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EEUU:I Disapprove of School Vouchers. Can I Still Apply for Them?

Por: nytimes.com/Kwame Anthony Appiah/ 11-04-2018

My son attends preschool part time at a private Montessori school, which goes up to middle school. I like the school, and he is very happy there, but I can’t afford to keep him there when he starts kindergarten full time.

I believe that free public education is an important aspect of our society. Our local public elementary school is generally considered a decent option, but I worry about how standardized testing has changed the public-school landscape in recent decades. My son is thriving in his current environment, and the approach of traditional public schools is significantly different from Montessori’s. If money were no object, I would strongly consider keeping him at his current school.

Our state has a school-voucher program, which uses public money to help low-income families pay for private-school tuition. My family would probably qualify. But I believe that taxpayer dollars would be better spent to fortify public-school systems and should not be funneled to private schools. Given my beliefs, may I apply for a school voucher? Name Withheld

Looking after your son’s interests is a special obligation you have as a parent. “Special obligation” is a philosopher’s term, but it simply means that you have duties to him, arising out of your relationship, that you don’t have to other children. You’re not merely entitled to put his education first; you’re obliged to do so. You should feel free to use whatever legal means there are to get him a great education, including vouchers — unless you think they are so wicked that your participation in them would amount to condoning evil. If you just think the voucher program is bad policy, then join the campaign against it. That’s the right way to voice your judgments about the merits of educational policy. You don’t want to sacrifice your son’s education to abstract principle, especially given that you’re not going to end the voucher program by failing to make use of it. Our roles as parents, friends, employees and citizens can make conflicting calls on us.

But be sure you’re right about what’s in your child’s best interests. You should take a closer look at your local public elementary school, and not content yourself with the general skepticism you express about the “public-school landscape” and the effects of “standardized testing.” If it turns out that the private option isn’t obviously better, you can bring your beliefs as a citizen into a more natural alignment with your duties as a parent.

My children are currently in private school, although both were in public school for many years, and my younger one may switch back to public school for high school. I’m a big supporter of public education, so I was already feeling guilty about my choice — and then the federal tax bill passed in December. New tax rules allow pretax 529 savings accounts to be used not just for higher education but also for private precollege education. What should I do, if I want to do all I can to be a public-school ally? It seems there are three options: 1) Not take the tax deduction; 2) Take the deduction and give the money I save to the P.T.A. of a local underresourced public school or an organization working to improve public education; or 3) Take the deduction, figuring that as an N.Y.C. resident it will help offset the huge increase I expect to see in my taxes.Name Withheld

 Under the new federal tax act, you can withdraw up to $10,000 a year from a 529 savings account to pay for a student’s private precollege education. Vouchers lite! Previously, these accounts could be used only for higher education. But the way that the relevant “deduction” works hasn’t changed. When you pay into these accounts in New York State, your state income-tax liability is reduced up to a limit of $5,000 for a single person or $10,000 for a couple. Once in the fund, your money grows federal- and state-tax-deferred; but you don’t have to pay taxes when you take the money out, if it’s for a qualified educational expense. (The details here, as with much tax law, get complicated, but this is the basic picture.) You may well be paying into one of these funds already for your child’s college education and getting the maximum state-tax deduction. If so, this particular change in the tax law should not affect your income taxes very much.

Of course, any money you take out in the next few years won’t be available later for college expenses and won’t have compounded for long. Still, the new federal law does encourage you to save for private school as well as college in one of these funds. If things remain as they are, the federal provision that increases the use of these funds threatens to reduce state income-tax revenue. Then again, a “preliminary report” from New York’s tax department suggests that K-12 payments may not be considered qualified educational expenses and that the state could recapture any associated tax benefits. And, as you’re aware, this new use for 529 funds may do little to offset the loss to you that comes from no longer being able to deduct more than $10,000 in state property and income taxes from your federally taxable income.

