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El derecho a la educación en un contexto adverso

El derecho a la educación en un contexto adverso

La educación pública y particular subvencionada atiende a la población estudiantil más vulnerable del país, aquella que en sus instituciones educativas no sólo debiese encontrar un espacio de aprendizaje, sino que también de contención, de interacción social, e incluso de servicios tan básicos como la posibilidad de alimentación. La grave crisis social por la que está atravesado el país ha surgido justamente por abandonar a aquellos que más lo necesitan, lo que se refleja también por la enorme desigualdad en las oportunidades educativas y el sostenido deterioro de la educación pública. En el fondo, parte de este gran malestar social se vincula a que no se ha garantizado la realización plena del derecho a la educación de niños, niñas y jóvenes del país.

Una condición básica del derecho a la educación es que la educación con financiamiento del estado sea accesible. Un cierre anticipado del año escolar en forma masiva tendrá graves consecuencias para aquellos que justamente necesitan más de este espacio educativo, sobre todo luego del estallido social por el que ha atravesado el país. Lejos de promover un sentido de normalidad anticipada, las escuelas y liceos deberían permanecer abiertos para recibir a sus estudiantes, para contenerlos, dialogar y reflexionar sobre el momento histórico por el que se encuentra atravesando el país, así como para identificar los mecanismos para que la nueva pérdida de clases no sea una desigualdad adicional en sus oportunidades de desarrollo a lo largo de la vida, y en cómo abordaremos los desafíos de una calidad integral de la educación.

Aun existiendo casos específicos donde no existen las condiciones para realizar un proceso de enseñanza y aprendizaje, ni tampoco de seguridad para estudiantes, profesores y asistentes de la educación, estas excepciones no deberían actuar como regla general. El interés de algunos sostenedores por cerrar masivamente el año escolar no debiera ser superior al de garantizar el derecho a la educación de los estudiantes del país. Así nos han hecho saber profesoras y profesores del país que quieren continuar recibiendo a sus estudiantes, pues saben que muchos de ellos necesitan de sus escuelas y liceos. La pregunta, entonces, no es sobre si debemos o no hacer un cierre anticipado del año, sino sobre qué apoyos necesitan profesores y equipos directivos para que puedan perseverar y desarrollar de la mejor forma posible el funcionamiento de sus establecimientos.

La grave crisis social por la que atraviesa el país nos exige con mayor fuerza defender y proteger la plena realización del derecho a la educación, y eso se consigue poniendo al centro el bienestar de los estudiantes como norte para tomar la decisión de mantener abiertos los colegios con jornadas regulares, flexibles y sólo en casos extremos cerrarlos anticipadamente, reconociendo las particularidades de cada situación específica. Por ello, este mismo énfasis en continuar el año escolar debe servirnos de ejemplo también para evitar todo tipo de políticas educativas que amenacen el cierre de las escuelas públicas, y apoyar aquellas que permitan el pleno desarrollo del derecho a la educación de sus estudiantes.

Fuente de la Información: https://www.latercera.com/opinion/noticia/derecho-la-educacion-contexto-adverso-2/922695/

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Education: Why have Wales’ teenagers under-performed?

The latest international test results for teenagers – Pisa – have been published.

There is a keen eye on how students in Wales have performed, but why? Here is our guide.

What are Pisa tests?

Pisa’s full title is Programme for International Student Assessment – the main tests are in maths, reading and science and are run every three years by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)

Tests take about two hours and all are done on computer.

In 2018, they were taken by 600,000 15-year-old pupils in 79 countries and regions.

In the last results, Singapore outperformed all other participating countries. Japan, Estonia, Hong Kong and Canada were also among the top performers. This time around, four Chinese provinces finished top in all areas.

How has Wales performed?

This was the fifth time Wales has taken part – results in 2010 saw Wales slip below average performance in all three subject areas and was described by the then-education minister as «unacceptable» and «alarming». But the 2018 tests have brought improvements, if Wales is still trailing England in particular, of the other UK nations.

