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Maestro del año de Honduras rema 10 kilómetros al día para poder trabajar

Centroamérica / Honduras / 18 de septiembre de 2016 / Por: Noticias Terra.com

Maestro del Año 2016″ de Honduras, Hugo Armando Pinto, tiene que remar diez kilómetros diariamente, por el río San Juan, en el Caribe del país centroamericano, para llegar y volver de su trabajo, dijo hoy el docente.

Además, Pinto lleva en el cayuco, que es prestado, a varios alumnos de la Escuela «Francisco Vegas Pérez», de la comunidad Boca Cerrada, municipio de La Masica, departamento de Atlántida.

Por su dedicación a la enseñanza, el Gobierno de Honduras ha declarado a Pinto «Maestro del Año 2016» y el próximo lunes se le rendirá un homenaje en la Casa Presidencial en Tegucigalpa, informó por su parte una fuente del poder Ejecutivo.

Al conmemorarse hoy el «Día del Maestro Hondureño», el presidente de Honduras, Juan Orlando Hernández, felicitó a Pinto, quien ejerce como docente interino desde 2005 en el centro educativo que trabaja.

«Muchas felicidades Hugo (Armando) Pinto, Maestro del Año 2016. Que su esfuerzo sea ejemplo e inspiración para los hondureños», le expresó Hernández al mentor galardonado a través de la red social Twitter.

Pinto dijo a periodistas que desea tener una lancha con motor para llegar más rápido a la escuela donde presta sus servicios.

Añadió que en invierno tiene que desafiar las malas condiciones del tiempo para remar a puro brazo los cinco kilómetros de ida y cinco de regreso, además de sufrir las plagas de zancudos, entre otras inclemencias.

El maestro agradeció el reconocimiento que se le ha hecho por su trabajo de formar a la niñez hondureña a través de la educación en una comunidad que, en su opinión, ha sido olvidada por las autoridades.

Dijo además que aspira a tener una plaza permanente como maestro de educación para no seguir ejerciendo de manera interina.

Ejemplos de maestros como Pinto abundan en Honduras, principalmente en comunidades rurales.

Algunos docentes y alumnos caminan a diario largas distancias para llegar a su centro educativo.

Otros maestros lo hacen a caballo o se quedan a dormir en la comunidad de su escuela y regresan el fin de semana a su comunidad de origen.

Imágen: http://cdne.diariocorreo.pe/thumbs/uploads/img/2016/09/17/honduras-maestro-del-ano-re-jpg_604x0.jpg

Fuente: https://noticias.terra.com/mundo/latinoamerica/maestro-del-ano-de-honduras-rema-10-kilometros-al-dia-para-poder-trabajar,c10bda3d01e8019f3024c8a65811505d7se6y96o.html

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Argentina ante el peligro de una educación para el mercado

Argentina/17 septiembre 2016/Fuente:Ipsnoticias

En Argentina, docentes, estudiantes y sindicalistas están movilizados por despidos masivos en el sector, que denuncian que forman parte de un proceso de vaciamiento de la educación pública y el avance hacia un nuevo modelo donde prima satisfacer las necesidades del mercado.

“Se está produciendo un modelo educativo que ya no se piensa en clave de derecho y en clave de derecho social para el conjunto de la población, sino que se piensa en clave de formación de un modelo social, económico, que pone foco en la lógica del emprendedor. Una lógica del individuo que se hace así mismo”, resumió a IPS la académica Myriam Feldfeber.

La especialista en educación de la Universidad de Buenos Aires participó el 31 de agosto en un “abrazo” a la sede del Ministerio de Educación en la capital argentina,  convocado para denunciar una nueva oleada de 200 despidos y retrocesos “en la construcción hacia una educación gratuita, universal e igualitaria”.

La mayoría de las personas despedidas ahora se regían por contratos o estaban aún como transitorios en la plantilla, y se suman a otros 1.100 cesantes en el área de educación desde que asumió la presidencia el 10 de diciembre el centroderechista Mauricio Macri.

Desde entonces, se despidió a 10.662 empleados públicos en 23 ministerios y sus dependencias.

“Trabajaba en el Instituto de Formación Docente desde hace más de seis años. Un área de implementación de políticas que tienen que ver con el desarrollo de investigación en los institutos de formación docente de todo el país, explicó Laura Pico.

“El viernes (26 de agosto) recibí un llamado de un número desconocido en el que me informaban que estaba desvinculada del ministerio y que a partir del lunes no fuera más”, detalló a IPS.

Los despidos se suman a un proceso de reducción y eliminación de diversas políticas educativas, muchas implementadas durante los gobiernos de Néstor Kirchner (2003-2007) y Cristina Fernández (2007-2015)

La Asociación de Trabajadores del Estado (ATE) denuncia que hay subejecución del presupuesto educativo, desmantelamiento de áreas de formación docente, de derechos humanos, educación de adultos, estadística, coros infantiles y juveniles, entre otras.

“Notamos con gran preocupación que nuestros despidos -además de una demanda gremial- ponen en el tapete un vaciamiento de políticas educativas y un retiro del estado de los territorios”, resumió a IPS el delegado de la ATE, Lautaro Pedot.