None of that is ethics, though. My ethical view is you should take all the tax deductions you’re legally entitled to. Many features of our tax system are ridiculous; many are the product of lobbying without much regard for the public good. But you don’t have a duty to pay more than you are required to by law just because you and people like you are benefiting from bad policies, any more than you have the right to pay less than you’re required to when you take a hit from bad policies. The right thing to aim for is tax reform that makes the system fairer. (We will all have our own views about whether the recent tax reforms did that. Count me a skeptic.)

You’re already helping to pay for New York’s public schools through your taxes. Your choice to give your children a private education doesn’t lessen your financial support for public schools. If you want to lend additional assistance to public schools without sending your kids to them, you can, as you say, support the local P.T.A. You can also pay attention when voting for candidates for public office and vote for those who will do their best for those schools. And you could lobby your state to make sure that it excludes deductions related to 529 funds used for K-12 expenses — deductions that encourage people with your sort of income to leave the public schools. With more people like you as parents, those schools might provide better education for all our children.

*Fuente: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/10/magazine/i-disapprove-of-school-vouchers-can-i-still-apply-for-them.html

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India: Making educational innovations scalable

Por: thehindubusinessline.com/Rohan Sandhu /11-04-2018

Demonstrated impact, cost-effectiveness, and the ability to work with the existing system are crucial

India is reported to have about 15 million NGOs in the education sector. Combined with the proliferation of social enterprises in recent years, the space for non-government education innovations is rapidly becoming a network of cottage industries, with interventions often reinventing the wheel and successful practices not being appropriately leveraged to address India’s learning crisis at scale.

Former US President Bill Clinton’s observation while reviewing school reform initiatives in the US may hold true for India as well: “Nearly every problem has been solved by someone, somewhere. The frustration is that we can’t seem to replicate (those solutions) anywhere else.”

Over the past year, however, India’s Ministry of Human Resource Development (HRD) has made significant efforts to identify NGO-led innovations around the country and create platforms for them to present to and engage with state education departments.

HRD Secretary, Anil Swarup, calling himself a “principal facilitator,” travelled across States to identify innovative models and organised five workshops to showcase such education innovations. “A government champion,” the Brookings Institution’s Millions Learning report finds, is often the “linchpin behind experimentation and greater participation in policy-making.”

Complex undertaking

But, while a government leader’s backing is crucial, scaling is a complex undertaking that comes with some fundamental questions, and the need to recognise that not all innovations are necessarily scalable. Experiences of a number of educational innovations point to factors that are critical for an innovation to be one that is scalable — demonstrated impact, cost-effectiveness, and the ability to work with the existing system.

At the outset though, the definition of “scaling” itself must be clarified. Key here is the question of what should be scaled — an intervention as a whole or some critical components. The Millions Learning report, studying a multitude of case studies, concludes that the process of scale requires that a balance be struck between the non-negotiable elements that are imperative to the success of a programme and must be replicated, and other elements that can be adapted as per specific requirements of individual contexts.

This portends the need for rigorous impact metrics or proof of concept, and the ability to disaggregate the outcomes generated by an intervention’s myriad elements. But, as Mary Burns writes, “educational projects do not undergo the kind of meaningful or rigorous impact evaluations that determine whether they are indeed worthy of being scaled.”

A survey of about 40 technology-based education innovations in India corroborates this. While most innovations report their reach, information on their outcomes is seldom available. This, though, is linked to a larger systemic challenge — the absence of a universal assessments or monitoring framework, because of which there is no common benchmark against which outcomes across different models may be evaluated and compared. It is critical that this gap is addressed before innovations are scaled based on personal relations and adhoc decisions instead of well-defined impact metrics.

Apart from delivering impact, for a country like India, models that seek to scale must also do so in a cost-effective manner. As Venkatesh Malur, who led Sampark Foundation’s Pedagogy Framework — reaching over 2.8 million children studying in 46,000 primary schools in India — summarised inAccelerating Access to Quality Education that Subir Gokarn and I co-edited a few years ago, “There is a need to prioritise frugal innovations in classroom transactions and work in sync with the existing system that will leverage the existing teachers, systems, and infrastructure.”

