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In Neighborhoods Without Public Schools, Zimbabwe’s Students Rely on Illegal Schools

Africa/ Zimbague/ 09.10.2018/ Fuente: globalpressjournal.com/africa/zimbabwe/neighborhoods.

It’s noon on a windy Friday in Caledonia, a neighborhood along Harare’s eastern edge. Children roam the schoolyard at Ngodza Primary School, excited for the weekend ahead.

This for-profit school has three classrooms. Together, those classrooms accommodate 118 children, who each pay $10 per month to attend. The school is not registered with the government. It operates illegally.

Teclar Chengedzai lives in Caledonia and says her 6-year-old must learn there because there are no government schools nearby.

This is a common problem as Harare expands far beyond its original boundaries. Unregistered schools now outnumber registered schools in the city, according to government data.

There were an estimated 1.48 million Harare residents in 2012, according to census data. It’s not clear how many schools operate in the city, but locals say the government doesn’t come close to meeting their education needs.

Children attend class at Ngodza Primary School, an unregistered school in Harare, Zimbabwe.

Gamuchirai Masiyiwa, GPJ Zimbabwe

As a result, unregistered schools, both primary and secondary, are opening in areas such as Caledonia, where there are no public schools. That’s a far cry from Zimbabwe’s educational heyday in the early 1980s, when a new government under Robert Mugabe abolished a long-standing system that favored the country’s white minority with high-quality schools while black students’ education was neglected. Under Mugabe’s leadership, Zimbabwe attained a literacy rate of nearly 100 percent and the government boasted of having the best school system on the continent. But over time, those gains dissolved under a corrupt and brutal regime, leaving Zimbabwean students with few options for quality education (See a timeline of Zimbabwe’s education system here.)

Now, some areas have more unregistered schools than government ones, says Christopher Chamunorwa Kateera, director of the Harare Provincial Education Office in the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education, but the government can’t close the illegal schools because it would leave entire neighborhoods without options for education. An amendment to the country’s Education Act obliges the government to provide students in such areas with a formal alternative.

According to government data, there are 205 registered schools and 219 unregistered schools in Harare, Kateera says.

The government has closed some unregistered schools and enrolled their students in registered schools, but in other cases, officials seek to formalize unregistered schools, Kateera says.

“Wherever we identify unregistered colleges, we call them in and have meetings with them informing them of the procedures they should follow to regularize their establishments,” he says.

Parents say unregistered schools come with their own challenges. The school that Chengedzai’s child attends doesn’t provide textbooks. It also doesn’t offer grades six or seven because, unlike registered schools, it doesn’t have access to the exams required to attend secondary school.

“They want parents to buy these books, which are expensive to get as well,” Chengedzai says.

A teacher leads students at Ngodza Primary School in the Caledonia neighborhood of Harare, Zimbabwe.

Gamuchirai Masiyiwa, GPJ Zimbabwe

Another problem is that a student must be enrolled at a registered school in order to take standardized exams, which are required for entrance into university and also for many jobs.

Godfrey Hozo, the school’s headmaster, says the school opened in 2016. It’s difficult to keep teachers, he says, because of the school’s low pay. Right now, the school has four teachers, including himself.

“We end up having composite classes, because at times you might have five students for grade three and 16 students for grade four,” he says. “The teacher then has to plan what they teach for each level, but they will be in the same room.”

The school charges $10 per month for fees, he says. About 70 percent of the enrolled children are able to pay. Those who can’t pay the fees are eventually dismissed.

A major problem, he adds, is getting information from the national education ministry about the government-approved curriculum. Hozo says he asks teachers in government schools to help him access syllabi and textbooks.

Hozo says the government should relax what he calls the “stringent conditions” for school registration, so that institutions like his can fully engage in the nation’s educational system.

There’s no indication that the government will ease those conditions. Instead, Kateera says, unregistered schools need to improve their standards and formally register with the government.

Fuente de la noticia: https://globalpressjournal.com/africa/zimbabwe/neighborhoods-without-public-schools-zimbabwes-students-rely-illegal-schools/

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Indonesia Needs to Educate on Natural Disasters

Asia/Indonesia/09.10.2018/Source: www.fairobserver.com.

fter another earthquake and tsunami in Indonesia, it is clear that people are not taught what to do in the event of natural disasters.

Indonesia has once again been hit by a natural disaster. On September 28, a 7.5-magnitude earthquake followed by a tsunami struck the cities of Palu and Donggala on the island of Sulawesi. At the time of publishing, at least 1,424 people died, with thousands more injured. With homes in ruin, tens of thousands have been forced to live in makeshift refugee camps.

