The problems that Syrian refugee children, class teachers and Turkish children face in the school environment from the standpoint of trainee teachers

The aim of this study is to indicate the problems that Syrian refugee children, class teachers and Turkish children face in their school environment. The data of this study were realized via case study design which is one of the qualitative investigative designs. Interviews were carried out using the observation notes of the prospective teachers as well as their semi-structured discussion forms. As a result of the content analysis of data obtained from the research, it was seen that the most significant problem faced by the study participants was “language problem”. In connection with the language problem, it was seen that factors such as adaptation, communication, and pedagogic condition, social and emotional development influenced them negatively. As the Syrian students do not know Turkish and they are taught with the traditional methods, they do not benefit from the teaching activities and they get bored in classes. While this situation causes behavioral problems in the classroom, the teachers spend more time with the Syrian students. This makes them to fall behind and not to finish the curriculum in time. It is recommended classroom teachers should receive training on how to teach in a multicultural classroom, language courses should be opened, designated based on their age and knowledge of Turkish to solve the language problem of Syrian children and adults and classroom teachers should receive "Teaching Turkish as a Foreign Language" education.


INTRODUCTION
Turkey has always been a country receiving immigrants or a transit country due to its location. After the "Syrian Crisis", which started in March 2011, Turkey began receiving immigrants from its neighbor Syria. Turkey has become a country where most Syrians immigrated as a result of the "open gate policy". According to the data from General Directorate of the Immigration Office (URL, 2020a) dated February 2020, the number of refugees coming to Turkey has reached 3.587.566. According to the February 2020 data of the Refugees Association (URL, 2020b), approximately 520,000 of this number consist of children of elementary school age.
The Syrians were given shelter and medical facilities considering the fact that immigration would soon come to an end and they would return to their country. Most people thought the war would last longer than it was expected; hence activities in the field of education were also dealt with. It is obvious that extreme increase in the number of refugees and dispersion of most of the refugees out of the camps have led to challenging problems in education, as well as in other areas. Besides being involved in designing education in the camps, from 2013 on Turkey has taken crucial decisions and implemented them to design education outside the camps (Seydi, 2014).
By the end of 2019, education for the refugee Syrian children had been carried out within and outside the camps via Temporary Education Centers and State Schools and private schools owned by Syrians. The Syrian children who attend state schools receive education from Turkish teachers in accordance with the Turkish curriculum in the same classes as the Turkish children. As for the Temporary Education Centers (TEC), there are education centers which offer education in Arabic to the Syrian children and youngsters at the school age according to the Syrian curriculum covering the elementary and junior high levels. The curriculum implemented in these centers is the Syrian curriculum and it is carried out by voluntary Syrian teachers. These teachers are paid via a project within the scope of UNICEF and PTT (Turkish Postal Service) collaboration (Emin, 2016). Following the end of 2019, GEMs were closed and the strategy of giving education to Syrian children only in state schools was adopted (URL, 2016a).
The abundance of actors for the education of Syrian refugees -such as the host country, UN, NGO's (Civil Social Groups), disparity of the expectations and power conflict complicate the refugee education (Özer et al., 2016). In the countries where Syrians have migrated, due to the political decisions in education and the gaps in the implementation, the lack of legal status and the role of the international actors, several difficulties have aroused in the realization of these decisions (Buckner et al., 2018: 444). In spite of all these difficulties, Turkey has contributed extensively to the Syrians under her reassurance by pursuing "open gate policy". A lot of practices have been done and are still in progress such as the schools in the camps, education in the state schools with the Turkish children under the same conditions (Dillioğlu, 2015: 10), education given in GEMs in their own language and curriculum for them not to lose a school year when they return to their country, in-service training to the Syrian and Turkish teachers, training to the contracted teachers to teach the Syrian students in Turkish, training to the counselor teachers for support for the Syrians, training to the teachers who have alien students in their classes (URL, 2016b). In spite of all Özmen 555 these practices, there are still educational problems for the students. Tüzün (2017: 12) outlines some of the problems as follows: physical capacity of the schools and classrooms, potentiality for psychosocial and academic support, facilities for language learning, discriminatory attitudes, isolation and peer violence. It is seen that, in the construction of a common future, completing the regulations for the Syrian children to be involved in the education system is not sufficient although it is a crucial step for the resolution of the problems. Structural obstacles in spite of convenient regulations, frequently seen poor living conditions of the refugee children, poverty, need to work, insufficient care, in case of ambiguity inconsistency of the families for education and changing assessments for the good of education all influence access to education for the children (Özer et al., 2016: 