In line with Malur’s point on frugality, Sampark’s Smart Class Kit costs one dollar per child per year. Other innovations which have attempted to scale reinforce this. Gyan Shala, which scaled its operations in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, to cover schools in West Bengal, Bihar, and Uttar Pradesh, operates with a total cost of education per student amounting to 3,000 per year. The Bharti Foundation’s schools similarly seek to deliver education at a rate that is lower than the government school system, so that they may be easily replicated by the latter.

In a similar vein, models that are able to scale must be able to operate within the constraints of the existing system, with the current set of teachers, school leadership, and government machinery. Often, social enterprises and NGOs, in an attempt to see some quick successes, actively avoid engaging with governments and teachers.

But if they wish to scale, such an attitude can prove deleterious. In several cases, pilots succeed in specific contexts with favourable conditions, but fail without these. In Kenya, for instance, limited understanding of public sector and political economy constraints prevented a contract teacher programme that was able to raise students’ test scores when implemented by an NGO, to show the same positive outcomes when implemented at scale by the government.

Studies attribute this difference to the “lack of attention to the interaction between the intervention being tested and the broader institutional context.” Ark, which designed a School Quality Assessment framework for 120,000 schools in Madhya Pradesh, sought to create a product that had government ownership from the very beginning and was “delivered with existing public sector capacity, rather than being dependent on a major skills upgrade” (Accelerating Access to Quality Education).As an innovation scales, partnering with the government system to build its capacity becomes even more critical since scaling is not just a straightforward process of replication, but a more complicated one of adaptation. Binswanger and Aiyar (2003) recommend real-time process-monitoring that provides “continuous feedback that enables the scaling-up process to constantly be improved.”

Given the state’s institutional capacity constraints, Malur writes how Sampark works “hand-in-hand with the state machinery,” providing support and strengthening it. Teachers, too, are provided constant support through continuous trainings, frequent visits from Sampark’s coordinators, and a helpline that is available at all times. On a related note, innovators must be flexible and open to deviating from their initial model. Ark’s SQA design underwent at least four changes over just one year based on constant testing. “The team rapidly discovered that their original ‘premium’ design was too complex for operating in the contexts, and with the resources, available.”

Ultimately, the success of scaling hinges upon a productive partnership between the innovation and the government and teacher system. This is a partnership that must be established at the very outset — embedded in the core design of the model — and one that needs to be deepened as the innovation is scaled up.

Remedial measures

Finally, the quest to scale should not cause us to ignore some fundamental issues. Several innovations — like remedial programmes — have actually cropped up in response to the challenges imposed by flawed policies. Scaling educational innovations is a worthy endeavour, but it is crucial that we don’t replicate band-aid solutions, while ignoring deeper malaises.

Additionally, it isn’t enough to think of innovation as being the domain of just NGOs and social enterprises. The narrative about the top-down centralised nature of the Indian education system that gives little agency to teachers, school leaders, and frontline administrators, is well-established. While there is undoubtedly a rich supply of innovations outside this system, the demand to adapt and scale these will only be amplified and made more organic if last-mile functionaries and implementers are given the time and space to deviate from the rigidities of the current governance framework.