Fernanda Saforcada, especialista en educación y directora académica del Consejo Latinoamericano de Ciencias Sociales (Clacso), con sede en Buenos Aires, lamentó los despidos que además de un problema humano y social, “implican la pérdida de una experiencia acumulada”.

“Estamos hablando de equipos técnicos que desarrollaban una actividad, que tienen vínculos de trabajo, redes que se han ido constituyendo. Todo eso también es una pérdida significativa. Se pierde experiencia, se pierde historia, se pierden saberes, se pierden relaciones”, dijo a IPS.

El desmantelamiento es más evidente en áreas como el Instituto Nacional de Formación Docente y el Instituto Nacional de Educación Tecnológica, así como en programas socioeducativos y de inclusión digital, de derechos humanos, de educación sexual integral, artística y de jóvenes y adultos.

Argentina ante el peligro de una educación para el mercado

El proceso de aprendizaje se transformó en las escuelas públicas argentinas con el programa Conectar Igualdad, que entrega una computadora portátil a cada estudiante. Ese es uno de los proyectos educativos afectados por los cambios introducidos en la educación por el gobierno de Mauricio Macri. Crédito: Fabiana Frayssinet/IPS

Asimismo fueron reducidos o eliminados programas de becas universitarias, para promover la igualdad de género, de entrega de computadoras a estudiantes con necesidades especiales o de estímulo a completar estudios secundarios.

“Creo que ahora se apunta a un sistema de educación opuesto al de inclusión y al de garantizar el derecho a la educación”, puntualizó Pico.

Para Feldfeber, también coordinadora de la Red Latinoamericana de Estudios sobre Trabajo Docente y de grupos de investigación de Clacso, lo que “en principio desaparece es la idea de la educación como derecho, como horizonte de la política pública”.

Como ejemplo de aquella estrategia, mencionó la creación de 14 universidades nacionales “sobre todo en lugares a las que están teniendo acceso sectores  tradicionalmente excluidos del sistema”, y hoy cuestionadas.

“Es un tema muy preocupante que algunas áreas centrales están siendo ocupadas en el Ministerio de Educación por personas que no vienen del campo educativo, por directivos de empresas o por personas que no tienen ningún tipo de trayectoria dentro del sector público”, subrayó.

“Uno de los cargos más altos del ministerio es ocupado por un gerente internacional de Phillips Morris (el ahora subsecretario de Políticas Socioeducativas, Ezequiel Newbery), que plantea que no conoce que es educación, que no entiende que es una política socioeducativa y que dice que viene al ministerio a poner orden”, consideró.

“Ordenar, se entiende en la clave de lo que estamos asistiendo hoy, que es despedir trabajadores, desarmar equipos”, adujo.

En el marco de lo que llama una “modernización” de la administración pública, el gobierno  argumenta que se trata de un “reordenamiento” ministerial.

El ministro de Educación, Esteban Bulrich, defiende “una revolución educativa”, que define como “darle a cualquier argentino, nazca donde nazca, la posibilidad de que tenga las mismas condiciones de calidad educativa”.

Para Bulrich, “la inclusión sola, sin calidad, no sirve, es un medio camino. Inclusión sola es fraude” y para mejorar esa “calidad” hay “que comenzar por el verdadero agente de cambio que es el docente”.

“La idea es darle (al docente) más herramientas, para que tengan una visión moderna, del siglo XXI  de las habilidades y competencias que los niños de nuestro  sistema educativo necesitan para ser autónomos”, explicó en un acto en junio.

Saforacada critica que el denunciado fortalecimiento del “ámbito privado”, se da “en el marco de un proceso de reconfiguración del rol del Estado”.

“Hay un nuevo posicionamiento del Estado en búsqueda de alianzas con ONG (organizaciones no gubernamentales), con fundaciones y con sectores empresariales”, analizó.

“Son ONG muchas veces vinculadas a sectores empresariales, que muestra cómo se vacía de alguna manera lo público para otorgar un nuevo contenido al ámbito de la gestión de la educación”, analizó.

“Y cuando hablamos del ámbito privado, más allá de la dicotomía de lo público y lo privado, hablamos de que lo que prima son los intereses  individuales sobre los intereses de ciertos sectores y no el interés de lo común”, finalizó.

La ATE denunció un intento de “privatización” en programas como “Conectar Igualdad” (destinado a la inclusión digital, heredado del gobierno anterior), donde este año “desembarcaron empresas internacionales como Microsoft y Google”.

El objetivo sería sustituir por esos programas operativos, otros de software libre producidos localmente, como Huayra, utilizados en computadoras portátiles distribuidas gratuitamente a los escolares.

El informe Educación para Todos en el Mundo 2000-2015, de la Organización de las Naciones Unidas para la Educación, la Ciencia y la Cultura (Unesco), destacó avances en la educación argentina en la última década, en seguimiento a las metas planteadas durante el Foro Mundial de Educación de Dakar, en 2000.

Según ese informe, el gasto público en educación de este país sudamericano fue uno de los más altos de América Latina, representando el 6,26 del producto interno bruto.

Asimismo se consiguió que casi 99,1 por ciento de los niños y niñas argentinos asista a la escuela primaria, lo que ubica al país junto a Uruguay con el nivel de cobertura más alto de la región.

