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Indian: Poor kids lured with free education, converted to Islam; nine held in Telangana

Indian/November 21, 2017/By: Hyderabad /Source: http://indianexpress.com

As many as 17 children including seven girls, all in the age group of 4 to 15 years, were converted,» Sandeep said, adding that police have seized Islamic literature from the spot.

Nine persons were arrested today for allegedly converting children from poor families in Telangana to Islam under the pretext of providing them free education, food and shelter here, the police said. Police rescued 17 children in age group of 4-15 years, including seven girls, from the premises of an unrecognised school in Moula Ali area on the complaint of the Child Welfare Committee.

Out of the ten accused in the case, police arrested prime accused Mohammed Siddiqi alias Satyanarayana and eight others. “Siddiqi and eight others allegedly lured parents from interior areas of Bhadrachalam, Mahabubnagar, Khammam and Warangal districts of Telangana and made them believe that their children will get free education along with accommodation and food facilities,” Assistant Commissioner of Police (Malkajgiri Division) G Sandeep said.

He said the accused converted the children to Islam and started imparting them Urdu and Arabic studies. “They converted the children to Islam, but didn’t change their names. Their motive was to convert as many children as possible,” the officer said.

During the investigation, police found that Siddqui and nine persons were indulged in religious conversion of the minors, mostly belonging to SC/ST communities. “As many as 17 children including seven girls, all in the age group of 4 to 15 years, were converted,” Sandeep said, adding that police have seized Islamic literature from the spot.

The ACP said Siddiqui converted to Islam in 2003-2004 and started Peace Orphan Society in Warangal. He was running a school-cum-hostel in Hyderabad since the last year.

A case was registered against the accused persons under sections 153A (promoting enmity between different groups on grounds of religion, 363 (kidnapping), 342 (wrongful confinement) of the IPC and relevant sections of the SC and ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act. Police are probing whether the accused received funding from abroad, the ACP added.

Source:

http://indianexpress.com/article/india/poor-kids-lured-with-free-educationconverted-to-islam-nine-held-in-telangana-4945289/

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Nigeria: Change Should Begin With Education

Nigeria/November 21, 2017/Source: http://allafrica.com

The Federal Executive Council [FEC] held a special retreat in Abuja last Monday on the challenges of education in Nigeria. The retreat had the theme: «Education in Nigeria: Challenges and Prospects.» President Muhammadu Buhari declared it open while Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and most ministers were present. The decision to hold the retreat was first made in June at a FEC meeting chaired by then Acting President Osinbajo. Minister of Education Malam Adamu Adamu said at the time that «[FEC] members agreed that the falling standards in education are so serious that we will need a ministerial retreat to look at all the issues…Initially, we had prepared a blueprint but FEC felt the issue is beyond that because there are crises in all the areas of education, in out of school children, in technical education and training, in ICT, in all the areas you can think of.»

The minister increased the areas of educational malaise when he spoke at the 2017 Convergence Education Summit in Abuja last week. He said, «The education sector is plagued with so many challenges. Some of the challenges include dearth of qualified technical teachers, dilapidated and inadequate classrooms, lack of tools and equipment for technical and vocational education, poor data for educational planning and administration. Others are dearth of critical ICT infrastructure and services, low access to tertiary education due to insufficient institutions, multiplicity of curriculum-related issues, problem of out-of-school children and poor funding, among others.» The list looks very long but the minister actually left out other areas such as poor quality of teachers in many states, high drop-out rate, inability of many parents to pay their children’s exam fees, widespread malpractice in exam administration, the problem of fake certificates and sexual abuse, among others.

President Buhari’s opening speech at the retreat was overshadowed by a remark he made about Kaduna State Governor Nasir el-Rufai’s plan to sack 21,780 teachers who failed a basic competency exam. Most newspapers seized on that remark and had screaming headlines that «Buhari backs el-Rufa’i’s plan to sack teachers.» This was unfortunate because the Kaduna controversy is but a flash in the pan when it comes to tackling the major problems devilling education in Nigeria.