The writer is an Associate Director at the International Innovation Corps, University of Chicago. This article is by special arrangement with the Center for the Advanced Study of India, University of Pennsylvania

*Fuente: https://www.thehindubusinessline.com/opinion/columns/making-educational-innovations-scalable/article23495239.ece

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España. Educación: derecho o negocio

España/ 10 de abril de 2018/Por: Antonio Rodríguez de la Fuente/Fuente: http://www.diariocordoba.com

Ya hace meses que empezó el curso lectivo y se abrió el telón de la comedia que tiene como argumento la educación nacional. El adorno partidista de los programas electorales. El sacapechos de todos, y cada uno, de los gobiernos españoles, tanto del PP como del PSOE. La carta con la que nos jugamos el futuro como país desarrollado y altamente competitivo. La sempiterna reivindicación de cualquier político con aspiraciones de gobierno. En fin, un año más se desarrolla el curso académico sin Pacto de Estado por la Educación. ¡La gran asignatura «muy» pendiente de la democracia española! Y argumento muy a tener en cuenta a la hora de valorar lo que ocurre con los nacionalismos donde la educación juega un papel importantísimo, determinante a la hora de legislar, valerosamente, para hacer de la enseñanza doctrina instruida que busque la unión ciudadana en torno a una España que, verdaderamente, sea indivisible.

Que los españoles no se preocupen: jamás habrá un pacto que perdure en materia educativa porque, con el pacto y la materia, solo convive la más interesada, retrógrada y enfermiza ideología partidista.

La ley Villar de 1970 implantó la educación general básica. Pasado no mucho tiempo, se supo que nunca hubo una educación común a todos los individuos que constituyen un todo, sino dos caminos muy separados: los colegios privados y las escuelas públicas; el colegio era el «del brillito» y la escuela la «de balde», donde asistían los «niños de la calle». Ahora existen los colegios privados, colegios concertados y colegios públicos, y, obviando los primeros, los segundos y terceros jamás lograrán ponerse de acuerdo porque los concertados, dentro de su heterogeneidad, son máquinas reivindicativas, infatigables, en su derecho de elección, de distinción, de separación y de reclamación de recursos públicos con intención de introducir particularidades educativas más afectas a «lo privado» que a lo general o universal. Este mal endémico del sistema que se mantiene por la inercia natural del obligado cumplimiento, nunca se resolverá porque siempre faltará la más mínima dosis de voluntad política para afrontarlo con realismo, con autenticidad y veracidad.

Las siete leyes educativas, en 39 años de democracia, no han sido capaces de establecer unos principios pactados que, a largo plazo, sean fundamento del sistema educativo que, sin someterse a la lacra de la derogación, construyan un acuerdo, al que todos dicen aspirar, que marque el ritmo «nacional» de la educación de los españoles.

No se puede concebir, ni comprender, que siga vigente un sistema que no incentive el esfuerzo personal del alumno; antes al contrario, lo libera de la más mínima responsabilidad al permitirle pasar de curso sin haber aprobado todas las asignaturas del anterior. Esto revela, por sí mismo, la actual concepción escolar y educativa: más como un lugar de «pasar el tiempo obligatoriamente» que de instrucción y conocimiento como pilares maestros en el desarrollo vital del alumnado. Por eso en Alemania los colegios –sobre todo los públicos– sorprenden por su eficiencia y organización educativa al entender muy bien para qué, cómo y por qué está el alumno en sus aulas. Y en Finlandia, multiplíquese por dos…

Posiblemente, para no caer en demagogias contaminantes haya que contestar, con amplitud de miras y sin cortoplacismos políticos, a las siguientes interrogantes: ¿Enseñanza privada concertada o totalmente pública? ¿En España es la enseñanza un derecho o un negocio? ¿Modelo educativo y, a través de él, modelo de sociedad? ¿En el actual sistema educativo qué es lo que separa y qué es lo que jamás unirá? ¿Quién educará a los futuros maestros y profesores, dónde, cómo y con qué plan de estudios? ¿Por qué hay que aceptar en la docencia la sobrecarga como un mal necesario, un hábito o una costumbre?

Parafraseando a Ortega y Gasset, tendríamos que decir referente a la educación española que «no sabemos lo que nos pasa y eso es precisamente lo que nos pasa».