Respecto a educación secundaria, la tasa neta de matrícula es una de las más altas de América Latina: 89,06 por ciento en el año 2012, aunque todavía preocupa la deserción de los jóvenes en este nivel.

Argentina, con 43 millones de habitantes, redujo también los índices de analfabetismo de 2,6 a 1,9 por ciento de las personas mayores de 15 años.

Fuente: http://www.ipsnoticias.net/2016/09/argentina-ante-el-peligro-de-una-educacion-para-el-mercado/

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Unesco acogió exposición sobre Campaña de Alfabetización en Cuba

Centro América/Cuba/17 Septiembre 2016/Fuente: Prensa Latina

A propósito de las actividades en la Unesco por el Día Mundial de la Alfabetización, Cuba mostró una exposición sobre la Campaña de Alfabetización que constituyó la base de su actual sistema educativo, informó hoy la embajadora Dulce Buergo.

Titulada ‘Educación: Derecho del Pueblo, herramienta imprescindible para el desarrollo’, la muestra exhibió fotos, textos y diversos materiales sobre los esfuerzos realizados al inicio de la Revolución para enseñar a leer y a escribir a toda la población, lo que permitió declarar el país libre analfabetismo en 1961.

Buergo, embajadora de Cuba ante la Unesco, explicó que la exposición propuso al público un recorrido por aquellos años en que se consiguió ‘la proeza histórica de erradicar el analfabetismo en menos de un año y crear las condiciones para garantizar la educación universal y gratuita en todos los niveles de enseñanza’.

En declaraciones a Prensa Latina, la representante diplomática agregó que ‘se mostró nítidamente el alcance de este proyecto social, llevado a cabo por los jóvenes, de familias de diferentes clases sociales, el cual significó una verdadera ofensiva de lápices, cuadernos y libros, extendida a todo lo largo y ancho de la isla’.

La exposición, que despertó un gran interés entre los participantes en la Jornada sobre Alfabetización organizada por la Unesco, presentó por ejemplo el farol, el uniforme, la cartilla y manual usados por los brigadistas para su labor de enseñanza.

La ministra de Educación de la nación caribeña, Ena Elsa Velázquez, participó en la apertura de la muestra e intercambió con varios de los asistentes sobre la experiencia de Cuba en la materia.

Velázquez enfatizó la importancia y la necesidad de una voluntad política clara para impulsar los objetivos educativos y, en general, toda la Agenda 2030 de desarrollo sostenible.

De acuerdo con Buergo, la muestra fue una excelente oportunidad para ‘celebrar el 55 aniversario de esa gran obra de la Revolución que fue la Campaña, su impacto histórico y social, que merece ser recordado siempre y amplificado a las nuevas generaciones’.

Asimismo, el evento también fue ‘un homenaje al líder histórico de la Revolución cubana, Fidel Castro, en su 90 cumpleaños, por la entrega incondicional, compromiso permanente y lucha incansable por un mundo mejor no solo para Cuba, sino para todos los países’, agregó.

Fuente: http://www.prensa-latina.cu/index.php?o=rn&id=26485&SEO=unesco-acogio-exposicion-sobre-campana-de-alfabetizacion-en-cuba
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UNESCO report on TVET, higher education and innovation presented to Government of Namibia

África/Namibia/17 Septiembre 2016/Fuente: UNESCO

UNESCO presented a report on the Situational Assessment of Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET), Higher Education and Innovation in Namibia, to the Government of Namibia in Windhoek on 12 September, 2016.

The report, which was presented to the Minister of Higher Education, Training and Innovation Dr Itah Kandji-Murangi, includes policy recommendations based on findings from a mission to Namibia led by Dr Borhene Chakroun, Chief of Section of Youth, Literacy and Skills in Paris.

It is the result of continuous collaboration between experts assembled by UNESCO and Namibian stakeholders in the areas of TVET, higher education and innovation.

At the ceremony, Regional Director of the UNESCO Regional Office for Southern Africa in Harare, Zimbabwe, Professor Hubert Gijzen, applauded the mission and its stakeholders for their efforts. He said the report recognised the challenges, opportunities and strategic directions in the specific context of Namibia and aligned with Namibia’s 2016-2020 development action plan towards Prosperity for All.

Receiving the report Dr Kandji-Murangi promised that the ministry would use if as the basis for developing a work-plan and ensuring the implementation of the policy recommendations.

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Francia: Anti-elitism algorithm to decide which secondary school Paris pupils attend

Europa/Francia/16 de Septiembre de 2016/Autor: Henry Samuel/Fuente: The Telegraph

RESUMEN: Un algoritmo decide qué escuela secundaria asisten los niños parisinos, en parte, basando su cálculo en su posición social en un intento de abordar el elitismo. Los críticos advierten la posibilidad que podría llevar a multitudes de parisinos a enviar a sus hijos a escuelas privadas. Hasta ahora, la zona de influencia de un alumno francés es el único criterio para decidir a qué escuela secundaria asistirá. Pero a partir de 2017, esta decisión se calculará a través de un algoritmo que también tendrá en cuenta si un niño es de una familia de bajos ingresos. Noticias del sistema informático se produjo días después de que Thomas Piketty, Economista francés estrella y autor del éxito de ventas de capital internacional en el siglo XXI, advirtió que «los alumnos desfavorecidos» están siendo excluidos de los establecimientos «socialmente SELECT» en Francia.