In his speech at the retreat, Minister of Education Malam Adamu Adamu called for a state of emergency to be declared in education. He said «all change must begin with education because if we get education right, other areas of our national life will be right and they will fall in line.» This is true indeed but what is the solution? The minister said, «What is needed is vastly improved funding accompanied by a strong political will.» He said while the Buhari administration has the will, what it «must now do is to make the funds available.» Both are easier said than done. The APC administration’s political will to solve the deep-rooted problems of the education sector is yet to be proved. As for funding, Malam Adamu said among sub-Saharan African countries, Nigeria commits far less to education as a percentage of its budgets than smaller and less endowed nations in the region.

«From 1999 to date,» the minister said, «the annual budgetary allocation to education [in Nigeria] has always been between four per cent and 10 per cent.» He said none of the E9 or D8 countries other than Nigeria allocates less than 20 per cent of its annual budget to education. It is true that for a developing country such as Nigeria, all sectors of the socio-economy are yearning for greater attention. If however we believe, beyond mouthing slogans, that education is the sector with the greatest multiplier effect for national development, then we must up our game and greatly increase spending in education at all levels to address the myriad of problems that have already been identified.

That assertion has caveats, however. The education sector is not spared from the national malaise of corruption. It cannot be said that this country has got real value for the amounts we invested in education, less though they are compared to other countries. The anti-corruption campaign being waged in other sectors must also be waged vigorously in the education sector, otherwise pumping in more money could be an exercise in futility.

It was not said after the FEC retreat whether it accepted the minister’s prayer to declare a state of emergency in education. In case it decides to do so at a later date, the elements in this declaration and the timelines for achieving specific targets should be made clear to all Nigerians so that we can all monitor compliance. Besides, the problems of education in Nigeria cannot be tackled by the Federal Government alone. In fact, state and local governments have a greater role to play in education than the Federal Government. The sectors the latter are mainly responsible for, i.e. primary and secondary education, are the ones that have suffered the greatest quality deterioration and are more badly affected by other problems. Needless to state, the Federal Government’s heavy investment in tertiary education can hardly achieve desired results if the two lower tiers of education are in crises.

That is why last week’s ministerial retreat should be followed up by a wider stakeholders’ summit involving the other tiers of government as well as non-government actors in the sector, local and international. At the end of it, a comprehensive yet simple blueprint of action with reasonable timelines should be produced and widely circulated in the country. At that point the President should bring his full moral authority to bear to get all actors to key into the program and bestow on it the political will and resource infusion. Hopefully within a few years the country will begin to reap the fruits of such concerted action.

Source:

http://allafrica.com/stories/201711190024.html

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Pakistan: Govt making efforts to provide quality education facilities to students: Maiza Hameed

Pakistan/November 21, 2017/By: https://pakobserver.net

Parliamentary Secretary Capital Administration and Development Division (CADD) MNA Maiza Hameed Sunday said that government was making efforts to provide quality education to students.

In a statement, she said that over 4000,000 new students enrolled in various educational institutions due to remarkable improvement in education sector.

She said that government took effective measures to improve sanitation by establishing toilets for girl students along with proper hand washing facilities in 12 schools under Federal Directorate of Education (FDE).

Parliamentary Secretary said that mobile bus libraries handed over to CADD to enhance reading skills of all students of federal schools.

She said that CADD had taken special initiatives to strengthen education system and developed a national culture of reading through mobile bus libraries.

Orignally published by NNI

Source:

https://pakobserver.net/govt-making-efforts-provide-quality-education-facilities-students-maiza-hameed/

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Brasil: Violência nas escolas é tema de debate na Comissão de Educação

Brasil/Noviembre de 2017/Fuente: Senado Noticias

Resumen:  La Comisión de Educación, Cultura y Deporte (CE) promueve la audiencia pública el miércoles (22), a partir de las 10h, sobre la violencia en las escuelas públicas.