 

Source: OECD, December 2019

Wales has moved closer to the international average. Education Minister Kirsty Williams said: «We have caught up, we are continuing to improve in all areas and as a nation we must be determined to keep up this momentum.» In reading, latest tests showed a significant increase in the scores of higher achieving pupils in Wales since 2015 but the scores of lower achieving pupils have not changed significantly.

Pisa test result averages in science

Scores of 15-year-old pupils, UK nations

Source: OECD, December 2019

Wales has moved closer to the international average. Education Minister Kirsty Williams said: «We have caught up, we are continuing to improve in all areas and as a nation we must be determined to keep up this momentum.» In reading, latest tests showed a significant increase in the scores of higher achieving pupils in Wales since 2015 but the scores of lower achieving pupils have not changed significantly.

Pisa test result averages in mathematics

Scores of 15-year-old pupils, UK nations

In science, back in 2015, there were 28 countries with mean scores higher than Wales; that figure is now 19 countries. The study also said Wales had made «encouraging progress» in mathematics, and was close to the OECD average for the first time.

Why had we been doing so badly?

There is no single reason, but one factor identified by the OECD was the need improve the quality of teaching.

Former education minister Leighton Andrews said the Welsh Government may have taken its «eye off the ball» in the 2000s when it scrapped testing and league tables.

The report into the 2015 tests found only 6% of the variation in student performance in Wales could be put down to their socio-economic background. The results also showed Wales’ highest performers were achieving lower scores than the OECD average and top performers in other parts of the UK.

Andreas Schleicher, head of education and skills at the OECD, said the nation had under-performed and the education system had «lost its soul» by not focusing on high-quality teaching.

He said reforms in Wales were on the right lines but it will take a while for these to have an impact.

Why are they important?

They have become an increasingly influential indicator of global education performance since they were introduced in 2000. Some argue that major businesses look at Pisa scores before making investment decisions, but there are plenty of sceptics who say too much emphasis has been placed on Pisa by politicians.

There are also questions about how useful it is to compare 15-year-olds in such varied education systems and cultures across the world.

In Wales, ministers have made improving Pisa scores a top priority over the past decade and said they tested the skills young people will need in future.

  • 500-score Pisa target dropped in Wales
  • Wales still worst in UK in world education tests
  • What can Wales learn from Poland?
  • Still from Educating Is Changing video

    What has happened since the last tests?

    Education is going through a period of major reforms, many of which have been influenced by Pisa. Some were introduced after the 2010 results, including a renewed focus on literacy and numeracy. There have also been changes to teacher training.

    Reformed GCSEs are also more aligned with the skills Pisa tests assess. The last results highlighted concerns more able and talented pupils were not being stretched so the Welsh Government has invested £3m to boost their performance.

    The biggest reform of all is the ongoing development of a new curriculum which will be introduced in classrooms from 2022. The OECD welcomed the changes, but said improvements in results would take time.

  • Pupil in Singapore

    What are the thoughts from the top performers?

    In Singapore, which had the best performance last time, education expert Dr Pak Tee Ng said it was about resources and investment.

    «It’s not just about investing money, it is investing in teachers, investing in professional development, investing so that the schools will be places, safe places and places for children to learn and to grow,» he said.

    «Not only that, I think we play a lot of attention to making sure that we have a much more positive narrative of education. That is to say we would like people to know that good things are happening in the schools and to us teachers are nation builders.

    «The right spirit for education should be that for the sake of our children, for the sake of our country, we will improve regardless of where we stand in international comparative tests.»

    When asked about creating a more positive narrative in Wales, Dr Pak said: «Let’s not make any international comparative tests into some kind of world cup – children’s education is not about competition like a world cup of some sorts.

    «I would say it is right and proper for any country to improve the education system with or without international comparative tests.»

    Should we still take part?

    Prof Alma Harris, head of Swansea University’s school of education, said: «Pisa does exactly what it says on the tin.

    «It looks at the performance of 15-year olds in three different subjects every three years but an education system is way more dynamic than that and therefore looking at issues of mental health in young people, well-being, inclusion, equity – these are all things that Pisa can’t measure but they’re very important to any education system – it’s what gives it excellence and equity.