An algorithm is to decide which state secondary school Parisian children attend, in part basing its calculation on their social standing an attempt to tackle elitism.

Critics warn the chance could prompt droves of Parisians to send their children to private schools.

Until now, a French pupil’s catchment area is the sole criterion for deciding which secondary school he or she attends.

But from 2017, this decision will be calculated via an algorithm that will also factor in whether a child is from a low-income family.

News of the computerised system came days after Thomas Piketty star French economist and author of international bestseller Capital in the Twenty First Century warned that «disadvantaged pupils» are being shut out of «socially select» establishments in France.

«The level of social segregation seen in secondary schools is reaching unacceptable heights, notably in Paris,» he wrote in a blog post in Le Monde. The most upscale schools only had 0.3 per cent of its pupils from underprivileged backgrounds compared to 65 per cent on the other end of the scale.

The decision to use the algorithm by Paris’ education chief came just days after the French education minister, Najaf Vallaud-Belkacem, appeared to pour cold water on the idea.

«I think we should break away from the French myth of a global, uniform measurement, a political-technocratic revolution,» he told Le Monde. «I don’t think that an algorithm should be seen as a magic wand» to improve the social mix, he insisted.

Her words followed controversy over a similar computerised system that has been used since 2008 to decide which lycées French high school pupils should attend based on similar criteria.

While defenders of the system insist it has cut «the social segregation index» by 30 per cent, controversy struck in August when it transpired that 83 per cent of this year’s intake to a Paris lycée came from low-income pupils following an apparent glitch in the algorithm.

The lycée algorithm is based on pupils’ preferences, their marks and whether they receive grants for low income families and can send them to the other side of a large catchment area.

François Weil, Paris’ chief education officer, said the calculation would be different in secondary schools as younger children cannot be expected to travel too far from home.

Peep-Paris, a parents’ union, slammed the move, saying: «They want to correct the city’s (educational) policies by displacing children. But they shouldn’t be carrying the can. What I expect from the authorities is to make all state secondary schools attractive so that people want to go to them.»

Mr Piketty warned that the algorithm would only improve the social mix in Paris if it was also applied to Paris’ private secondary schools, which teach a third of the French capital’s pupils. Parents’ howls of protest were totally unjustified, he added, as such establishments all receive huge state subsidies.

Failure to do include them would see an even higher percentage of families send their children to private schools, he warned.

It was unclear on Wednesday whether private schools would be included.

Mr Weil’s office said: «(Private schools) will be included in different ways. We can agree on aims for social make-up, recruitment strategies.»

Le Monde said that suggested that the algorithm would likely not apply to them.

Fuente: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/09/14/anti-elitism-algorithm-to-decide-which-secondary-school-paris-pu/

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Liberia: Some Operators Tipped to Transform Sector Have Limited Achievements in ‘Messy’ Arena

África/Liberia/16 de Septiembre de 2016/Autor: Rodney D. Sieh/Fuente: Front Page Africa

RESUMEN: Liberia esta en medio de lo que algunos desearían, en una importante transformación de la educación, entre el  éxito o el fracaso, entre nadar o hundirse en el dilema de las carreras  contra el tiempo para rescatar lo que muchos, incluyendo a la presidenta Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, han concluido como un escenario un tanto desordenado, humedeciendo las esperanzas de decenas de niños pequeños que se encuentran en las esquinas de las calles al lado del tráfico durante el horario escolar. El gobierno a través del Ministerio de Educación recientemente tomó la controvertida decisión de externalizar el sector de los operadores privados en lo que el Ministro George Werner anuncio con bombo y platillo como una oportunidad para que los niños aprendan. «Todos los niños merecen una gran educación – una que le permita seguir sus sueños y lograr su potencial. Y sin embargo, en Liberia estamos fallandole demasiado a nuestros hijos. Nuestros profesores, nuestras escuelas y nuestro sistema todos se enfrentan a desafíos profundos en incorporarlos. Por desgracia, es en las comunidades más pobres, donde los retos son mayores.»

Liberia is in the midst of what some hope would be a major education transformation, a make or break, sink or swim dilemma racing against time to rescue what many including President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf have concluded is a somewhat messy arena, dampening the hopes of scores of young children found on the street corners and traffic sideways during school hours.

The government through the ministry of Education recently took the controversial decision to outsource the sector to private operators in what Minister George Werner trumpeted as an opportunity for children to learn.

“Every child deserves a great education – one that allows her to follow her dreams and achieve her potential. And yet in Liberia we are failing too many of our children. Our teachers, our schools and our system all face deep and embedded challenges. Unfortunately, it is in the poorest communities where those challenges are greatest.”

Werner’s gamble hopes to improve on the disturbing statistics that out of 1.5 million children enrolled in primary school, some 42 percent of primary age children remain out of school.

While Werner and the government have labeled the dilemma “an injustice that needs to be addressed, many remain unsure that the outsourcing of the sector to private operators is the best approach to buck the trend holding back Liberia’s future generation from derail.

At a recent Cabinet meeting, the Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf led government was briefed on the status of the Partnership Schools for Liberia (PSL) undertaken by the Ministry of Education in concert with private operators targeting some 185 schools in 13 counties across the country.

