Ensuring a constancy amid uncertainties
Trials for parents
For schools, it's a collective ordeal. Families are left with individual trials, on top of everything else that's going on with the pandemic. Wong Hoi-man is a mother of two autistic sons. One boy, who is 12-year-old, has normal intelligence and studies at a regular school. The other, who is 8, has mild intellectual disability and attends special school. All of the city's non-tertiary schools suspended classes in late January. The date for classes to reopen has been set back several times.
It's the same issue for every child who attends school but it is especially troubling for SEN children. They need more time to adapt to changes, Wong said. The situation is most evident in her younger son.
The boy, stuck at home for more than two months, lost his temper and cries a lot. Sometimes, he hits himself.
- China sends task force after deadly explosion in Inner Mongolia
- China's grain and livestock output rise in 2025
- Cold wave sweeps China, forcing school closures and snow response
- Guangzhou hospitals expand use of cell, gene therapies
- State Council to supervise probe into factory explosion in North China's Inner Mongolia
- Chinese courts see surge in foreign-related cases
































