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Australia: Sending new teachers to difficult schools could be driving them out of the profession

Oceania/ Australia/ 16.07.2019/By: Michael McGowan/ Source: www.theguardian.com.

Teachers’ union says poor job security and lack of autonomy contribute to teachers leaving the field early

Up to half of all new teachers in Australia leave the profession in the first five years and a new report identifies a possible reason: programs which encourage sending novices into the country’s most challenging schools.

An annual survey of teachers around the world highlighted teacher shortages as “one of the most pressing problems faced by current education systems”.

The report pointed to Australia – where between 30% and 50% of teachers leave the profession in the first five years – as one of the most glaring examples of how placing early-career teachers in “challenging schools” affects attrition.

Teacher retention has long been a problem for Australian schools. Australian Bureau of Statistics data consistently show that many people who hold a teaching degree do not work in education, and in 2014 a government reportestimated that 20% of education graduates do not register as teachers on graduating.

In its submission to a parliamentary inquiry into the status of teaching last year, the Australian Education Union blamed job security, lack of professional autonomy and being forced to teach out-of-field for extended periods for early-career teachers leaving the profession.

Australia funds a number of programs at state and federal levels which send early-career teachers to schools in regional and remote areas, as well as areas with a lower socioeconomic status.

For example, since 2009 Australia has spent millions of dollars funding the controversial Teach for Australia program which places non-teaching graduates in regional or low socioeconomic schools.

Last year Guardian Australia revealed the Australian Capital Territory had cut ties with the program over what it said was a lack of value for money, citing retention rates as one of the main reasons.

Released by the OECD on Wednesday night in Australia, the Teachers and School Leaders as Lifelong Learners report suggested sending early-career teachers into difficult school environments could contribute to the problem.

“Several education systems have introduced financial incentives to attract teachers into schools with more challenging circumstances, with mixed results and little evidence of the effect of such measures on teacher allocation across schools,” it said.

“One solution to reduce attrition in the early years is, thus, to review how novice teachers are distributed across schools, with a view to assigning them to less challenging working environments in their first placements.”

It suggested redirecting incentives to later-career teachers, which would potentially help foster equity “as students in challenging schools would be taught by more experienced teachers”.

The report also found teaching was the first-choice career for only 58% of teachers in Australia compared with 67% across the OECD countries, and that although Australia had a higher-than-average proportion of female teachers, that was not backed up in leadership positions.

It also revealed that Australian teachers were more concerned about increasing support staff to limit administrative burden than about individual pay.

Source of the notice: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2019/jun/20/sending-new-teachers-to-difficult-schools-could-be-driving-them-out-of-the-profession

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Growing Through Education in Nigeria

Africa/ Nigeria/ 16.07.2019/ Source: blogs.imf.org.

Our chart of the week, drawn from the IMF’s 2019 economic health check for Nigeria, highlights substantial inequality in access to education between girls and boys, and between rich and poor.

It is widely accepted that addressing educational gaps results in rapid and large benefits for children, their families, communities, and the country more broadly.

Limited schooling for girls

According to a survey conducted by the Nigeria Bureau of Statistics, a girl born into a Nigerian family in the poorest fifth of society spends about 1 year in school—approximately a third of the already limited schooling enjoyed by, say, her brother.

Access to education improves as a family gets richer, but gender inequality in education is entrenched and barely disappears for the richest 20 percent of households.

We believe that closing gender gaps in education across all income groups could boost GDP by 5 percent in one generation. It would lower income inequality by 2¼ points as measured by the Gini coefficient—a reduction that many countries strive to achieve over decades.

Spending beyond education

The government and development partners all recognize that more resources and structural changes are needed to improve access to education and make it more equitable.

Adequate funding for teachers and schools can help raise the quality of education. But spending beyond the classroom can also yield educational benefits. For example, investments in safe access to water and sanitation facilities will improve health and therefore learning opportunities for all kids, while giving an extra boost to school attendance. Mobilizing revenue through, for instance, comprehensive VAT reform and improved tax administration will be critical to fund these efforts.