194) and the level of benefiting from education. A similar situation is experienced by Syrian children who emigrate to Lebanon. Due to the burden of educational expenses or to help their families economically, fewer children attend school; but more children attended school when their families were supported economically on the condition that their children must continue studying (De Hoop et al., 2019). The school and the teacher have an important point in the life of a child. In addition to all the deprivations in their lives, being in another country as a refugee in the same environment with people whose language they are not familiar with is much more difficult for those children. Adjustment for the Syrian students to their classes and freeing themselves from unfavorable experiences are closely related to their teachers' approach and attitudes. In this sense, the teachers working in elementary schools have a great responsibility. Adopting themselves to the normal life after such misfortunes and loving the country they are living in are compatible with the attitudes of their class teachers (Sağlam and ĠlksenKanbur, 2017: 312;Rubinstein-Avila, 2017).
In the literature, there are many studies about the problems Syrian children experience in their countries of migration. A study examining the inclusion of Syrian refugee children in school systems in Sweden, Germany, Greece, Lebanon and Turkey shows that these children are not given a high-quality education and rich materials and teachers are not trained to learn a second language (Crul et al., 2019). At the same time, Syrian children have been struggling for years with war and they have to emigrate from their countries. They witnessed the torture, maiming and death of their neighbours, brothers and parents. In the places where they emigrated to, they were subjected to discrimination and racist behaviour without receiving proper education, shelter and food. Therefore, many of them experienced depression and anxiety (Kandemir et al., 2018). A study that compares school systems in Europe with respect to refugees found that perceived discrimination is a strong negative predictor of a person's separation from school and the society in Table 1. The number of students who were observed and the status of speaking Turkish. 1  15  19  34  10  2  20  9  29  5 general. Due to the compulsory education age limit, when students who start school late due to immigration finish primary school, the alternatives for multi-choice secondary schools are either vocational schools or lowlevel schools. This poses problems for children who are unable to realize their complete potential. In European countries, Sweden is a good example. After determining literacy and math skills of children from the country, they were placed in a training program to fit their needs (Koehler and Schneider, 2019;Chimienti et al., 2019). In a study of Syrian refugee children and their families who settled in Canada, Syrian children did not only have difficulties in making friends among local students, but were also subjected to constant bullying and racism which in turn affects their sense of belonging and connection. To prevent this, it is suggested that the children of the host country be informed about the difficulties experienced by Syrian children (Guo et al., 2019). In a similar study conducted in Turkey, it was shown that class teachers had difficulties in teaching Syrian students reading and writing in Turkish as a foreign language and also it appeared that they experienced many problems developing their language and communication skills (IĢıkdoğan-Uğurlu and Kayhan, 2018). This and many similar studies examine the academic and emotional problems experienced by Syrian students. This study investigates the problems experienced by Syrian children, children of the host country and classroom teachers. The difference and importance of this work is created by the point that the events experienced by classes with Syrian children were analyzed from a multifaceted point of view arising both from Turkish and Syrian students and from the eyes of the trainee teachers. Syrian students experience a lot of problems as well as the class teachers and the other students in the same class. As it is necessary to know how the laws, regulations and legislations were introduced in 2011, how the practices of NGOs and how the UN, integration and inclusive educational activities are taught to the Turkish and Syrian students and class teachers in the school environment, the main objective of this study is to discover the problems that Syrian refugee children, class teachers and the Turkish children face in the school environment. For this purpose, responses to the following questions were sought: 1) Which problems do the class teachers who have Syrian students in their classes face? 2) Which problems do the Syrian students who attend state schools come across in class?

Class Number of Turkish students Number of Syrian students Total Number of syrian students who speak Turkish
3) Which problems do the Turkish students who have Syrian students in their class face? 4) What are the solutions of prospective teachers to the problems experienced in a multi-cultural class?

Pattern of the research
This research has been designed as a qualitative case study in order to designate the problems which class teachers who have Syrian students in their classes, Syrian students and Turkish students. Cases appear in several forms such as the events that we come across in daily life, experiences, perceptions, tendencies, concepts and circumstances. Case study is used for studies that aim to investigate events which are not completely unfamiliar to us and at the same time the meaning of which we do no grasp appropriately (Yıldırım and ġimĢek, 2016: 69). The difficulty of conducting experimental and semi-experimental work on displacement and other humanitarian crisis environments is well known (Puri et al., 2017). It is observed that the trainee teachers started their internship in order not to disturb the Syrian students and not to disrupt the classroom environment.