Much of the attention was initially pointed at Bridge International Academies, the sole partner announced by the MoE when the outsourcing plan was initially announced. The school trumpets itself as the most polarizing chain of private schools in Africa.

The partnership includes 185 schools, 92 randomly chosen as PSL schools and 93 forming a comparison group. The partnership would enable the following eight private operators to run, manage and operate selected schools.

The MoE has broken down the distribution as follows: BRAC – 20; Bridge International Academies– 23; Liberian Youth Network, LIYONET – 14; More than Me – 6; Omega – 19; Rising – 5; Stella Maris – 4 schools; Street Child – 12 schools.

Over the past few weeks, FrontPageAfrica has been dissecting the partners and made some rather peculiar discovery, that a lot the operators have very limited exposure to Liberia terrain.

Bridge International Academies

SCHOOLS ALLOCATED: 23

THEIR PITCH: BIA trumpets itself as the world’s largest education innovation company serving the 700 million families who live on less than $2 USD per day. “We strive to provide the highest quality education product to the more than 100,000 students who attend Bridge’s more than 400 nursery and primary schools across emerging markets in Africa and (soon to open) in Asia.”

BIA pitches itself as a data-driven and technology-enabled using smartphones, tablets, and “closed loop” Learning Lab to monitor teacher and student performance in real time and says it constantly reviews and revises to ensure that it offers a world class education that will prepare students for the 21st century. Outside of the classroom, BIA works with governments and civil society organizations to create customized teacher training modules, English Language Learning curricula, and “pop up” schools for refugees and other vulnerable populations.

THE MISSING LINK: BIA took a hit recently when the Ugandan government announced that it would shut down all schools operated by Bridge. Janet Museveni, Uganda’s minister of education and sports, announced last month that the government will close the 63 for-profit nursery and primary schools run by Bridge International in the country after deciding they fell short of standards on education, hygiene and sanitation.

In a statement to parliament, Museveni said that in Uganda the material used by Bridge “could not promote teacher-pupil interaction” and that the poor hygiene standards “put the life and safety of school children in danger”.

Bridge International has been funded by the World Bank, the UK’s Department for International Development, Bill Gates and others.

Like Liberia and Kenya, Uganda had turned to private providers to fill the gaps in infrastructure, teaching and other resources which have opened up under its universal primary and secondary education programmes.

In May 2015, over 100 organizations signed a statement critical of the privatization of education in Kenya and Uganda, which slammed Bridge International specifically for delivering poor quality education for too high a fee.

In its defense, Bridge International said it was sincerely concerned over Museveni’s statement to the Ugandan parliament, which it said threatened to force 12,000 children out of their schools and 800 Ugandans out of work.

“We are waiting to receive the report [into Bridge schools in Uganda] to review the ministry’s concerns,” said Michael Kaddu, head of corporate and public affairs for Bridge International Academies in Uganda.

“We have been working closely with the ministry to put the needs of the children first and come to a speedy resolution of any issues made known to us.

EXPECTATIONS: Despite the controversy, Bridge says recent results point to gains by its pupils in standard deviation on core reading skills, standard deviation on Math compared to their peers in neighboring schools, based on USAID-designed exams administered by an independent monitoring and Evaluation Company – this translated into over 250 additional days of learning.

LIYONET

SCHOOLS ALLOCATED: 14

THEIR PITCH: The Liberian Youth Network (LIYONET), is a registered non-governmental, non-political and non-for-profit organization committed to promoting children and youth participation in sustainable development and good leadership leading to bringing up a generation of children and young people who are responsible citizens of Liberia, through provision of socio-economic empowerment, integration, access to basic services (education and information), self-reliance, gender mainstreaming and civil and constitutional rights of communities-residents and vulnerable persons.

THE MISSING LINK: Until the partnership announcement very little information was available regarding the network. FrontPageAfrica has been unable to trace any previous engagement in education. The network has no website or record or trail of its work to education or working with kids.

EXPECTATIONS: LIYONNET has been allocated schools in Bong and Sinoe counties respectively, notably in the Fuamah, Panta-Kpaai and Zota Districts in Bong and the Tarjuwon District in Sinoe. With very little experience in education, the jury is out on how much reach and impact the organization will have on transforming education for the rural and mostly-poor constituents.

BANGLADESH RURAL ADVANCEMENT COMMITTEE (BRAC LIBERIA)

SCHOOLS ALLOCATED: 20

THEIR PITCH: BRAC launched operations in Liberia in 2008 and has been working for a better future for Liberians with programmes in microfinance, agriculture, poultry and livestock, health, and Empowerment and Livelihoods of Adolescents; programmes that benefit more than half a million people.

THE MISSING LINK: While much of the attention was focused on Bridge, many were puzzled as to how the organization got its foot in the door of Liberia’s education outsource – particularly when it has not demonstrated experience in the area in Liberia.

Ironically, the organization which has been in Liberia since 2008 did not prioritize education as it had in next door Sierra Leone, Uganda, South Sudan, Philippines, Haiti and Afghanistan.

More importantly, an internal BRAC report on its schools in Bangladesh found that students found much of the course work difficult, in part because the BRAC methodology which equates learning with memorization. Moreover, according to the report, many of the children found the materials completely new. It is unclear how BRAC intends to adapt its model to suit Liberia’s pressing needs.