Other reforms require few additional resources and are important in shaping priorities. Passing into law the Gender and Equal Opportunities Bill and implementing a Children’s Rights Act are examples of legal changes that would put equality of opportunity on the statute books—a move which would have a positive impact for generations to come.

Source of the notice: https://blogs.imf.org/2019/06/24/growing-through-education-in-nigeria/

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Japan to boost education support for non-native children

Asia/ Japan/ 16.07.2019/ Source: asia.nikkei.com.

 

Japan will provide more support for educating children of foreign nationals from early childhood through high school, including by increasing Japanese-language classes, under a plan released Monday.

The education ministry’s proposals follow changes in April to immigration law that allow certain foreign workers to bring family with them to Japan. Schools had already been facing a rise in students learning Japanese as a second language, prompting criticism that efforts on this front were lagging.

Monday’s plan, which calls for working «to ensure that all children of foreign nationals have educational opportunities,» seeks to provide seamless support to learners from preschoolers to job-seeking international students.

It proposes multi-language guides to ensure parents have information on how to enroll students at kindergartens and elementary schools.

Public schools are to receive more teachers for Japanese as a second language as well as aides who speak the languages of foreign students. Some schools currently have no such staff. Regions with a shortage of human resources will use translation and distance-learning systems.

Public high schools will be asked to give special considerations for Japanese-language learners when taking admissions tests, such as making it easier to read kanji characters and allowing the children to bring dictionaries into the exam rooms.

The ministry proposes creating an evening middle school program in every prefecture and major city for those who could not receive compulsory education in their home countries.

The initiative also will help international students in higher education find jobs in Japan, proposing the certification of collaboration programs between universities and businesses.

The plan covers Japanese-language learners of all ages.A 14-language online curriculum for self-study will be developed for residents of areas that lack easy access to Japanese-language classes

Source of the notice: https://asia.nikkei.com/Spotlight/Japan-immigration/Japan-to-boost-education-support-for-non-native-children2

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Gobierno de Brasil quiere reducir objetivo de invertir en educación el 10% del PIB

América del Sur/ Brasil/ Fuente: mundo.sputniknews.com.

El ministro de Educación del Gobierno de Brasil, Abraham Weintraub, aseguró que pretende revisar el objetivo oficial que obligaba al país a aumentar progresivamente el gasto en educación hasta llegar al 10% del PIB en 2024, informaron medios locales.

«Subir lo que se gasta significa que vamos a tener que aumentar los impuestos en Brasil un 10%; eso lo vamos a cambiar en el Plan Nacional de Educación (…) el plan tiene que respetarse, pero el dinero del contribuyente también», dijo el ministro, según recoge la Agência Brasil.

El PNE fue aprobado en 2014 y establece metas y estrategias para mejorar la educación desde la enseñanza infantil hasta la pos graduación.

El PNE fue aprobado en 2014 y establece metas y estrategias para mejorar la educación desde la enseñanza infantil hasta la pos graduación.

El ministro aseguró que «intentará» cumplir esos objetivos aun reduciendo la inversión, y destacó su plan para universalizar la etapa pre-escolar y garantizar que el 50% de los niños de hasta tres años estén matriculados en guarderías.

Según datos oficiales, Brasil gastó en educación en 2014 un 6% de su PIB, y el porcentaje cayó al 5,5% en 2015, último año con datos disponibles.

Según un informe del estatal Instituto Nacional de Estudios e Investigaciones Educaciones Anisio Teixeira (Inep), para que Brasil cumpliera su objetivo para 2019 (invertir el 7% del PIB en educación) habría que inyectar 120.000 millones de reales (32.000 millones de dólares) en el sector.