Study group
This study was carried out in the 2018-2019 fall semester with 8 senior students of the class teaching department who went to practice teaching in schools where there were Syrian students. When the study group was chosen, typical situational modellingone of the relevant modelling methodswas used. In accordance with this study, "students who went to schools for observation where Turkish and Syrian children studied together" were chosen. Typical situational modelling is to designate the typical ones out of several situations in the universe (Büyüköztürk et al., 2018: 93-94). 4 of the eight prospective teachers had observations in the first grade, the other 4 in the second grade. The characteristics of the classes where observations were held: First Grade: The total of the students is 34, 15 Turkish and 19 Syrian.10 of the Syrian students speak Turkish, 9 do not. In the classroom, there are a computer and a projector, a locker for the teacher and a cabinet for the students to put their lesson material in. They arrange posters depending on certain days and weeks, but visual aids related to lessons are made up of works done by the prospective teachers.
Second Grade: The total is 29, 9 of which is Syrian. 5 of the Syrian students speak Turkish. The classroom layout is the same as the first grade.
In Table 1, there are 34 students in the first class, and more than half of them are Syrian students. Of the 19 Syrian students, 10 are fluent in Turkish. Among the 29 students in the second grade, 9 are Table 2. The problems the class teachers who had syrian students in their classes faced (n .

Themes Codes f
In Terms of Language and Communication Children who don't speak Turkish don't participate in the lesson 7 The teacher opens their books because they don't understand the direction 1 The teacher can't communicate with the Syrian children and their parents who don't speak Turkish 1 Academic Point of View The teacher do not prepare separately for the lesson 6 The students are good at math but bad in other lessons 2 In Terms of Class Management One to one support to those who don't understand, the others get bored 4 The teacher spends more time for the Syrian students to understand 2

Total 23
Syrian. 5 of these children can speak Turkish.

Collection of data
The data of this research were gathered via observations from the interviews with the prospective teachers who went to schools for observation where Turkish and Syrian children received education As a result of literature scanning, open-ended 12 observation questions were prepared in order to determine the problems the teachers, Syrian and Turkish students had in the class environment. The observation questions were arranged and developed after consulting an instructor specialized in the field of qualitative research. The prospective teachers made their observations for 5 weeks and wrote their impressions in forms. For the face-to-face interviews, semi-structured interview forms composed of similar questions were used. The interviews were recorded upon permission; the researcher also took notes. Observations were performed with eight and interviews with three prospective teachers. The interview notes have been coded as A, B, C. The interviews lasted 90 min; 30 min for each. Of the teachers who were interviewed two observed in the first grade and one in the second grade.

Data analysis
Content analysis was used in the data analysis. For the content analysis, first the codes in the data set were found, then the themes taken from the codes were designated; the codes were arranged according to these themes. The themes were classified according to the research questions (Yıldırım and ġimĢek, 2016: 253). Moreover, one-to-one extracts from the observation and interview results were placed at the end of each table.

Validity and reliability studies
For persuasiveness within the scope of validity (internal validity), interview data were arranged in the written form to provide participant confirmation and they were presented to the prospective teachers for agreement. To look into the research objectively and to provide consistency (inner reliability) or reliability in the research, a researcher who specialized in education and qualitative research was consulted for help in preparing the interview and observation forms. Furthermore, compatibility and consistence of method diversity -observation data and interview records and notes-, and observations of the researcher in the same environment twice have contributed to providing persuasiveness (inner validity) in the scope of validity. By using the formula: Reliability agreement number / agreement + agreement number for reliability, two researchers worked at different times for the same data and reached similar results; .86 was found (Miles and Huberman, 1994).