According to Reuters, Indonesia’s geophysics agency, BMKG, lifted a tsunami warning too early, just before the waves hit the coast of Palu. It is also understood that buoys — which are connected to the seafloor to detect tsunamis — in Sulawesi have not worked for the past six years and had not been fixed due to a “lack of funding.” With poor planning in place, Indonesians were left with little notice of an imminent disaster.

As reported by The Guardian, Phil Cummins of the Australian National University and Adam Switzer of Nanyang Technological University in Singapore believe the earthquake and tsunami were not the result of a failure in technology, but rather due to the lack of education among the people.

In 2004, Southeast Asia was left devastated by an earthquake and tsunami that quickly spread across the Indian Ocean. Unlike that time, the wave that struck Sulawesi was not was prompted by an earthquake hundreds of miles out in sea. Instead, it was a localized tsunami resulting from an earthquake close to the coast. The tsunami waves hit Palu just 30 minutes after the quake which, according to Switzer, “should have been the early warning.”

Cummins added that to blame technology is “misguided.” Instead of relying on a warning system, he said, people should have sought “high ground immediately. They cannot afford to wait for a siren or a warning, they need to move instantly.” The issue is that Indonesians in Sulawesi did not really know they should have done that.

He added: “Either they didn’t know they needed to do that or they didn’t believe anything would happen, and in either case that says the people in Sulawesi were not educated about what they need to do in this situation. And that’s what killed people.”

THE NEED TO EDUCATE

The conditions in Palu should be a wake-up call about the need for education — especially for those living in earthquake-prone areas — not only about natural disasters in general, but what people must do to ensure their safety. It is indeed difficult to predict when a natural disaster will occur. But considering Indonesia is vulnerable to such situations, it needs a comprehensive plan so that citizens are educated in how to respond to earthquakes and tsunamis. Sufficient response plans would mean that every Indonesian has basic knowledge about what to do when disaster strikes.

In Indonesia, most elementary school textbooks in social studies contain a a lesson about natural disasters. These include that cutting down trees can cause landslides and trigger floods or about how earthquakes occur. But there is no lesson about what to do when an actual quake takes place. Presumably, mitigation in Indonesia has not become a serious issue just yet.

Records over the past 15 years show there have been two devastating earthquakes in the country, leading to thousands of casualties. The 2004 earthquake and tsunami in Aceh caused 230,000 deaths across 14 countries around the Indian Ocean — the majority of those in Indonesia. Another earthquake took place in Yogyakarta in 2006, which claimed the lives of 5,000 people.

Several years have passed, but Indonesians still do not understand what to do when an earthquake occurs, other than running out of a building or trying to protect themselves under a table. With the country situated in an active geological area, Indonesia must prepare itself for natural disasters.

EARTHQUAKES AND TSUNAMIS

It should be made clear that educating people about what to do when an earthquake takes place is as crucial as having advanced technology to predict when disasters may occur. According to the US Department of Homeland Security’s Ready website, when an earthquake shakes the ground and you are in a vehicle, you should immediately pull over and stop. If you’re in bed, you should stay there. If you are outdoors, you should stay outdoors. Such valuable information is often unknown to Indonesians and should be an example for authorities and nongovernmental organizations in helping to increase people’s readiness to face earthquakes.

There is also a need for disaster exercises such as practicingdrop, cover and holdAs per Ready, this involves dropping on the ground to your hands and knees; covering or protecting your head and neck with your arms; crawling to the extent needed to avoid falling or collapsing materials; and holding onto strong furniture or doorways in a building until an earthquake stops.

No less important is making an emergency communicationpattern with your family. In an earthquake-prone country like Indonesia that has the 2004 tsunami in its memory, this is necessary.

There are also reasons why you are advised not to run out of a room if there is an earthquake. Trying to run when an earthquake takes place is very dangerous due to potentially falling debris or broken glass. It is safer for people to stay at home and protect themselves by crouching under a table.

Earthquakes do not usually last for very long. It only takes tens of seconds for an earthquake to occur. However, when the the ground stops shaking, people must be aware of the possibility of a tsunami, especially if they live on the coast. Again, these things are not taught to the average Indonesian.

In 2004, the tsunami in Aceh was preceded by a 9.2-magnitude earthquake that lasted for an estimated 10 minutes. In such instances, it is important to educate fishermen who work at sea.

Nature will usually give a number of signs before a tsunami hits. When a tsunami approaches the coastline, water will usually spread toward dry land and cause the inside of the sea to be exposed, showing its contents, corals and fish in the sea itself. Because of the low tide, there are often many fish floundering on the beach. Due to a lack of understanding, fishermen may not always act immediately. They need to be aware that they should not pick up the fish and should instead seek high ground.