Fuente de la Noticia:

http://www.diariocordoba.com/noticias/opinion/educacion-derecho-negocio_1216870.html

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Argentina: Buscan convertir en obligatoria la educación sexual en todas las escuelas del país

Argentina/10 de abril de 2018/Por: Télam/ Fuente: http://www.lanueva.com 

Presentaron a los ministros una resolución que busca incorporar a la currícula de cada escuela los lineamientos más importantes fijados en la Ley de Educación Sexual Integral.

Los ministros de Educación de todo el país buscan convertir en obligatoria la educación sexual en las escuelas, tras la presentación que hizo hoy la Secretaría de Innovación y Calidad Educativa en el Consejo Federal, donde se hizo hincapié en que los estudiantes aprendan un contenido mínimo que sea incorporado a la currícula.

La Secretaría de Innovación y Calidad Educativa presentó a los ministros una resolución que busca incorporar a la currícula de cada escuela los lineamientos más importantes fijados en la Ley de Educación Sexual Integral (ESI).

La ley que implementaba la ESI en todo el país fue aprobada en 2006, pero no era parte de la currícula sino que, especialmente en los colegios privados religiosos, se daban en forma de jornadas.

De esta manera, «se vuelven obligatorios los contenidos de ESI, se asegura la llegada de la información a los estudiantes y se fija un contenido mínimo necesario que los adolescentes deberán aprender», destacó hoy el Ministerio de Educación de la Nación en un comunicado sobre la reunión del Consejo Federal, que se realizó en la localidad bonaerense de San Fernando.

Ahora, los ministros de Educación de las distintas jurisdicciones analizarán la información recibida para tomar una decisión sobre el tema.

«Se vuelven obligatorios los contenidos de ESI, se asegura la llegada de la información a los estudiantes y se fija un contenido mínimo necesario que los adolescentes deberán aprender»

Los resultados del Operativo Aprender dieron cuenta de que 8 de cada 10 alumnos mencionaron a la educación sexual como un tema que falta dar en la escuelas.

El ministro Alejandro Finocchiaro aseguró a Télam, en oportunidad de la presentación del Operativo Aprender que, para dar este fuerte impulso en la currícula, triplicará la inversión en educación sexual llevándola de 38 a casi 100 millones de pesos

En la provincia de Buenos Aires, el defensor del Pueblo adjunto, Walter Martello, advirtió que en los colegios privados y de orientación religiosa de la provincia no se enseña Educación Sexual y que toman para ello un artículo de la ley que habla sobre «las convicciones» de los miembros de la escuela.

Martello recalcó que la Ley 26.150 había fijado que el programa de Educación Sexual Integral debía alcanzar a todas las escuelas, tanto públicas como privadas.

Pero el artículo cinco de esa ley «les otorga una solapada discrecionalidad a las comunidades educativas para que puedan adaptar lo que establece la ley en función de las convicciones de sus miembros».

Y agregó: «El último párrafo de ese artículo es tomado por los sectores más conservadores de la Iglesia para desvirtuar el programa de educación sexual integral».

Ley 26.150

La ley que estableció la ESI en 2006 se proponía garantizar que los estudiantes de todos los niveles y establecimientos educativos reciban educación sexual. A pesar de esto nunca había sido implementada correctamente.

El objetivo era promover una educación para una sexualidad responsable desde una perspectiva de género, donde se incluyan aspectos de la diversidad sexual.

Además, la ESI contemplaba la prevención de problemas de salud (sexual y reproductiva), el uso de métodos anticonceptivos, temas sobre la identidad de género, orientación sexual e igualdad de trato y oportunidades para las mujeres.

En el año 2008 se establecieron los Lineamientos Curriculares para la Educación Sexual Integral. La idea era que se planteen abordajes integrales y transversales, es decir, que se trabajen desde todas las materias, desde los niveles iniciales, primario y primer ciclo de secundario.

La ESI plantea la integración de aspectos biológicos, psicológicos, sociales, afectivos y éticos y no se basa solamente en la enseñanza acerca de las relaciones sexuales, ni se reduce a las formas de prevenir embarazos o enfermedades.