The report concluded that the strict discipline and rigid lines of authority found throughout BRAC and its programs — can be discomfiting to western sensibilities.

“This characteristic of BRAC’s program functions as a two-edged sword. On the positive side, BRAC has succeeded in setting basic standards for its schools, including the number, age, and sex of students; the size, shape, and decorations of classrooms; the teacher and students arriving and leaving at the right time; and the holding of regular meetings of the parent and school committees.”

EXPECTATIONS: The organization trumpets its primary schools’ operations in Bangladesh where it has been non-formal education to disadvantaged and out-of-school children, particularly girls. It will be interesting to see how it performs in Liberia where it has made no inroads in education.

Where BRAC could come in handy is if it can put some of the experiences trumpeted from its work in Bangladesh where it has prepared students to sit for the government Shomaponi Examination, the equivalent of the WAEC. BRAC primary schools are free, and include textbooks, notebooks, and other educational materials.

There are currently over 22,000 BRAC primary schools operating throughout the world. Liberia expects a lot and BRAC must prove it has earned its stripes. Under the partnership, BRAC has been allocated schools in Lofa and Nimba counties, in Foya, Kolahun, Zorzor, Voinjama, Saclapea and Gbehlay Geh.

OMEGA (Ghana)

SCHOOLS ALLOCATED: 19

THEIR PITCH: Founded by Ken & Lisa Donkoh, and James Tooley in 2008, and backed by Pearson’s Affordable Learning Fund, Omega Schools is a social enterprise on a mission to deliver quality education at the lowest cost on a grand scale.

The model has proven to be extremely attractive to parents, enabling its schools to be full within 10 days of opening. Currently the chain has 38 schools educating over 20,000 students and seeking to double that number in a year.

 In Ghana, Omega Schools has responded to need for low-income schools with an innovative Pay-As-You-Learn model – a chain of low cost private schools with specialized curriculum, assessment, technology and management modules that are benefiting the poor and empowering aspirations of low income families and their communities.

THE MISSING LINK: While Omega has been given high marks for its work in Ghana, it is entering unfamiliar territory in a rural Liberia setting lacking stable electricity and in some cases, very limited internet facilities.

But more importantly, a working Paper by author Curtis Riep suggests that the Omega Chain of Private Schools in Ghana which claims to bring education to the poorest is instead delivering a high-burden cost for access.

Riep finds that Omega Schools’ impact on access is «negligible,» quality of education suffers as expenditures are driven down, and the cost of these schools actually represents a high percentage of household income.

He concludes that this model of privatization represents a «for-profiteering» endeavor, exploiting the poorest members of Ghanaian society and their basic right to education.

EXPECTATIONS: Omega has been assigned schools in Bong, Margibi, Montserrado and Nimba counties respectively. Omega is expected to improve performances in Salala, Suacoco, Zota, Gibi, Marshall, Greater Monrovia, Buu-Yao, Gbehlay-Geh and Saclepea.

 If Omega can do a quarter of what it has on paper in Ghana, the areas benefiting from its program could see vast improvements. Located in Kasoa, on the outskirts of Accra has been hailed for its all-inclusive and no-hidden-fee model.

MORE THAN ME ACADEMY (US-Liberia)

SCHOOLS ALLOCATED: 6

THEIR PITCH: The academy uses education as a catalyst for transformative social change for every girl in Liberia.

MISSING LINK: Bolstered by heavy international media attention at the height of Ebola, the academy was asked by the MoE to replicate its model and add capacity to the ministry to meet their priorities. While the academy says it remains committed to maintaining a center of excellence by scaling its successes into pilot government schools across the country, results so far has not been convincing.

The Academy was in 2014 dogged by allegations of rape when its recruiter was accused of having sexual relations with ten students, ages 12 to 16.

In court documents, the students claimed that the recruiter took advantage of the school’s free education program to use them as sex slaves. The stain from that episode continues to raise questions over MTN’s ability to transcend the larger realities of Liberia’s education dilemma.

EXPECTATIONS: MTM has been allocated six schools in Bomi, Montserrado and Gbarpolu with emphasis in the Klay, West Bank, Senjeh, Bopolu and Dewoin districts. Many are unsure whether MTN with only one school to its credit in less than five years has enough pedigree to now be ranked amongst the top-carrying partners selected for the partnership.

RISING ACADEMY (Sierra Leone)

SCHOOLS ALLOCATED: 5

THEIR PITCH: The academy created by a group of Canadian and British entrepreneurs to address Sierra Leone’s education dilemma, uses simple pillars: teach strong values, select and train teachers carefully, make the student the protagonist of the classroom, develop well-crafted and engaging class plans and create a feedback culture.

In Sierra Leone, the school charges a flat fee, with no extra charges, of 25,000 Leones (US$3.5) per week, with a possibility of a scholarship for students that cannot afford this rate.

“The wage bill is kept low by paying teachers the average salary of state schools—but with the benefit of guaranteeing on-time payment which is already a huge competitive advantage,” according to Francisco Guarisse, who has spent some time working with Rising.

Rising has grown from 1 school and 80 students to 8 schools and more than 1000 students. The academy made its mark at the height of the deadly Ebola virus outbreak by continuing to provide education despite schools being closed during the epidemic as teachers provided daily Ebola prevention and literacy classes.