    «So I’d say that Pisa is one dimension, one indicator that we should take account of – of course – policy-makers will take account of it whatever we say – but to recognise that it is really one very small indicator amongst many others that would give a more contextualised picture of how a system is performing.

    «Pisa of itself is not problematic, it’s what people do with Pisa and how they interpret Pisa and I think where it’s been most unhelpful is where it’s changed the policy discourse in a country, away from the way the country may have been going.»

    Prof Harris said Pisa was problematic if it distracted a country from reform and Wales was «on a very clear reform trajectory.»

    Fuente de la Información:  https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-wales-50587348

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Estados Unidos: Betsy DeVos has cut 600 staff positions at the Department of Education

Remember the confirmation of Betsy DeVos as education secretary? It feels kind of quaint now, because congressional Democrats have so completely outdone their hysterics in the time since.

For the first time, a vice president had to break the tie in favor of confirmation, all because liberals didn’t like that DeVos was wealthy and unlikely to devote her energy as secretary to ensuring that the department worked for teachers unions rather than students.

If Democrats and the national media weren’t in a sticky mess right now over impeachment, they might notice that DeVos has done some things that might concern them. And she still has at least a year left to do more.

The Washington Examiner‘s editorial board recently checked in with DeVos for her thoughts on her tenure as secretary.

She said in an interview that she’s most proud of introducing a major bill that would make $5 billion available to parents of K-12 students so that they can choose where their child attends school.

She also noted her rollback of the Obama-era guidelines on adjudicating sexual misconduct claims in higher education. DeVos’s new regulations on the subject are set to go into effect soon and ensure all students have the right to due process — a nice change from the current standard, which basically offers prayer as the only defense for male students accused of sexual misconduct.

But something DeVos has consistently said since the start was that her primary goal is to shrink the department all around, reducing its power as much as possible.

She’s had some success there. Under her watch, the department has eliminated 600 staff positions, bringing the total from 4,300 to 3,700.

“Well, I have long advocated for the notion that it would be great to work myself out of a job,” she said.

The department will still be there when DeVos leaves, but it’s getting smaller so long as she’s around.

Fuente de la Información: https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/betsy-devos-has-cut-600-staff-positions-at-the-department-of-education

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China arrasa en un ranking mundial sobre educación

Asia/ China/ 03.12.2019/ Fuente: elintranews.com.

 

La OCDE difundió el «informe PISA», en el que se destacaron los países asiáticos y Chile y Uruguay en Latinoamérica.

China y otros países asiáticos arrasaron en un ranking global sobre educación, manteniendo los buenos resultados que muestran desde los últimos años. Se trata del “Informe PISA”, que cada trienio la Organización para la Cooperación y el Desarrollo Económicos (OCDE) publica respecto a la calidad educativa en ciencias, matemáticas y comprensión lectora.

Los resultados de 2018, difundidos recién este 3 de diciembre, dejaron a cuatro ciudades de China (Beijing, Shanghai, Jiangsu y Zhejiang) como las mejor colocadas en el ranking global. La suma de ellas permite que el país chino arrase en los tres ítems evaluados. Luego, se posiciona Singapur, otra ciudad china como Macao, y el territorio de Hong Kong.

El primer país que aparece en el informe y no está ubicado en la zona de Asia oriental es Estonia. Luego están Canadá, Finlandia e Irlanda y posteriormente el ordenamiento vuelve a Asia con Corea del Sur. Estados Unidos, por su parte, es el 13º , aunque tiene una falencia en matemáticas respecto a las ciencias y la comprensión lectora.

En América Latina, Chile obtiene el primer lugar con el puesto 43º a nivel global. Muy cerca se ubica Uruguay (48º), Costa Rica, un lugar después, y México, que está 53º. El triunfo chileno a nivel regional repite lo mostrado en el anterior informe de 2015, aunque su índice aumentó. No obstante, ninguno de ellos logró alcanzar el promedio establecido por la OCDE como parámetro mundial.