La audiencia fue sugerida por el senador Cristovam Buarque (PPS-DF). Según él, más de la mitad de los educadores de escuelas públicas afirman haber presenciado agresiones físicas o verbales de alumnos a funcionarios y profesores en el ambiente escolar. Además, el 11% de los directores y el 9% de los profesores dijeron haber sufrido amenazas de algún alumno. Con base en la encuesta Prueba Brasil 2015, Cristovam informa aún que el 76% de los directores y el 71% de los profesores ya relataron tener conocimiento de agresión verbal o física entre los propios alumnos.

Entre los invitados al debate, están el coordinador general de Educación Ambiental y Temas Transversales del Ministerio de Educación, Felipe Felisbino, y la coordinadora del Área de Estudios sobre Juventud de la Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Miriam Abramovay.

A Comissão de Educação, Cultura e Esporte (CE) promove audiência pública na quarta-feira (22), a partir das10h, sobre a violência nas escolas públicas.

A audiência foi sugerida pelo senador Cristovam Buarque (PPS-DF). Segundo ele, mais da metade dos educadores de escolas públicas afirmam ter presenciado agressões físicas ou verbais de alunos a funcionários e professores no ambiente escolar. Além disso, 11% dos diretores e 9% dos professores disseram ter sofrido ameaças de algum aluno. Com base na pesquisa Prova Brasil 2015, Cristovam informa ainda que 76% dos diretores e 71% dos professores já relataram ter conhecimento de agressão verbal ou física entre os próprios alunos.

Entre os convidados para o debate, estão o coordenador-geral de Educação Ambiental e Temas Transversais do Ministério da Educação, Felipe Felisbino, e a coordenadora da Área de Estudos sobre Juventude da Faculdade Latino-Americana de Ciências Sociais, Miriam Abramovay.

A diretora de Área Programática da Unesco-Brasil, Marlova Jovchelovitch Noleto, e o desembargador do Tribunal de Justiça do Rio de Janeiro (TJ-RJ) Siro Darlan de Oliveira também estão entre os convidados. A Secretaria de Educação do Distrito Federal deve enviar um representante para a audiência pública, que ainda contará com a participação da deputada federal Pollyana Gama (PPS-SP).

O debate está marcado para a sala 15 da Ala Senador Alexandre Costa e será realizado de forma interativa, com a possibilidade de participação popular. Dúvidas, críticas e sugestões poderão ser enviadas pelo portal e-Cidadania ou pelo Alô Senado (0800 612211).

Fuente: https://www12.senado.leg.br/noticias/materias/2017/11/20/violencia-nas-escolas-e-tema-de-debate-na-comissao-de-educacao

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Reino Unido: Scientists call for more graphic sex education as British teens become more ‘adventurous’ in bed

Reino Unido/Noviembre de 2017/Fuente: Mirror

Resumen: Los adolescentes conocedores de Internet de hoy en día son más aventureros sexualmente que aquellos hace 20 años, según una encuesta británica sobre las actitudes sexuales cambiantes.

Los Millenials británicos directos no están teniendo relaciones sexuales antes que sus contrapartes en la década de 1990, pero están experimentando con diferentes tipos de sexo.

Today’s internet savvy teenagers are more sexually adventurous than those 20 years ago, a British survey of changing sexual attitudes found.

Straight British Millennials are not having sex earlier than their counterparts in the 1990s but are experimenting with different kinds of sex.

But the proportion of sexually active 16 to 24 year olds who said they have had vaginal, oral and anal sex during the last year has risen, from approximately one in ten women and men in 1990 to 1991, to one in four men and one in five women in 2010 to 2012.

And some of the largest increases in the prevalence of oral and anal sex over the past decade were observed among those aged 16 to 18.

Yet the median age of 14 for the first heterosexual experience such as kissing and the median age of 16 at first intercourse whether oral, vaginal or anal has not changed much in recent decades.

The readily availability of internet porn , greater promiscuity, and bisexual experiences among girls could be part of the reason why these types of sex have risen.