Fuente de la noticia: https://mundo.sputniknews.com/america-latina/201907111087981802-gobierno-de-brasil-quiere-reducir-objetivo-de-invertir-en-educacion-el-10-del-pib/

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2do Parlamento de Mujeres Indígenas por el Buen Vivir

América del Sur/ Brasil/ 16.07.2019/ Fuente: www.facebook.com.

2do Parlamento de Mujeres Indígenas por el Buen Vivir, del 18 al 20 de Julio en #LasGrutas, Río Negro.
Hermanas de todas la naciones indígenas, las invitamos a inscribirse!
Click en el siguiente link:
https://forms.gle/aRU8Pwzqeq6tEW2y8
Para más información o dudas respecto al formulario también pueden escribirnos al: parlamento2019.inscripcion@gmail.com
Esperamos encontrarnos, fortalecernos y tener un espacio armonioso para parlamentar. Jallalla! Mariciweu!
#2doParlamentoMujeresIndigenas

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Fuente de la noticia: https://www.facebook.com/PMOriginarias/

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Panamá: Programa de las Presentaciones individuales de la 71° Asamblea y Conferencia Mundial de la OMEP

Centro América/ Panamá/ 16.07.2019/ Fuente: omeppanama.com.

 

Ciudad de Panamá, del 22 al 26 de julio de 2019.

Estimados/as colegas:

El Comité Nacional de Panamá de la OMEP ha logrado convertirse en el país anfitrión de la 71° Asamblea Mundial y Conferencia Mundial de la OMEP, por primera vez, desde su creación.

La Conferencia Mundial se desarrollará del 24 al 26 de julio de 2019, bajo el lema: Identidades y Culturas en la Educación de la Primera Infancia. Por ello, el Comité convoca a todos los maestros y maestras, equipos directivos de escuelas, educadores populares, graduados y graduadas en Educación Infantil, Primaria y Especial, en Artes, Psicología, Pedagogía, Medicina y otros profesionales involucrados en la atención y educación de la Primera Infancia a participar activamente.

Por otra parte, se informa que la Asamblea Mundial, para presidentes y representantes oficiales de todos los Comités, se realizará del 22 al 23 de julio.

Les damos una cálida bienvenida a la Ciudad de Panamá, que también en 2019 estará cumpliendo sus 500 años de fundada.

Reciban ustedes nuestros más cordiales saludos.

Ulina Mapp

Presidenta de OMEP Panamá

Toda la información en: www.omeppanama.com

 

2019 PANAMA PRESENTACIONES INDIVIDUALES Y POSTERS

 

Link para la descarga del programa: https://omeppanama.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/2019-PANAMA-PRESENTACIONES-INDIVIDUALES-Y-POSTERS-1.pdf

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Participa en 71° Asamblea Mundial y Conferencia Internacional de la OMEP en Panamá

Centro América/ Panamá/ 16.07.2019/ Fuente: omeppanama.com.

 

El Comité Nacional de Panamá de la OMEP ha logrado convertirse en el país anfitrión de la 71° Asamblea Mundial y Conferencia Internacional de la OMEP, por primera vez, desde su creación.

La Conferencia Internacional se desarrollará del 24 al 26 de julio de 2019, bajo el lema: Identidades y Culturas en la Educación de la Primera Infancia. Por ello, el Comité convoca a todos los maestros y maestras, equipos directivos de escuelas, educadores populares, graduados y graduadas en Educación Infantil, Primaria y Especial, en Artes, Psicología, Pedagogía, Medicina y otros profesionales involucrados en la atención y educación de la Primera Infancia a participar activamente.

Por otra parte, se informa que la Asamblea Mundial, para presidentes y representantes oficiales de todos los Comités, se realizará del 22 al 23 de julio.

Les damos una cálida bienvenida a la Ciudad de Panamá, que también en 2019 estará cumpliendo sus 500 años de fundada.

Reciban ustedes nuestros más cordiales saludos.

Ulina Mapp

Presidenta de OMEP Panamá

Fuente de la noticia: https://omeppanama.com/

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