Para realizar el informe, se establecieron una serie de ejercicios unificados que en mayo de 2018 se le realizaron a 600.000 alumnos de 15 años en 79 países. Como conclusión, el organismo evaluador lamentó que uno de cada cuatro estudiantes “no pueden completar las más básicas tareas de lectura. Esta situación se ve aún más agravada en los países más pobres, ya que como informó El Intransigente América, la UNESCO estimó que hay 12 millones de chicos que no pueden ir a la escuela primaria.

Fuente de la noticia: https://elintranews.com/mundo/2019/12/03/tifon-kammuri-deja-la-primera-victima-fatal/

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España: Estos son seis de los mejores maestros españoles de Educación Infantil

Europa/ España/ 03.12.2019/ Fuente: www.elespanol.com.

Con motivo del día del profesor EL ESPAÑOL ha hablado con seis maestros que han sido nominados a los ‘Goya’ de la educación en España, mejor denominados como los Premios Educa Abanca a los Mejores Docentes de España en 2019. Este periódico se ha puesto en contacto con seis maestros, nominados junto con otros 16, que pujan por ser finalistas en la categoría de Educación Infantil. Conocerán si quedan entre los mejores de este país el próximo 5 de diciembre.

  • 1 de 6

    Alberto Padilla

    Alberto Padilla ha revolucionado el colegio Juan Armario, situado en Alcalá de Los Gazules (Cádiz) con su implicación con los alumnos más pequeños del centro. El maestro considera fundamental implicar a las familias en el aprendizaje. Por ello, organiza certámenes de teatro y de música en los que padres e hijos participan aprendiendo el temario de este modo . Sus 26 alumnos de tres años asimilan conocimientos como la cultura romana a través del arte.

  • 2 de 6

    Ariana Álvarez

    Ariana Álvarez es un maestra que ha entrado de lleno en el siglo XXI. Desde el colegio Neira Vilas, situado en Boqueixón (Galicia), enseña a sus alumnos, de ente 3 y 5 años, a leer y escribir a través de tablets. Aun así, tampoco olvidan los métodos tradicionales. No obstante, el centro apuesta por la robótica y las nuevas tecnologías para aprender las lecciones. Un apunte curioso es que los niños, junto con la ‘seño’, cocinan bizcochos para los cumpleaños de los compañeros. Así, la docente ha conseguido una gran cohesión entre el alumnado.

  • 3 de 6

    Felipe Moreno

    Este joven profesor del colegio valenciano Comtessa de Llucena, situado en Lucena del Cid utiliza un método muy sensorial y vivencial para enseñar a sus alumnos todo lo que les rodea. Por ejemplo, este otoño se han dedicado a coger hojas secas o castañas para aprender todo acerca de la estación. Además, la democracia es muy respetada. ¿Por qué? Porque cada mañana Felipe Moreno tiene una asamblea con sus alumnos para que sean ellos los que decidan qué quieren aprender ese día.

  • 4 de 6

    Rocío Collado

    Los niños a los que enseña Rocío Collado siempre se sienten como en casa: comen cuando tienen hambre y duermen cuando tienen sueño. Esta docente del colegio vallisoletano La Escalerita, situado en Arroyo de la Encomienda, dirige un equipo de maestros que atienden las necesidades particulares y emocionales de cada alumno. De este modo, hay niños en el centro que con 5 años ya tocan el violín o la guitarra porque detectaron que les encanta la música. Por ello, les llevaron a profesores particulares para que satisficiesen la demanda de los niños.

  • 5 de 6

    Cristina Parrondo

    Si hablamos de la maestra Cristina Parrondo, hay que decir que es la tercera nominada a los premios Educa Abanca del colegio Minerva, lugar donde trabaja y situado en Paterna (Valencia). La docente, como una más, está adaptada a la vanguardia en métodos educativos a través de la tecnología. Los ‘peques’ aprenden su temario gracias a ordenadores adaptados, cuyos teclados sólo tienen números, letras, flechas y colores. Con estas herramientas los niños crecen familiarizados con la informática. «Es un reto estar nominada, ya que mis dos compañeras que me antecedieron en la nominación fueron finalistas y quedaron quinta y novena a nivel estatal», cuenta la maestra.