The findings mean sex education may need to be updated to ensure safe sex and teenagers are not coerced into doing things they may not want to, scientists said.

The study explores the changes in young people’s sexual practices using nationally-representative data from the National Surveys of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles (Natsal), the largest scientific studies of sexual health and lifestyles in Britain.

These three studies, Natsal 1, 2 and 3, have been carried out every 10 years since 1990, and have involved interviews with more than 45,000 people to date.

Lead author Research Associate Dr Ruth Lewis conducted the work while at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine but is now based at the MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow.

«At a time when much sex and relationships education is being updated, keeping pace with current trends in sexual practices is crucial so that curricula are tailored to the realities of young people’s experiences,» she said.

«By shedding light on when some young people are having sex and what kinds of sex they are having, our study highlights the need for accurate sex and relationships education that provides opportunities to discuss consent and safety in relation to a range of sexual practices.

 Senior author Professor Kaye Wellings at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, added: «The changes in practices we see here are consistent with the widening of other aspects of young people’s sexual experience, and are perhaps not surprising given the rapidly changing social context and the ever-increasing number of influences on sexual behaviour.

«It is important to keep up to date with trends in sexual lifestyles to help young people safeguard their health and increase their well being.»

The study which also involved researchers from University College London and NatCen Social Research was published in the Journal of Adolescent Health .

Fuente: http://www.mirror.co.uk/science/scientists-call-more-graphic-sex-11551920

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52 Indian students get Australian govt scholarships for 2018

Australia/Noviembre de 2017/Fuente: Hindustantime

Resumen:  Alrededor de 52 estudiantes indios obtendrán becas y becas Australia Awards-Endeavor para 2018. Los premiados estudiarán en las principales universidades de investigación de Australia en campos que incluyen ciencias médicas, derecho y salud pública, ingeniería mecánica y criminología, alto comisionado australiano en la India Harinder Sidhu dijo el viernes.

Tres australianos también emprenderán oportunidades de aprendizaje en la India como parte de estos premios.

Las Becas y Becas Australia Awards-Endeavor ofrecen apoyo a los internacionales para llevar a cabo estudios, investigaciones o desarrollo profesional en Australia. Para postular, debe ser de un país y / o región participante.

About 52 Indian students will get the Australia Awards-Endeavour scholarships and Fellowships for 2018. The awardees will study at Australia’s top research universities in fields that include medical science, law and public health, mechanical engineering and criminology, Australian high commissioner to India Harinder Sidhu said on Friday.

Three Australians will also undertake learning opportunities in India as part of these awards.

The Australia Awards–Endeavour Scholarships and Fellowships offer support to internationals to undertake study, research or professional development in Australia. To apply, you must be from a participating country and/or region.

Recipients will receive:

•travel allowance: $3,000 (Rs 1,45,950 ), with provision to pay up to $4,500 under special circumstances

•establishment allowance: $2,000 ( Rs97,300 ) for fellowships or $4,000 (scholarships)

•monthly stipend: $3,000 (Rs1,45,950), to be paid up to the maximum category duration on a pro-rata basis)

 Health and travel insurance is also included for select categories.

Endeavour scholarship recipients will also receive tuition fees paid up to the maximum study/research duration on a pro-rata basis. Tuition includes student service and amenities fees.

Congratulating the winners, Sidhu said the awardees were selected on the basis of their potential to build educational, research and professional links between Australia and India. She hoped they would over time become the new generation of global leaders.

“The Australia Awards-Endeavour Scholarships and Fellowships will forge understanding and strong networks between Indian and Australian scholars. These links will continue long after the scholars have returned to India,” Sidhu said.

The scholarships and fellowships are awarded every year to high achieving students, researchers and professionals from around the world to study in Australia’s world-class education institutions or undertake a professional development programme.

Implemented by the Australian government’s department of education and training, the scholarships are internationally-competitive and merit-based.