Tsunamis cause abnormal sea activities. The key sign is the presence of a wall of water with a great roar. Imagine a sound that resembles that of a train or jet.

PREPARING FOR NATURAL DISASTERS

The theory seems easy, but the practice is difficult. As natural disasters are hard to predict, humans can only anticipate them by preparing themselves. Therefore, there is a need to make sure that training is carried out in Indonesia.

There are many things that can be done to educate people about disaster avoidance efforts. Schools could conduct regular evacuation exercises for earthquakes. Posters can also spread awareness about what can be done during natural disasters. National media outlets can also be used to educate people, such as making earthquake alertness videos. Relevant institutions and government ministries also need to make more of an effort to ensure that those who live and work on the coast are sufficiently educated about the signs of natural disasters and what they need to do in such events.

What is clear is that, learning from Palu and previous natural disasters, more efforts are needed by both the Indonesian government and other relevant stakeholders to educate people not only about basic information concerning natural disasters, but also what they need to do to recognize signs and steps to be taken when those disasters occur. Doing so could save lives.

Source of the notice: https://www.fairobserver.com/region/asia_pacific/indonesia-earthquake-sulawesi-tsunami-natural-disasters-asia-news-today-24920/
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Double trouble for visually impaired pupils in Nigerian schools

Africa/Nigeria/09.10.2018/Source: punchng.com.

In this first part of a two-part report, Afeez Hanafi writes about how dearth of learning facilities compounds the plight of visually impaired persons in schools across Nigeria

With exercise books, a pen and few other materials, Kehinde Lawrence is good to make the best out of every lesson. A Junior Secondary School 3 pupil at Owo High School, Ondo State, she reads her numerous textbooks in school and at home without let or hindrance.

But such ease is a mirage for her visually impaired classmate, Godfrey Ekevre. Aside from a snippet that he takes out of every class, the 25-year-old needs more several hours – or days – to write the same note Lawrence will have completed the moment a class ends.

The Delta-born pupil has been going through the strenuous routine since 2005 when he lost his sight to glaucoma. Before then, he had enjoyed stress-free learning as Lawrence up till Primary 6.

His 13 years of academic life without sight has been both harrowing and depressing; no thanks to the dearth of facilities in the school to aid his learning.

Devices such as braille hand frame and stylus, slate and stylus, Perkins Brailler, SMART Brailler, braille embosser/braille printer and braille notetaker are writing and reading tools for visually impaired persons with the last three devices considered up-to-date but expensive for the special pupils, many of whom are from poor families, to afford.

Perkins Brailler and SMART Brailler are typewriter-like machines for producing braille texts. While the former is old-fashioned, the latter is a modern tool that displays, vocalises and produces information typed in braille.

Similarly, Job Access With Speech, a computer screen reader programme for Microsoft Windows, allows visually impaired persons to read the screen with voice notes or by braille display.

In a review, Vision Australia, a leading national provider of blindness and low vision services in Australia, describes braille hand frame and stylus as a means of writing braille introduced over a century ago. It is said to be “very time consuming,” requiring an average of 90 minutes to produce a page of braille.

Sadly, Ekevre and many of his counterparts in Owo High School, Ondo State and some other institutions across the country use either the moribund braille hand frame and stylus or the archaic slate and stylus to write notes.

Besides the rigour of using the old-fashioned tool, Ekevre is faced with the burden of getting braille paper he slots into the frame to produce notes.

“I wish I was a sighted pupil,” the 25-year-old said regrettably as he began to share his plight with our correspondent.

He continued, “The school used to provide braille paper for us (visually impaired pupils) but they stopped buying it about two years ago. They said there was no money. Since then, we have been buying the paper by ourselves. A pack of the paper is N1,200 and it contains 100 pieces. I use about three packs a term.

“It is also difficult to get sighted pupils to assist us. We call them to dictate their notes to us after classes while we use braille hand frame and stylus to write. We usually give them money for them to assist us. I give them about N500 weekly.

“I bought a fairly-used typewriter which I use during exams for N10,000. My mother cannot afford to buy a new one for me. As I speak to you, it is faulty.

“The school has a library, but it does not make provision for the visually impaired pupils. Even the braille library at the Ondo State School for the Blind where our boarding house is has a few braille materials and most of them are scriptures. Majority of the books on the shelves are in print form.

