"The children talk to him, laugh with him and sometimes
even chitchat with him during the lesson. Joshi can do that quite well,
too," Ute Winterberg, headmistress at the Pusteblume-Grundschule in
Berlin, told Reuters in an interview.
Joshua cannot attend classes because he wears a tube in his
neck due to a severe lung disease, said his mother, Simone Martinangeli.
The project is a private initiative paid for by the local
council in the Berlin district Marzahn-Hellersdorf.
"We are the only district in Berlin that has bought
four avatars for its schools. The impetus was COVID-19, but I think this will
be the future well beyond the pandemic," said district education
councillor Torsten Kuehne
"It does happen from time to time, for various reasons,
that a child cannot go to class in person. Then, the avatar can give that child
a chance to remain part of the school community," Kuehne said.
He added that he had already brought up the project in political
discussions at a state level.
"I like it either way because I like the avatar,"
said student Noah Kuessner when asked if he is looking forward to seeing Joshua
again.
"And I would like it better if Joshi could really come
to school," said another classmate, Beritan Aslanglu. © Reuters