFP.
"It was so difficult not (being) able to meet my friends... the online class wasn’t nice."
Parents across Mongolia -- a landlocked country where nearly a third of people live below the poverty line -- have complained of varying access to education since the pandemic first emerged in neighbouring China, with televised classes condemned as limited and online learning restricted to those with internet access.
For the urban poor and remote herding communities, education has been patchy at best, conducted inside small, congested homes where some families lack televisions or a reliable power supply.
Complaints snowballed around social media but authorities stuck to movement restrictions and home learning, apart from a short respite late last year when schools were briefly reopened.
- 'It's time to adapt' -
Wednesday's reopening saw parents living in yurt districts near the capital -- city dwellers from Mongolia's nomadic culture -- express delight that their children were returning to school.
"When they are watching TV lessons (in the yurt), there are so many interruptions ... cooking, little siblings crying, fire in the stove, and water boiling," said Urangoo's mother, Dolgorsuren Tumurbaatar.
Students said they were happy to be back in school after more than a year of online learning or televised classes
"Schools were closed too long. It's time to adapt and live with Covid."
During the schools closures, public-school students relied on "TV lessons" -- lecture videos without any interaction -- or online classes with limited outcomes.
"Usually, teachers speak on their own and some students even go to sleep while they turn off camera and mic," Urangoo Baasansuren added.
For the lucky few, expensive vastly-oversubscribed private schools provided applications such as "Google Classroom" and even on-to-one tutoring to ensure nearly two years of education were not lost to their pupils.
But for many others, in schools which routinely have 50 to 70 pupils per class, those years have gone.
At a school in the capital, father-of-three Munch Purevdorj said it is now the right time to reopen schools.
"We have such a high rate of first and second-dose vaccination," he told AFP.
"It's time to think about (the children's) future."


Published Date:2021-09-02