“Our textbooks are supposed to be in braille so that we can read them by ourselves but what some of my friends who have recorders do is to give textbooks to sighted pupils to dictate to them while they record. I wish I had my own midget too instead of writing notes all the time which is very stressful.”

Although pupils with visual impairment at the school enjoy free boarding and do not pay tution, the expenses they incur to make themselves relevant academically are high compared to what their sighted counterparts are required to spend.

Our correspondent gathered that a regular pupil pays less than N2,000 per term as tuition; half of what Ekevre spends in a term only on braille paper.

For the 25-year-old on whose neck poverty and parental issues hang like a noose, the stress he passes through in the course of learning comes with its attendant psychological implications.

“I don’t usually feel settled. I think of how to get braille paper once the pack I have is almost finished. My mother is a petty trader and she has been striving by all means to fund my education. My father has two wives. For three years now, I have not seen him. He is with the second wife,” he added.

Ekevre’s counterpart at the United Faith Tabernacle College, Jarawan-Kogi, Plateau State, Yohana Iliya, endures a similar gruelling experience. But unlike Ekevre, the stress is reduced for the Senior Secondary School 3 pupil with the aid of a recorder, which he bought with donations by some Good Samaritans.

“Quality braille materials are expensive. That is why most of us resort to what we can afford. We beg classmates to dictate notes to us. Last term, I sought the help of a classmate, but he refused to offer any help. From the tone of his voice, it was clear that I had become a burden to him. I felt very bad that day, but I had to bottle up my feelings.

“The school has some braille machines but they are not working. We use slate and stylus to write our notes. Since I have a recorder, I spend less on buying braille paper,” he added.

Hundreds of kilometres away, at the Government Secondary School, Kwali, Abuja, Amos Bako strives endlessly to seek education like every other ambitious person. At 27, the SS1 pupil is unwavering in his determination to become an expert in International Relations despite the many hurdles that stand in his way.

He began his tortuous academic journey in 2007 after he became blind as a result of some particles that entered his eyes at a mechanic workshop in his village in Takum, Taraba State.

Like Ekevre and Iliya, Bako does not pay school fees, but he spends a lot of money on buying learning materials which are said to be unavailable in the school.

He stated, “My parents are retired civil servants and they live on their pensions. It is my mechanic friends that sponsor the larger part of my education. Back then when I was an apprentice, I did not think of going to school. I started my primary school in 2007. I finished in 2013 and proceeded to the secondary school.

“Special pupils are facing enormous challenges. Our writing materials are too costly but they are what we need to excel. I buy a pack of braille paper N1,500 here (Abuja). Frame and stylus costs N7,000. Perkins brailler is around N250,000 but I cannot afford it. The school has three braille machines but they are not working now. They have been faulty since I got admission into the school.”

Learning appears to be more daunting for many students at higher institutions across the country. Often times, they depend on some tolerant sighted course mates to move from one lecture room to another and document their notes.

Except for a few whose families could buy them modern facilities, many visually impaired students, especially at public higher institutions, make do with outdated devices to study, too.

Bulus Chuanoemoa, a 300-level student of Special Education, Visual Handicap, at the University of Jos, Plateau State, is one of such indigent students whose studies have been fraught with frustration resulting largely from non-provision of braille facilities by the school.

He said, “We face many challenges starting from the nature of the school environment which is unfriendly to the visually impaired students. The locations of our lecture theatres and departments are difficult for the blind students to navigate. Most times, we need our sighted friends to assist us to attend classes.

“Books in the library and those recommended by lecturers are only available in print form and it is difficult to get them translated into braille. One can buy a book for N1,000 and spend N5,000 to produce it in braille. And sometimes, we have two or three books for a particular course.

“What most of us in my department do is to buy textbooks and look for people to dictate to us while we record. The recording has its own disadvantage too because some pronunciations may not be correct and you will not be able to get their right spellings. There are times when the people that assist us in dictation are unwilling to help. You have to give them money to persuade them to help at such times.

“At times, I copy notes during exam periods when I should be reading. It is very unfortunate. The school has a resource room but it does not have materials we can access. The resource masters there are the ones helping to read questions out to us during exams; the questions are not in braille and we do exams with our typewriters.”

Born to the family of peasant farmers, the 24-year-old in a recent encounter with Saturday PUNCHexplained how he had relied largely on the benevolence of churches to augment whatever his poor parents could afford.

He added, “I could not afford to buy a Perkings Brailler. Instead, I use slate and stylus to write my notes. It consumes a lot of time and energy.  A good laptop or desktop computer with JAWS installed in it is much easier and more convenient for a blind student to use to take examination than using a typewriter. A standard laptop should be about N100,000 and installation of JAWS is N20,000 or more. Where will I get the money from?”

