Make a vaccine? I'm trying to teach my kids the alphabet
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[July 06, 2020]
By Kate Holton, Emma Thomasson and Stephen Jewkes
LONDON/BERLIN/MILAN (Reuters) - It's tough
to do any useful work when you're stuck at home, struggling to
home-school bickering kids, let alone when you're trying to produce a
COVID-19 vaccine.
British drugmaker AstraZeneca had spent years preparing for a pandemic,
but when the moment finally came it was caught cold on a crucial front:
stressed parents working from home struggled to focus.
So the company recruited up to 80 teachers to run online lessons and
repurposed a car parking app to book virtual classes. It also lined up
personal tutoring and helped to locate some childcare spaces for those
battling to adapt to the abrupt change to their lives.
The move by Britain's biggest drugmaker, and similar efforts by
companies the world over to host everything from magic classes to yoga
for children, shows the lengths businesses are going to to help staff
work through the coronavirus crisis.
"It was quite apparent that it was going to be really challenging for
those with small kids and with two parents working," AstraZeneca's HR
chief Fiona Cicconi told Reuters.
"People were starting to say they were feeling really anxious, I've got
so much to do, how am I going to get it done?"
The new corporate attitude towards home-working could help lead to
higher productivity and loyalty, according to experts, and ease moves
towards more flexible working as companies rethink whether staff need to
be in the office, and as schools take time to return to normal.
'I'M DISTRACTED FOR SURE'
The march of the pandemic has upended normal life, forcing companies to
shut offices, schools to close and grandparents and childcare providers
to stay away.
That has left many exhausted parents juggling work demands while helping
their children with school work to prevent them from falling behind or
spending too much time online, not to mention having to feed, entertain
and care for them.
German business software company SAP provided online lessons on magic,
coding, yoga, guitar and break dancing for children of staff.
It is now working on a more formalised schooling scheme with a partner
organisation, which will pair children of staff with students, and also
offer activities through the summer holiday.
Thomas Angerstein, EMEA head of the SAP department responsible for
providing "mission critical" support to customers, said the magic
classes had helped his eight-year-old son, and consequently helped him
too.
"I could focus on my team," he said. "Usually he is hovering around and
looking at my screen and I'm distracted for sure."
In Italy, tyre maker Pirelli teamed up with local company Radiomamma.it
to provide online education and entertainment for children, with classes
in English, creativity and technology the most popular.
Rosaria Demma Carà, who works in Pirelli's Financial Statements
division, said the classes had helped her 10-year-old son and 5-year-old
daughter interact with their peers, relieving the social blackout of
lockdown.
"(It also helped) us get on with some work."
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Thomas Angerstein, SAP Head of Mission Critical Support EMEA, is
seen in this February 2019 handout picture. SAP SE/Handout via
REUTERS
'THEY'RE OFFERING - WHY AREN'T YOU?'
Esther Canónico, from the London School of Economics, said companies
needed to prioritise supporting their staff in different ways
because any return to normality would take time, and flexible,
long-distance working was likely here to stay.
Supportive measures should, however, not be seen as an attempt to
persuade staff to work harder, especially when those working from
home can struggle to manage boundaries with work life, and end up
working for much longer, she added.
"There is not a clear differentiating line between work and home,"
she said of the new environment. "The advice is for employees to
actively manage their boundaries."
Companies, for their part, see offering such services as good
business sense in terms of operational resilience.
AstraZeneca, for example, knew it had to act when a survey found
that 1,100 of its 8,300 staff in the country needed help with
childcare.
A plan to recruit freelance teachers was inspired by a former
teacher who worked in the company's HR department and it was backed
by CEO Pascal Soriot, with the whole process signed off in a matter
of hours.
Launched in May, it offers four lessons a day to up to 1,300
children who have registered. Separately it has lined up a tutoring
company that provides one-on-one sessions.
The tutoring firm, EB Education, said it had since been asked by
another company in the drugmaker's home town of Cambridge if they
could provide a similar service.
"The other company have had a few of their workers saying:
AstraZeneca are offering this so why aren't you? So they put
something in place," EB's Karen McGillicuddy told Reuters.
For now AstraZeneca, which has been licensed to produce a potential
vaccine for COVID-19, is expanding its support. It has introduced
new classes for different age groups and is looking at a summer
school.
HR chief Cicconi said staff had been incredibly grateful, during
what is an extraordinary time.
"They know it's not normal for us to run three primary schools," she
added.
(Additional reporting by Josephine Mason; Editing by Pravin Char)
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