About POP!

POP! is INQUIRER.net’s premier pop culture channel, delivering the latest news in the realm of pop culture, internet culture, social issues, and everything fun, weird, and wired. It is also home to POP! Sessions and POP! Hangout,
OG online entertainment programs in the
Philippines (streaming since 2015).

As the go-to destination for all things ‘in the now’, POP! features and curates the best relevant content for its young audience. It is also a strong advocate of fairness and truth in storytelling.

POP! is operated by INQUIRER.net’s award-winning native advertising team, BrandRoom.

Contact Us

Email us at [email protected]

Address

MRP Building, Mola Corner Pasong Tirad Streets, Brgy La Paz, Makati City

Girl in a jacket

LOOK: Scared of school? Girl takes her virtual classes in a cemetery

LA PAZ — Neydi, a Bolivian primary school student, logs on to virtual classes like many kids around the world during the pandemic. The only difference is the setting: surrounded by tombstones in a public cemetery in highland city La Paz.

Bolivia has kept its schools largely closed during the COVID-19 outbreak, pushing many parents to find novel ways to get their kids online for class. It is particularly challenging in a country with sporadic internet connectivity, limited access to expensive computers, and high costs for mobile data.

Jeanete Alanoca who works at a cemetery helps her daughter Neydy with their school tasks at the Cementerio General cemetery in La Paz
Jeanete Alanoca, who works at a cemetery, helps her daughter Neydy, a Bolivian primary school student, with her virtual classes during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at the Cementerio General in La Paz, Bolivia, March 16, 2021. Image: Reuters/Santiago Limachi

Neydi’s mother, Jeanete Alanoca, a 30-year-old indigenous Aymara who makes a living working at the General Cemetery of La Paz, decided to bring her daughter along with her to make use of the area’s free Wi-Fi. Neydi does not have her own device and must use her mother’s cellphone to do her schoolwork.

“Before the pandemic, I sent her to school and my in-laws also took care of her and picked her up from school. Because of this situation we are in, I have to bring her to work,” Alanoca told Reuters.

Jeanete Alanoca who works at a cemetery helps her daughter Neydy with their school tasks at the Cementerio General cemetery in La Paz
Jeanete Alanoca, who works at a cemetery, helps her daughter Neydy, a Bolivian primary school student, with her virtual classes during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at the Cementerio General in La Paz, Bolivia, March 16, 2021. Image: Reuters/Santiago Limachi

Alanoca’s work involves renting out stepladders at the cemetery to relatives and friends paying respects to loved ones, whose cremated remains are often kept in rows of elevated compartments.

Now she also helps her daughter out with her classes amid the graves. Without the free Wi-Fi, the family would need to rely on expensive cellphone data. Her other elder daughter goes with her in-laws to use their phone.

Jeanete Alanoca, who works at a cemetery, helps her daughter Neydy, a Bolivian primary school student, with her virtual classes at the Cementerio General cemetery in La Paz
Jeanete Alanoca, who works at a cemetery, helps her daughter Neydy, a Bolivian primary school student, with her virtual classes during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at the Cementerio General in La Paz, Bolivia, March 16, 2021. Image: Reuters/Santiago Limachi

She said neither mother or daughter were put off learning by the unusual classroom surroundings.

“They say the cemetery is scary, but I can’t do anything about that because either way I have to be here with my daughter and doing homework because I don’t have another cellphone. That’s why we’re here.” JB

RELATED STORIES:

LOOK: Teacher breaks down in tears after students replace his stolen shoes

Professor teaches online class for 2 hours before realizing he was muted

 

Read more from INQUIRER.n

How to spend QT with your ride-or-die, internetcore style

We want these ’80s and ’90s makeup trends to make a comeback

 

 

About Author

Related Stories

Popping on POP!