Data
In this section, the data are handled by the sub-problems of the research. In Table 2, the prospective teachers say that class teachers frequently have problems of language and communication contacts. During the observation results and interviews, it was surprising to see that the prospective teachers thought "teachers do not prepare distinctively for lessons" was not a problem for the Syrian students but a problem the teachers had. When the reason was asked during the interviews, the answer was like that: "Although coming to class unprepared affects students negatively from the academic point of view, it returns to the teacher as a problem because it results in unwanted behaviors in class -doing other things because they cannot learn, talk to other students, and damage their peers etc." (A, B-1st Grade).
Another aspect during the observations and interviews; as an answer to the question "What are the problems the teachers have?" they gave examples from the problems the Syrian students had. During the interviews, the answer given to the question "What does the teacher do in class?" is that:  According to the observation and interview results of the prospective teachers in Table 3, it seems that Syrian students mostly have problems in terms of social-emotional development. They are exposed to ridicule because they do not speak/understand Turkish and they pronounce words in a wrong way. The situation they are in maims their self-confidence. Another interesting thing in the table is that the teacher allows competition in a multi-cultural class. In the interviews, it was explained that this competition was like "giving a star to the ones who wrote correctly during dictation activities and sharing their photographs in the WhatsApp class group." The main problem in Table 3 is also "not speaking Turkish." This problem hinders their communication with their peers and their academic and social-emotional development. During the interviews after the prospective students said the teacher did not discriminate in any way, they added "When the teacher punishes somebody, he does it before all the students. He also uses physical violence, and gets angry. He does it to the Syrian students more frequently because his communication with them is a bit more broken when compared to Turkish students. They cannot express themselves. The teacher gets angry and hits, for them to supposedly, tell the truth. The child being hit is generally isolated from the class. They think the teacher doesn"t like him/her; we shouldn"t also like him/her. When the Turkish students are also hit; the class isolates them in the same way" (A, B-1st Grade).
"Syrian students have difficulty reading. Because Arabic is read from left to right, they read the Turkish texts in the same way. For example instead of "al" they read "la" (C-2 nd Grade).
The B coded teacher candidate made this statement about the problems the Syrian students had: "When two Turkish and Syrian students argue, the Turkish one tends to get even angrier and shouts. He gets angrier because he doesn"t understand the language he speaks and he thinks he has said swear words, thus he hits him more.The teacher brings them in front of the class, asks them to apologize and settles the situation. He punishes them whether they are Turkish or Syrian. He tells them to stand on one foot." (B-1 st Grade) In Table 4, it is seen that the Turkish students also get irritated because they cannot communicate with the Syrian students. That means the Turkish children also have "language problem" in another dimension. At the interview, the trainee teachers stated that the Turkish students have more advantage than the Syrian students in terms of social and emotional development, saying that "the Turkish students feel that they belong to the environment. They think that they didn"t come there afterwards like the others. They feel they are the hosts. They are more powerful when