The academy says it remains committed to rigorous, transparent, independent evaluation. What sets Rising apart is its partnership with Oxford University which monitors its performance. The academy says its students develop excellent literacy, numeracy and spoken English, as the foundation for success in further study, work and day-to-day life.

MISSING LINK: According to a baseline report dubbed a longitudinal Study of learning, progression, and personal growth in Sierra Leone, the Students in the Rising Academy Network achieved in mathematics an average scale Score of 475 Compared to those in other private schools (matched. In age and circumstance) who achieve an average score of 458 And those in government funded schools who achieve an average score of 450.

The report noted that only 5% Of Rising Academy Network Students achieved the benchmark at the start of the study (before Teaching began). 62% performed very poorly.

The scale of the challenge to improve mathematics outcomes is clear and the study will monitor the migration of students out of low performance bands as a measure of equity in performance standards. Students in the Rising Academy Network Achieve an average scale score of 193 compared to those in other private schools (matched

EXPECTATIONS: Rising has been allocated schools in Bomi and Montserrado Counties and will be expected to mirror its successes in Sierra Leone to parts of Liberia where basic education remains a challenge in Suehn Mecca, West Bank, Dewoin.

Around 1,300 schools were destroyed during the Civil War that lasted from 1991 to 2002. The academy has thrived under similar conditions like Liberia, in Sierra Leone where two thirds of children were out of school due to the war, it has made inroads.

STREET CHILD

SCHOOLS ALLOCATED: 12

THEIR PITCH: The UK registered charity helps to create opportunities through education for some of the most vulnerable children in the world. It expanded its reach to Liberia in 2008 looking to help out-of-school children, many of whom are living full-time on the streets, and offer them the chance to improve their lives by going to school and reuniting them with their families.

The charity says it works with communities to construct basic schools and promote the importance of education and identify members of the community to undertake distance teacher training.

The project has grown over the past 3and a half years to support almost 400 teachers and has a presence in a total of 127 communities across Sierra Leone. As a result, Street Child has now created first ever access to education for over 17,000 children in rural communities.

MISSING LINK: While the charity is doing some good for needy kids in Liberia, it’s education model remains suspect in the absence of a track record of deliverables toward education in Liberia.  

EXPECTATIONS: The charity has been allocated schools in Grand Cape Mount, Margibi and Montserado Counties with particular emphasis in Todee, Tewor, Tallah Tomb, Gibi, Marshall and Garwula districts.

Beyond the charitable aspects of looking out for the poor and needy, SC will be required to show Liberians that it deserves the twelve schools under its watch and is capable of bringing out the best of the kids and improving scores.

STELLA MARIS

SCHOOLS ALLOCATED: 4

THEIR PITCH: Stella Maris Polytechnic (SMP) is one of the successful institutions under the highly-rated Catholic schools’ system. Founded in 1988, the school is owned and operated by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Monrovia with approximately 2,000 students.

The school is recognized by Liberia’s National Commission on Higher Education as an approved baccalaureate granting school of higher learning, and is a member of the Association of African Universities.

The school traces its history back to the Arthur Barclay Vocational Institute that had its roots in a donation of land to the church in 1972. Eventually the planned school was renamed as the Arthur Barclay Technical Institute and first held classes in February 1979.

Catholic leaders then considered starting a Catholic college beginning in 1985, which eventually led to the establishment of Don Bosco Polytechnic.  That school included Arthur Barclay Technical Institute which then became the Arthur Barclay Technical Institute.

Stella Maris Polytechnic elementary school supports those who are in need in the wider community in Liberia.

MISSING LINK: Catholic schools in Liberia have a strong track record of discipline and academic performance but impact has been slowed due to funding issues in recent years. Nevertheless, the schools under the catholic umbrella remain a vibrant contributor to Liberia’s post-war resurgence.

EXPECTATION: The catholic-backed institution has been allocated schools in Dorbor and Trehn districts in Grand Kru and Karleway 2 and Sodoken districts in Maryland. Many expect that the model that has worked in the past will continue here despite insurmountable odds.

THE VERDICT

Werner may have been right in his conclusion that “Change is not easy” as he heralded his argument that the public system alone cannot address Liberia’s pressing education challenges singlehandedly.

According to Werner: “We have some great public schools in Liberia but we have far too few of them. And we already have a diverse set of school operators from government and non-government sectors in our education system.

We must work together and draw on the best of both sectors if we are to achieve the results we want to see. While the government will always remain responsible for ensuring every child’s right to education, we need to work far more collaboratively with others to strengthen our public schooling sector. This must happen fast.  We cannot risk failing another generation of children.”

Despite Werner’s lament, the jury is still out on the effectiveness of low-cost private schools. Various reports and assessments have been mixed regarding the level of impact on disadvantaged and poverty-stricken environments.

The bottom line is many remain unsure that these low-cost private schools work for communities at the bottom of the economic barrel, particularly in some communities in Liberia lacking electricity, internet access and the high-tech model a lot of the schools are trumpeting as part of the successes in other countries.

In the coming months, evaluation and testimony from students and families experimenting Liberia’s venture into the model could prove to be a deciding factor as to how far this could go in helping Liberia fix its messy education system.