El término “educación sexual integral” hace referencia a los saberes y habilidades para la toma de decisiones responsables y críticas en relación con los derechos de los niños y los adolescentes al cuidado del propio cuerpo, las relaciones interpersonales, la información y la sexualidad.

Según un estudio de Unicef, la ESI nunca fue implementado en las escuelas y tampoco los alumnos, ni los docentes ni los padres y madres recibieron información adecuada.

La mayoría de los estudiantes y los docentes comentaron haber recibido información principalmente por medios de comunicación o por otros compañeros, según el estudio.

Fuente de las Noticias:

http://www.lanueva.com/nota/2018-4-5-22-47-0-buscan-convertir-en-obligatoria-la-educacion-sexual-en-todas-las-escuelas-del-pais

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Portugal: Parlamento obriga Governo a abrir novo concurso para professores

Portugal/10 de abril de 2018/Por: Lusa/Fonte:https://www.publico.pt

Ministério da Educação estava a preparar um concurso apenas para os professores do quadro que ficaram descontentes com a sua colocação em 2017, mas as bancadas do BE, PCP, PSD e CDS votaram a favor da realização de um novo procedimento dirigido a todos os docentes. Ministério alerta que início das aulas pode ser posto em causa.

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México: Conocimiento puede financiar escuelas de educación superior

México/10 de abril de 2018/Por: Arturo Sánchez Jiménez/Fuente: http://www.jornada.unam.mx/

El conocimiento es una fuente potencial de recursos económicos propios, complementarios del subsidio federal con los que las instituciones de educación superior incrementarían su presupuesto, de acuerdo con Eduardo Peñalosa Castro, rector general de la Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana (UAM).

Peñalosa participó en la séptima asamblea general extraordinaria de la Unión de Universidades de América Latina (Udual), que se efectuó esta semana en la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM).

En este encuentro, que se realizó para reforzar vínculos entre las universidades de América Latina y el Caribe, de cara a la celebración por el centenario de la Reforma Universitaria de Córdoba, Peñalosa Castro expuso que esos recursos pueden generarse a partir de consultorías, oferta de educación continua especializada y cooperación académica nacional, regional e internacional, entre otras actividades.

Fuente de la Noticia:

http://www.jornada.unam.mx/ultimas/2018/04/08/conocimiento-puede-financiar-escuelas-de-educacion-superior-9985.html

 

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Denuncian afectaciones a sector educativo por recortes en Reino Unido

Reino Unido/10 de abril de 2018/Fuente: http://prensa-latina.cu

Los recortes realizados por el gobierno británico afectaron a alrededor de cuatro mil 50 niños con discapacidades o necesidades educativas especiales en 2017, denunció hoy el Sindicato Nacional de Profesores del Reino Unido.
Mediante un comunicado, dicha organización señaló que, debido a las medidas de austeridad implementadas por la administración conservadora, esos pequeños no pudieron acceder a centros escolares especializados o al tipo de enseñanza que requieren.

Además, alertó que la cifra de menores perjudicados durante el año pasado es casi el triple de la registrada en 2016 (mil 73) y es la mayor reportada desde 2010.

También indicó que dichas afectaciones forman parte de una crisis en el sistema educativo, provocada por la mala gestión del gobierno.

Es una vergüenza que la dirección del país prive a las autoridades locales de los recursos necesarios para atender a los niños con necesidades especiales, aseveró Kevin Courtney, secretario general adjunto de la Unión Nacional de Educadores.

Los menores están en sus casas porque no hay suficiente dinero para proporcionarles una educación adecuada. Los padres y maestros están desesperados. El Gobierno le está fallando a miles de pequeños y sus familias, por lo que debe actuar de inmediato para resolver esta crítica situación, añadió.

Fuente de la Noticia:
http://prensa-latina.cu/index.php?o=rn&id=164680&SEO=denuncian-afectaciones-a-sector-educativo-por-recortes-en-reino-unido
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