In Terms of Language and Communication
Generally Syrian and Turkish children communicate with their groups 2 They fight because they don't understand each other due to lang. prob 2 When the teacher compares, communication is spoilt among the children 2 Nobody wants to be friends with the Syrians because of personal care 1 The Syrian children are more inclined to violence 1 Some Turkish children play with the Syrian children but others don't 1 The Turkish children refuse the Syrian children 1 From the Academic Point of View When the lessons are presented in detail, they lose interest 2 Total 12 The solution proposals of the prospective teachers in Table 5 are under three topics namely "from the academic point of view", "in terms of language and communication" and "from the social and emotional point of view". The prospective teachers had proposals like "from the academic point of view, Syrian students should be taught in GEMs, courses should be opened in schools, teachers should learn Arabic, teachers should use body language for communication with the Syrian children, they should spend more energy in classes; in terms of language and communication, Turkish courses should be opened in the school, Turkish teachers should be recruited for the pre-school period; from the social and emotional point of view, welfare campaigns should be arranged." The opinions of the prospective teachers are as follows: A-coded trainee teacher said during an interview: "It is wrong to put the Syrian children among the Turkish children. There is not an intelligence problem. The biggest problem is language. If this is solved, it will be enough. "Attending the same class for Turkish and Arabic students causes the Turkish students to fall behind. They should follow the Turkish curriculum in the same school but in different classrooms" (C-2 nd Grade).
The trainee teachers say they think it is important for the parents to talk to the teacher for the students even though they do not speak Turkish; they say they think the teacher would give more attention to the children whose parents are concerned.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
In the research, it is concluded that the main problem is "language problem". The Turkish teachers do not speak Arabic and the Syrian children do not know Turkish; they don't understand each other and so the problems are not solved in time. This situation is reflected in the lesson, so the Syrian students cannot learn what the teacher teaches. Like every student who does cannot learn the lesson, they get bored and distract the other students and the teacher by displaying unwanted behaviors. Moreover, the class teachers do not implement facilitating activities nor bring varied material to class. Similar situations have been seen in the literature. It has been concluded that alien students do not understand their teachers, peers and the environment; they cannot communicate; they cannot express their feelings and thoughts; they do not participate in the lesson; and as a result of all these, they either have lower academic achievement as compared to their peers or frequently become unsuccessful (Güngör and ġenel, 2016). The following data have been reached: In a study related to the problems of the teachers who had refugee students, the main issue is the language problem; participating teachers do not design content for the need of the refugee students; teachers need material for those students; teachers do not develop objective methods in the process of assessment. It is a common idea that a preparatory training should be given to the teachers and refugee students for them to learn the Latin alphabet and Turkish. As a result of the research, it has been determined that teachers require vocational development and assessment aimed at refugee students such as analysis of the teaching content; teaching strategies; teaching aids; development and assessment of measurement material (Bulut et al., 2018;Erdem, 2017). Again the problems that the teachers came across and the themes that emerged according to the results of a study related to solution proposals are academic problems, language and communication problems, social problems and recommendations (ġimĢir and Dilmaç, 2018). In another study, the problems that emerged in classes that included Syrian children are gathered under three topics. These have been listed as an obstacle of language, lack of family support, and inefficiency of the teachers to have the refugee students grasp pedagogic skills (YaĢar and Amaç, 2018). A study on the problems of Syrian students in Turkey shows that the students were affected by post-traumatic stress disorder, had difficulty about understanding and communicating the content within the classroom, there were problems that arise due to the fact that the classrooms are overpopulated and teachers were not involved in decision-making processes about these students. Also, teachers are not effectively informed about refugee students as they are not in a credible effort to increase their capacity to cope better with the situation of these students (Tösten et al., 2017(Tösten et al., : 1149. In the study, it has been concluded that the Syrian students cannot communicate with their surroundings and fall behind academically due to "the language problem", live through lack of self-confidence and they are exposed to mockery of their classmates because they cannot express themselves properly. In a study related to Syrian students, it was reported that the biggest problem is that they do not speak Turkish and they have rapport problem with their peers; as for the problem the teachers who have Syrian students in their classes face is that they cannot communicate with the Syrian students and they cannot include them in the educational process (BaĢar et al., 2018;Kiremit et al., 2018). In a study related to the training of the Syrian refugees in the Child Studies Department of Ġstanbul Bilgi University titled "The Situation of the Syrian Refugee Children at the State Schools" (URL, 2015), it was reported in the interviews with the teachers in the schools that discrimination and isolation were rare; but with the focused groups of students it was reported that there was very limited communication between the Turkish and Syrian students, no friendship experience and the Syrian children were influenced and isolated. Some children said the Turkish students did not play with them, did not believe what they said and did not make friends with them. Most of the children said they were satisfied with their teachers. It was observed that the teachers did not do anything to solve discrimination and isolation in schools. The teachers also stated that the problem of discrimination was related to the parents of the Turkish children. The parents did not want their children to sit with Syrian children, and the teachers said they had difficulty finding a place for the Syrian children to sit. The Syrian children were sitting either with another child or alone. It was observed that the teachers hesitated to take the initiative in this matter. In two different studies with the pre-school students, similar results were found. It was concluded that the level of the Syrian children to know Turkish played an important role in adapting to school, learning class rules, communicating easily with others and feeling secure (Yanık-Özger and Akansel, 2019;Avcı, 2019). It has been emphasized that in all similar studies, the most fundamental issue is language problem (Çerçi and Canalıcı, 2019;Küçüksüleymanoğlu, 2018;ġahin and ġener, 2019). The studies having been done in this field and the consequences of this study are consistent. The most important problem experienced in a multicultural classroom was the "language problem". The origin of most of the other problems such as academic failure, social and emotional adaptation problems is that they do not speak Turkish and do not understand what they hear.