The student of Special Education had it smooth at the primary school section of Pacelli School for the Blind and Partially Sighted but while in the secondary school section, he had to wait for days to get braille textbooks because the (secondary) school reportedly had just one functioning braille machine.From his secondary school days at Pacelli School for the Blind and Partially Sighted in Lagos State up till now that he is doing a master’s degree programme at the University of Ibadan, Oyo State, 32-year-old Oyewale Oyetunji, has been dogged, defying all odds to become a scholar.

“In the 21st Century, the world has gone beyond typewriter which is prone to errors. But in Nigeria, blind students still use it,” he said in utter disappointment.

“I spent a lot of money to have textbooks in braille during my undergraduate days in UI. What I do mostly now is to scan the textbooks and read them on my computer with the aid of JAWS.

“Most of the materials in the school library are in print. In terms of accessibility for the blind, the library can be rated low – two or five per cent. What I see is the dearth of facilities and we have complained to lecturers a number of times, but they blame it on inadequate funding.”

Corroborating the lack of facilities, the Principal, Special Inclusive School, Kogi State, Dr David Matthew, lamented that all efforts to get the attention of the state government to the plight of the special pupils had proved abortive.

It was learnt that the school was established by  Christian Missions in Many Lands – a United States faith-based mission – and managed by the state government.

The principal said, “Copying of notes and lack of braille machines are some of the challenges the pupils are facing. We also have shortage of special teachers.

“Our learning disability department has collapsed because the person in charge has been made the principal of his community school. He has a master’s degree in learning disability. Unfortunately, the government is not providing replacement for those who are leaving.

“Over the years, I have visited Kogi State Ministry of Education and Government House several times, but all I got were empty promises. I later decided that the best thing was to make do with our little resources. My belief is that these challenges are temporary. I believe a time for divine intervention will come.

“A blind pupil has to be active and studious and should get friends around to dictate notes to them. If they don’t have pocket money to motivate their sighted counterparts, it will be very difficult for them to catch up.

“Sadly, most of them come from poor families. That is why we don’t insist that they buy new typewriters. A fairly-used typewriter is between N6,000 and N10,000. Sometimes, foundations donate writing materials to the school. It costs visually impaired persons a lot of money to succeed academically.”

Asked whether the deficient learning tools had implications for the pupils’ performance, Matthew said, “Performance cannot be attributed directly to inadequate facilities. You may have a pupil who has all the necessary tools but may not be brilliant. And you may have a pupil who doesn’t have all and he may be brilliant.”

He recalled that learning was excitement during his school time as he was given scholarships which are hard to come by these days.

“When I was in secondary school, I was lucky to be given scholarships by the then Benue State Government. At a time, I had as many as five typewriters but today, such privilege is not common. What we need is political will. The government should be ready to carry physically challenged persons along,” he added.

Tongtonk Danlami, a special teacher at Nakam Memorial College, a mission school in Jos, also decried the rate at which inadequate funding was crippling the smooth running of the inclusive boarding school.

Danlami said, “The issue of braille books for visually impaired pupils has been a problem over the years. Even when the school could afford to change print books to braille ones, where to do it was a problem.

“We have a library where we use a computer with JAWS, but it has stopped working. We also have the problem of having examination questions in braille. It is the teachers that assist the special pupils. The school only has one braille machine and it is old.

“A number of the children come from poor families and most parents don’t pay school fees. We have been having challenges in feeding them. Also, visually impaired persons need white canes (a cane that primarily aids its user to scan their surroundings for obstacles and helps other traffic participants in identifying the user as visually impaired) so that they can move from one place to another by themselves. We need sponsorship to provide all these things for the pupils. A white cane is about N10,000.”

National Policy on Special Needs Education in Nigeria

The Federal Ministry of Education in the 2015 National Policy on Special Needs Education in Nigeria admittedly highlighted the deficient educational system for persons living with disabilities. It stated that though Nigeria was involved in the special needs education, the practice fell short of the global best practices. The report added that the special needs classroom laboratories in the country were not technology-driven.

It read in part, “Facilities and materials that enhance learning are either lacking or – where they exist – inadequate and or/obsolete. What is more, many special needs education practitioners lack the technical knowhow to operate specialised special needs education gadgets.

“….Also, professionals in the area of gifted education are few in Nigeria. Learning materials are generally inadequate. It is the general teachers that seem to be dominating the field of Special Needs Education. Graduates of Special Education in Nigeria face the challenge of relevance on graduation because the curriculum in place is not skill-relevant after school life.

