Gaza Education Ministry official Ziad Thabet said that 230,000 students from 1st to 12th grades attended public schools and 200,000 went to United Nations-run schools and tens of thousands enrolled in private institutions.
The opening was delayed for two weeks because of damage to schools and the diversion of UN school buildings for use as temporary centres to house tens of thousands of displaced people. Some 50,000 people are still being housed in the UN schools, the UN Palestinian refugee agency said.
"We gave special training to more than 11,000 teachers and 3,000 principals and administrators about how to address students after the war," he said.
Thabet said 26 Gaza schools were destroyed during the war, and another 232 sustained damage.
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He said government funding for education remains spotty, with no money provided for operational expenses since the formation of a unity government earlier this year between Hamas, the Islamic militant group that runs Gaza, and the Western-backed Palestinian Authority based in the West Bank. UNICEF official June Kunugi echoed his concerns.
The UN Palestinian refugee agency says it is providing 130,000 school bags and teaching aids for government schools, and that it has carried out training programs for nearly 12,000 school counsellors, teachers and supervisors.
The war between Israel and Hamas-led militants stemmed from the abduction and killing of three Israeli teens in the West Bank in June. Israel blamed the attack on Hamas and carried out a wave of arrests, which was followed by an increase in rocket fire from Gaza that prompted Israeli airstrikes and then a ground invasion.
The Gaza war -- the third in just over five years -- left more than 2,100 Palestinians dead, the majority of them civilians, including hundreds of children, according to Palestinian and UN officials. Israel says the number of militants killed was much higher and accuses Hamas of using civilians as human shields. On the Israeli side, 66 soldiers and six civilians were killed.