At the end of the study, the fact that the teachers explain subjects at great length so that the Syrian students can understand and that they even deal with some children individually results in an important problem for the Turkish students. Because this situation slows down the progress of the subjects for the Turkish students, it is understood that it causes them to fall behind academically in comparison with their peers and also leads to unwanted behavior because they get bored. Similar results were found in a study carried out by Özdemir (2018). According to the data of this study with the topic "The Evaluation of the Opinions of the Turkish Students who Receive Education with the Syrian Students under Temporary Protection", a great majority of the participants are unhappy to receive education together with the Syrian students and often fight with them because they cannot communicate with them.
In the entire research, "language problem" appears to be the main problem the Syrian children face. This problem influences the adaptation and academic situations, and the social and emotional developments of the students negatively. After the observations and interviews the prospective teachers suggested that students should certainly learn Turkish before they start school, there should be particularly language courses at school on weekdays and/or weekends, Syrian students should receive education according to the MEB (Ministry of Education) curriculum in separate classes from the Turkish students, teachers should learn Arabic, and Syrian students should attend in GEMs. In addition, if parents come to school and talk to the teachers, it will cause the teachers to pay more attention to the students. In a study related to the problems arising in schools where there are alien students, teachers reported that they try to solve the vocabulary-based language problem by using Google Translate, continuously have the children memorize poetry, visit houses to increase communication and understanding among students and have drama and game activities. Aiming at the solution of the problems they had with the alien students, teachers and administrators have suggested that primarily kindergarten training should be given, there should be language training intended for families and children, they should place them all in the same class not to affect the Özmen 561 other children, and a new unit should be opened within the body of the Office of Education (SarıtaĢ et al., 2016). In another study, it was suggested that courses should be arranged for the teachers who have alien students in their classes in the field of Turkish teaching as a second and foreign language; permanent and temporary teachers should be appointed throughout the country to teach Turkish to the students and their families after school hours; counselling should be given to the students by appointing counsellors who speak Arabic and English; Turkish courses should be designed for the families to have them participate in educational activities; seminars and school activities should be designed for the families to cooperate with the school and have more responsibility in the training of their children; placement tests should be given to the students for them to get appropriate education for their Turkish levels; the students, who cannot start school at the beginning of the term and especially those who are not efficient enough to read and write, should attend the first grade for a period of time or Turkish courses should be designed for them after school; teaching programs for Turkish lessons suitable for the students and orientation programs to school should be developed; more visual material should be provided for the students (Güngör and ġenel, 2018: 166-167). In a similar study, class teachers had the solution to the problems they had with Syrian students: Syrian students should attend separate classes, parents should be given father-mother training; after getting acquainted, classes should be joined and the elder students should attend different classes (Ergen and ġahin, 2019: 377). In this and similar researches it has been concluded that for the education of Syrian students primarily "the language problem" should be solved (KardeĢ and Akman, 2018; Sağlam and Kanbur, 2017;TaĢkın, 2018;Tunç, 2015;Weddle, 2018). We are of the opinion that the solution of this problem will contribute to the solution of several other problems.
In summary, according to this research, the most important problem experienced by both Syrian and Turkish students and classroom teachers is the problem of language. People who coexist together try to live and learn together without understanding each other. This leads to many academic, emotional and social problems. As a solution, teachers recommend that language courses be held for Syrian children before they begin their lives as a student. Germany is one of the countries that have experienced migration in the past years. During the migration events in Germany in 1980 and 1990, they placed migrant children in separate classes to teach them German as second language, which had significant negative effects on the school and business careers of migrant students. According to European experience from previous migrations, it has been found that taking migrant children into normal classes after teaching basic language skills is extremely important for socialization, active use of language and integration (Koehler and Schneider, 2019). Migration from Syria is still ongoing. The countries of the world have not developed a regulation to please the parties on the migration issue, to provide appropriate living conditions for Syrians and to bring the education of children to a level close to/equal to the standard of the children of the host country. As a result of the migration events so far, the majority of migrants have not returned to their home countries, even if everything improves. Investment in these children will benefit the host country in the long run (Koehler and Schneider, 2019).

Suggestions
The following suggestions have been introduced according to the results obtained from the research data: 1). Teachers who have alien students in their classes can get training in terms of how to teach in a multi-cultural class.
2). Applied training can be designed for teachers and counsellors to bring these war victim children back to life.
3). Teachers who have a second trauma can be supported by the government 4). Language courses suitable for their age and Turkish level can be started for Syrian children and adults to solve their language problem. 5). The training of "Teaching Turkish as a Foreign Language" can be given to the class teachers who have Syrian students in their classes. 6). Syrian parents can be encouraged to come to school and communicate with the class teachers.