“Bias, cultural archetypes and negative behaviour patterns about special needs education are endemic in Nigeria…in the National Police of Education, it is stated that services to persons with special needs should be free, but it is not stated in an imperative term for the Federal Ministry of Education to operate.”

The report recommended that federal and state governments should ensure that necessary training and facilities that would guarantee easy access and implementation of special needs education progammes were put in place. For instance, it was stated that for students with visual impairment, there should be “training in orientation and mobility, braille reading and writing, use of computer with JAWS and repair of the equipment, etc.”

The report equally pointed out that there was inadequate synergy between the Federal Ministry of Education and other government ministries, agencies, non-governmental organisations, private sectors and international development partners.

Unfortunately, little or nothing has been done to address the disturbing issues raised in the report three years after.

No provisions for blind pupils in 2017, 2018 education budgets

A look at the 2017 and 2018 budgets of the Federal Ministry of Education showed that no provisions or allocations were made for the procurement of learning facilities for the visually impaired pupils.

For example, the 2017 budget with a personnel cost of N3,236,821,170 and an overhead of N827,950,190, did not mention any provision for blind pupils. In the budget, the government made provision for Almajiris (disadvantaged school-age children in the North roaming the streets) with N5,000,000 budgeted for their education programme. However, there was no such budget for the visually impaired pupils.

The government budgeted a staggering N30,000,000 for supply of text books to primary schools in the Kankara area of Katsina State. Similar provisions were made for several schools across the country, but there was no mention of materials for the blind pupils.

Meanwhile, it was observed that the ministry budgeted N5,000,000 for the training of personnel working in centres of persons with special needs. The government also earmarked N15,000,000 for the training of  95 teachers handling persons with special needs in the northern part of the country.

Also in the ministry’s 2018 budget totalling N621,226,697,523 with capital projects of N102,907,290,833, there was no mention of any provision for the visually impaired pupils or their schools.

The Ministry of Education’s Director of Press and Public Relations, Mr. Ben Bem Goong, did not pick several calls put across to him. He had also yet to reply to a text message sent to his phone by our correspondent on the lingering challenges facing the blind pupils.

Ondo, Plateau react

The Chairman of Plateau State Universal Basic Education Board, Prof. Matthew Sule, said the agency recently conducted training for special teachers in public schools across the state.

He added, “We are providing facilities for the children that are physically challenged. We have also provided teaching resources across the 17 LGAs in Plateau State.”

The Ondo State Commissioner for Information, Mr. Yemi Olowolabi, said the government provided the necessary braille equipment for the Ondo State School for the Blind.

But Olowolabi was silent on the provisions made for the visually impaired pupils in other public schools in the state, including Owo High School, which Ekevere attends.

He said, “This administration has spent so much money on the school. Government has increased funding of the school. Its quarterly grants are regular so that all their braille equipment is adequately provided. The government has a budget for the equipment.

“The Commissioner for Education also visits the school on a regular basis and a monitoring team was set up to monitor how the equipment is utilised.”

How visually impaired pupils fare in US

Unlike in Nigeria where special needs education is in a shambles, countries such as the United States provided state-of-the-art learning aids for visually impaired pupils.

For instance, the American Printing House for the Blind annually produces braille textbooks and other educational tools in large quantities, and distributes them to visually impaired pre-college pupils across the 50 states in the US.

The 2017 fiscal year report of APH stated that $17.8m was allocated to providing accessible materials to 63,357 registered pupils with visual impairment through the Federal Quota Programme. The FQP mandates that textbooks and aids are provided free to the eligible blind pupils in educational settings throughout the federation.

Other functions of APH include conducting research to develop and improve educational materials in core curriculum areas such as science, mathematics, English language arts, and social studies and adapting testing materials related to these subject areas.

APH also undertakes research in areas such as braille reading, orientation and mobility, and assistive technology while special materials are developed for teaching.

In the report, APH President, Craig Meador, identified BrailleBlaster as one of the modern technologies produced for the visually impaired persons to further bridge the educational barrier between them and their sighted counterparts.

“This revolutionary new software tool translates text into braille more quickly, easily and accurately – giving students access to learning materials on the first day of class at the same time as their sighted peers,” Meador said.

Source of the notice: https://punchng.com/double-trouble-for-visually-impaired-pupils-in-nigerian-schools/

 

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GES suspends Tempane SHS Headmaster over Akamba’s video

By Ghana.web

The Ghana Education Service (GES) has suspended the headmaster of Tempane Senior High School in the Upper East region Dominic Ndegu Amolale.