6 de 6

Yolanda Macián

Esta docente del colegio valenciano Liceo Hispano enseña a sus alumnos todo a través de talleres. Por ejemplo, sus alumnos aprenden las estaciones a través de la naturaleza. Lleva a sus niños de 3 años en invierno a hacer muñecos de nieve o bien, este otoño han realizado cuadros con hojas secas para fomentar también su faceta artrítica. Yolanda Macián es una convencida de que «ningún alumno se puede quedar atrás» pese a que «cuando llegan tan pequeños no todos tienen la misma madurez». En consecuencia, adapta su metodología en función de lo que cada niño necesite dando apoyo personalizado a cada menor.

Fuente de la noticia: https://www.elespanol.com/reportajes/20191127/mejores-maestros-espanoles-educacion-infantil-novedosos-ensenanza/447735229_3.html#img_6

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50,000 children missing from school: Australia’s ‘hidden disaster’ revealed

Oceania/ Australia/ 03.12.2019/ By: Fergus Hunter /Fuente: www.smh.com.au.

At least 50,000 Australian children are completely detached from formal education at any one time, a new report has found, challenging schools and governments to face up to a «hidden disaster» that is structurally entrenched and poorly understood.

The research from the University of Melbourne’s Graduate School of Education has sounded the alarm on children disappearing through «trap doors» in education systems that are failing to accommodate young people’s needs and embrace those who are struggling.

«Australia has a very serious educational problem that we seemingly do not want to acknowledge,» the researchers, Jim Watterston and Megan O’Connell, concluded. «It is an issue that needs to be brought out into the open and receive urgent attention.»

Through modelling based on internal education department data and statistics from multiple other sources, the report concluded 50,000 was a conservative estimate of the number of unaccounted school-age children who are completely disconnected from any form of education.

Some of the detached children may never have been enrolled in school while others fell out of the system along the way, having been expelled, dropped out, or moved home. The research emphasised this group of detached young people as distinct from students who are sporadically engaged at school.

«They’re not absent from school; they simply aren’t in one. We’ve allowed them to opt out and disappear through a range of different ‘trap doors’,» declared Dr Watterston, the dean of the Melbourne Graduate School of Education and a former teacher, principal and head of the Queensland and ACT education departments.

In the report – titled «Those who disappear: The Australian education problem nobody wants to talk about» – Dr Watterston and Ms O’Connell identified a number of drivers of detachment, including mental health issues, dysfunctional home lives, disabilities, behavioural disorders, bullying, and discrimination.

«These students either disappear or, worse still, are silently ushered out of the ‘back door’ by school leaders concerned about the reputational impact of these students on potentially lowered NAPLAN and ATAR scores or due to community concerns about their behaviour or ‘fit’,» the report found.

It lashed mainstream school systems for exhibiting hostility to students seen as problematic, who become «collateral damage» in a competitive school market focused on academic achievement.

The researchers have put forward a series of recommendations to tackle the issue. They called for a national approach led by the federal government, including early intervention and boosted support for accessible education programs and alternative environments to mainstream schools.

One student who has experienced disengagement and detachment from education, Eddie Wilkins, told The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald schools had failed to manage his personal circumstances.

Eddie, 16, has come from a difficult background and dealt with a number of behavioural issues. Having grown up in Bayswater in Melbourne’s east, he was excluded from the classroom for all of year 5, missed all of year 8 following surgery, only attended six hours a week in year 9 and was expelled in year 10.

«From my point of view, it was pretty unfair,» he said.

He said his teachers had been hostile to him because of his record and dismissive of his issues, including a sensory disorder that makes him sensitive to certain clothing.

«They’re pushing kids for better results – and I guess that’s a good thing – but the kids who aren’t getting good results are just ignored,» he said.

Eddie eventually ended up at Lynall Hall Community School in Richmond, an alternative setting that is significantly more accommodating to his needs. He is now more motivated to attend class.

«These kids exist right through the system,» said Dr Watterston. «It is time to take serious coordinated action to prevent our most vulnerable young people from falling through the cracks.

Source of the notice: https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/50-000-children-missing-from-school-australia-s-hidden-disaster-revealed-20191126-p53e5z.html

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