Expectations are high but accomplishing much in so little time could prove to be a daunting dilemma for the Liberian experiment

Some experts project two years as an ideal time to begin growing and seeing which operators can pull it off and work in the most difficult and remote districts.

It will be critical to see how the monitory and evaluation of this partnership would be enforced or regulated. If privatization is on the table, some observers say, it would have been key to look at successful school systems operating in Liberia to either participate in the PSL program or obtain license learned from their model to replicate in the flailing public school system.

Also, questions are being raised as to how the MoE came up with the criteria for allotting schools per organization with some of the partners accepted having no or limited track record of education work in Liberia being allotted larger number of schools compared to others who have.

What many agree on is that reforming Liberia’s education system is a work in progress and a process likely to take a long time as private operators — for-profit companies and charitable organizations — embark on a quest to take charge of 120 government primary schools, in a one-year pilot project that could make or break Liberia’s venture into a nationwide charter school system.

Fuente: http://www.frontpageafricaonline.com/index.php/politics/1983-dissecting-liberia-s-education-partners-some-operators-tipped-to-transform-education-sector-have-very-limited-record-of-achievements-accomplishments-in-messy-arena

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Vietnam education ministry’s plan for multiple-choice math test sparks debate

Asia/Vietnan/16 de Septiembre de 2016/Fuente: Tuoitrenews

RESUMEN: Un plan para reemplazar el papel de matemáticas de la escuela nacional actual por un único examen de opción múltiple ha traído opiniones mezcladas entre eruditos locales y el público. El jueves pasado, el Ministerio de Educación y Formación de Vietnam (MoET) anunció el primer borrador de sus ajustes propuestos para el  examen nacional de la escuela secundaria del país, a entrar en vigor el próximo año. El examen fue introducido por primera vez en 2015 después de los exámenes de graduación de la escuela y de acceso a la universidad que antes estaban separados. Los ajustes propuestos por la MoET incluyen cambios sustanciales en los papeles de prueba del examen, incluyendo la sustitución de la tradicional prueba de matemáticas escrita por un documento de opción múltiple.

A plan to replace the current national high school math paper with a multiple-choice only exam has brought mixed opinions from both local scholars and the public.

Last Thursday, Vietnam’s Ministry of Education and Training (MoET) announced the first draft of its proposed adjustments to the country’s national high school exam, to take effect next year.

The exam was first introduced in 2015 after the previously separate high school graduation and university entrance exams were merged.

The proposed adjustments by the MoET include substantial changes to the exam’s test papers, including the replacement of the traditional written math test with a multiple-choice paper.

The current format features ten problems to which students are required to write their answers, including their step-by-step workings, before arriving at a solution.

The proposed new math paper will comprise of 50 problems, all in multiple-choice format, for which only one of four given answers is correct.

Questions for the test will be drawn at random by a computer from a standardized and updated question list, according to the ministry’s plan.

The proposal was quickly met with mixed reactions, some raising questions over the proposed formats effectiveness in testing students’ mathematical thinking, while others embraced the change as an effective countermeasure to cheating.

The Vietnam Mathematical Society (VMS) was one of the first and most vocal opponents of the plan, calling a press conference on Monday to publicly voice their objection to the proposed math paper.

According to VMS Secretary General-cum-Vice President, Prof. Dr. Phung Ho Hai, most members of the Society’s Executive Committee agreed that the change from a written math paper to multiple-choice question list was a hasty decision that would leave students and teachers unprepared.

The professor added that the effectiveness of multiple-choice math tests employed by the Vietnam National University Hanoi, upon which the new national math paper is based, had not been properly evaluated.

Therefore, Hai said, the new test format should not be applied until its academic credentials are proven.

“The Executive Committee of VMS strongly advises that the MoET retains the current written format for the math paper in the 2017 national high school exam,” Hai said.

The VMS further explained that employing multiple-choice questions in testing mathematical logic and thinking would completely eliminate students’ analytical and problem-solving skills by encouraging tips and tricks to skip to the final answer, rather than demonstrating a full understanding of the logical steps to arrive at a particular solution.

However, Assoc. Prof. Dr. Nguyen Hoi Nghia, deputy director at Vietnam National University-Ho Chi Minh City, offered a different view, saying that the benefits of multiple-choice tests have not been fully understood in Vietnam even by mathematicians and administrative officials.

According to professor Nghia, objective study is required before reaching any conclusion on whether or not to implement the format in Math papers.

Nghia said he expected the MoET to host national and international seminars on the issue and draw experience from the public and published international math experts.

“In my opinion, the current science of multiple-choice testing does not disqualify it from testing pure mathematical knowledge,” Nghia said.

“Of course a detailed route to its application should be outlined, so that students and teachers can be properly prepared for the transition.”

In addition to a change in the math paper, the MoET’s planned changes to the national high school exam include two new test papers; natural sciences and social sciences, each consisting of 60 multiple-choice questions.

The natural sciences paper tests students’ aptitude in physics, chemistry, and biology, while the social sciences paper is comprised of questions on history, geography, and ethics.

The two new papers will replace the current five separate tests on physics, chemistry, biology, history, and geography, a move the MoET said would reduce costs in organizing the national exam.

Fuente: http://tuoitrenews.vn/education/37041/education-ministrys-plan-for-multiplechoice-math-test-sparks-debate

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