It follows a viral video of an aspiring National Organiser of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) Joshua Akamba inciting some students of the school against President Akufo-Addo over the challenges facing the implementation of the free SHS policy.

Ndegu Amolale received his suspension letter Saturday morning with an instruction to handover the management of the school to Upper East Regional GES Director to allow for investigations into the incident.

Speaking to Starr News’ Ibrahim Alhassan on this incident leading to his suspension, Ndegu Amolale said: “The letter is not asking me to any other thing but to step aside for investigations to be carried out.”

Addressing the content of the video, he said he did not of the presence of Akamba in the school, saying: “The day these people came I was not even on campus. I was in discussion with my regional director on the challenges the school is facing following the implementation of the double track system.”

“So that day I wasn’t on campus.”

The Ghana Education Service (GES) has suspended the headmaster of Tempane Senior High School in the Upper East region Dominic Ndegu Amolale.

It follows a viral video of an aspiring National Organiser of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) Joshua Akamba inciting some students of the school against President Akufo-Addo over the challenges facing the implementation of the free SHS policy.

Ndegu Amolale received his suspension letter Saturday morning with an instruction to handover the management of the school to Upper East Regional GES Director to allow for investigations into the incident.

Speaking to Starr News’ Ibrahim Alhassan on this incident leading to his suspension, Ndegu Amolale said: “The letter is not asking me to any other thing but to step aside for investigations to be carried out.”

Addressing the content of the video, he said he did not of the presence of Akamba in the school, saying: “The day these people came I was not even on campus. I was in discussion with my regional director on the challenges the school is facing following the implementation of the double track system.”

“So that day I wasn’t on campus.”

Source of the review: https://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/GES-suspends-Tempane-SHS-Headmaster-over-Akamba-s-video-690703

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Foreign students up 4,5 % in french tertiary institutions

Europe/ Francia/ 08.10.2018/ Source: thepienews.com.

There were 343,400 foreign students in the French higher education system, signalling a growth of 4.5% since 2016 according to figures released by the Ministry of Education.

The number of foreign students in tertiary education in France has grown 18% since 2012 and almost doubled between 2000 and 2017, the ministry document states.

“France presents an alternative to the [Anglophone] model of higher education”

“We are thrilled to see that French universities continue to attract many students coming from abroad and we hope that the trend will continue to grow,” Campus France’s director of communications Florent Bonaventure told The PIE News.

There are many factors behind the growth, Bonaventure explained. Beyond the quality of French higher education and its growing international reputation – and increased visibility in university rankings –  France has seen a rapid growth of English-taught programs and offers a cost-effective alternative to other destination countries, he said.

International students, Bonaventure explained, are treated the same as French or EU students, with the same fees, the same social security, and the same insurance regulations.

“France presents an alternative to the [Anglophone] model of higher education,” Bonaventure said.

“Education is of high quality, its research is known worldwide – see the Make our Planet Great Again program in natural science and climate change, for instance – and it is cheap for students as it is highly subsidised by the French state. France is also famous for its quality of life,”

According to the ministry figures, about half international students are from an African country, while 22% are from Europe ( 18% from the EU), 21% from the Asia-Pacific and 9% from the Americas.

All students who declared a nationality other than French are included in these figures, which include all foreign students already living in France, and also excludeS? exchange students.

Universities are by far the most popular institutions – that’s where over 70% of international students are enrolled, making up 14.6% of the student population.

The proportion of international students was shown to be varied across educational levels, though it was growing at postgraduate and doctorate level.

International students represent 11.6% of undergrad enrolments, 17% of master’s and 41% of doctorate level students.

The proportion of students who haven’t completed secondary education in France also grew: they make up 65.7% of international students at undergraduate level, 83% at postgraduate and 92% at doctorate level.

“[Along with EMI courses] Students have the opportunity to learn French while in France”

At university, the percentages of students from various countries vary only slightly: almost one international student in every five is from the EU (18.6%) and one from Asia (18.6%), while half are from Africa (49.9%).

Again, the proportion of students from a specific nationality varies across the study level. Asian students are overrepresented at PhD level, where they make up the 29.8% of all international students, and 55.3% of international students at master’s level are from Africa.

The most numerous nationality is Algeria, followed by Morocco and China – but while Algeria and Morocco register a strong growth from 2016, numbers from China are stagnating. There are slightly fewer students from Morocco and China in universities than in other tertiary education institutions.

Among European students, Italy is the most represented nationality, followed by Germany, Spain and Portugal.

In general, international students prefer literary disciplines (31.3%), followed by the sciences (29.1%) and economics (17.8%). Students from Africa show a slightly different trend, with most oriented towards the sciences (35.5%).

As for the future, Bonaventure said Campus France is planning on welcoming more students coming from Francophone countries, especially in Africa, and further promoting France as a study destination in non-Francophone countries, such as China, Vietnam, India, Brazil and African and Middle Eastern countries.

  1. “Universities have developed many English taught programs tailored for them and students have the opportunity to learn French while in France,” he said.

Source of the notice: https://thepienews.com/news/foreign-students-up-4-5-in-french-tertiary-institutions-figures-reveal/

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Compuses adapt to rise in Southeast Asian students

Asia/Taiwan/08.10.2018/Source:

From Prayer rooms for Muslims to the diversity of food available at school cafeterias, university campuses in Taiwan have over the past few years been stepping up their efforts to accommodate an increasing number of Southeast Asian students.

The number of students from Southeast Asia and India enrolled in colleges and universities in Taiwan has tripled over the past decade, said Bi Tzu-an (畢祖安), director-general of the Department of International and Cross-strait Education Affairs at the Ministry of Education.

Ten years ago, the number of Indian and Southeast Asian students at universities in Taiwan was about 8,000. In 2016, 28,000 students from ASEAN member states were enrolled at tertiary institutions, a figure that rose to 38,000 last year, the ministry said.

The rising trend is expected to continue, Bi said, adding that Taiwan aims to increase student numbers from ASEAN countries to 58,000 by next year.

Taiwan has been focusing on not only nurturing local talent, but also forging ties with neighboring countries and attracting more students as part of its New Southbound Policy.

In 2016, Malaysian students comprised the majority of the ASEAN student population at 13,380, followed by Vietnam at 4,463 and Indonesia at 4,061.

Malaysia has always contributed the largest portion of ASEAN students in Taiwan because of the country’s large overseas Chinese population, said Chen Shang-mao (陳尚懋), a professor with Fo Guang University’s public affairs department, adding that they choose to study in Taiwan because of their knowledge of Mandarin.

Liu Kuo-wei (劉國偉), vice president for international affairs at Ming Chuan University, said that Vietnamese students come to Taiwan to experience the culture and, after their studies, return home to pursue careers at Vietnam-based Taiwanese firms.

The number of Indian students in Taiwan has also been increasing over the past few years.

National Tsing Hua University, for example, has been ramping up efforts to attract students from India after President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) said the country was key to her administration’s New Southbound Policy.

In April last year, the Hsinchu school established its Center for India Studies — the first of its kind in Taiwan.

Center director Wang Wei-chung (王偉中) said that there were only 40 Indians studying at the university 10 years ago, but that figure has now surpassed 200.

They come to study at the university partly due to the cost, as it is cheaper compared with the US, which has traditionally been a major education destination for Indians, Wang said.

Source of the notice: http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiwan/archives/2018/10/07/2003701910

 

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Chinese students, made to study Communism, are rising up for workers’ rights

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In 1989, the Chinese government slaughtered pro-democracy student activists whose commitment to justice swept the nation; now they’re facing a new student uprising, one comprised of ardent Communist youth whose state-mandated education in the works of Marx, Lenin and Mao have prompted them to stand up for oppressed workers who labor in the for-profit factories that have flourished since the Deng reforms.

President Xi has pursued a program of increased, unchecked personal power and a movement away from western media influences; as part of this, Chinese curriculum has pursued a new emphasis on Communist literature.

The Communist students staged mass, illegal demonstrations in Huizhou in sympathy with a wildcat workers’ strike, bearing portraits of Mao, singing socialist anthems, and chanting «You are the backbone of the working class! We share your honor and your disgrace!»

On August 24, police cracked down on the students, arresting 50 organizers in raids as they sang «The Internationale» in Chinese. Some organizers remain in prison, accused of being secret agents of foreign powers.

Communist student movements are springing up all over China, and local police are cracking down on their leaders.

The dispute in Huizhou began in July, after Jasic Technology, a manufacturer of welding equipment, prevented its workers from forming an independent union. China allows labor organizing only under the auspices of the official, party-controlled All-China Federation of Trade Unions.

The workers said managers had seized control of their branch of the official union. Complaining of being underpaid and treated like slaves, they began to organize a petition before the police intervened and detained several of them.

The young activists learned of the workers’ plight on internet messaging apps and took up their cause, with about 40 students and recent graduates going to Huizhou, a manufacturing hub of 4.8 million people in Guangdong Province. Hundreds of others spoke out in support online — so many that several universities warned students not to go to Huizhou

Source of the notice: https://boingboing.net/2018/10/01/with-chinese-characteristics.html

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