Applications for the 2019 round open in April 2018. For more information on the Endeavour Scholarships and Fellowships and Endeavour Mobility Grants, check out the International Education website.

Fuente: http://www.hindustantimes.com/education/52-indian-students-get-australian-govt-scholarships-for-2018/story-UQ5WWG29Kl6vMXmccrrpvI.html

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China’s Top Economic Risk? Education

China/Noviembre de 2017/Fuente: Bloomberg

Resumen:  El presidente de China, Xi Jinping, recientemente presentó una visión audaz para transformar a su país en una economía completamente desarrollada para 2050, con un énfasis particular en estimular la innovación y la tecnología. Dado el actual nivel de capital humano de China, y algunos cambios inminentes en la economía mundial, eso puede ser más difícil de lo que espera.

Una opinión ampliamente aceptada en Occidente es que las escuelas de China están repletas de mafiosos de las matemáticas y las ciencias, justo el tipo de estudiantes que necesitarán las empresas del futuro. Pero esto es engañoso: durante años, los estudios titulares que muestran la destreza de China en las pruebas estandarizadas evaluaron solo a los niños en áreas ricas y no representativas. Cuando se incluyó a su población más amplia, la clasificación de China cayó en todas las áreas temáticas.

Chinese President Xi Jinping recently laid out a bold vision for transforming his country into a fully developed economy by 2050, with a particular emphasis on spurring innovation and technology. Given China’s current level of human capital — and some looming changes in the world economy — that may be harder than he expects.

A widely held view in the West is that China’s schools are brimming with math and science whizzes, just the kind of students that companies of the future will need. But this is misleading: For years, headline-grabbing studies showing China’s prowess on standardized tests evaluated only kids in rich and unrepresentative areas. When its broader population was included, China’s ranking dropped across all subject areas.

Official data bears out this dynamic. According to the 2010 census, less than 9 percent of Chinese had attended school beyond the secondary level. More than 65 percent had gone no further than junior high. From 2008 to 2016, China’s total number of graduate students actually decreased by 1 percent. Outside the richest areas, much of China’s population lacks even the basic skills required in a high-income economy.

Making matters worse are the millions of children in rural areas who are being raised by their extended families. With their parents working in faraway cities, these children tend to fare much worse in school and on IQ tests. Stanford economist Scott Rozelle has referred to this as an «invisible crisis» in the making: In the coming decades, he estimates, some 400 million underprepared Chinese could be looking for work. His research has touched such a nerve that even state media has given it serious coverage.

At the moment, it’s easy to overlook these problems. Official unemployment remains low and stable. Wages are rising and the middle class is expanding. China’s factories still rank among the world’s best, and its workers broadly have the skills they need to support themselves.

Yet with demographic and technological changes accelerating, the education gap will soon loom large. As wages rise, Chinese manufacturers will face growing competition from less-developed countries. As automation improves, factories will need workers with more and better education. And as older industries are disrupted, employers will demand new skill sets.

China — like many countries — isn’t prepared for these changes. Sustaining an advanced, service-based economy isn’t possible when only 25 percent of the working-age population has a high-school degree. In every country that made the jump from middle-income to high-income over the past 70 years, Rozelle found, at least 75 percent of the working-age population had a high school degree before the transition began. Even China’s elite schools can’t drive economic development for 1.4 billion people.

Raising the level of education more broadly will require both investment and reform.

Most countries would benefit from investing more in education. But in China, the need is especially acute: Even in prosperous urban centers, classrooms are commonly crammed with 50 students apiece, forcing much of the actual work of education onto frustrated parents. That’s a recipe for failure.

Another priority should be overhauling the so-called hukou system of household registration. The reason so many children are being raised by their grandparents in rural areas is because they’re restricted from accessing public services — including schools — in the cities where their parents work. Yet it’s significantly easier to offer a quality education in urban centers than in far-flung villages. And with apartment vacancy rates above 20 percent in many cities, it would be both a humane and economically sound policy to end these restrictions.

A final goal should be reforming curriculums. China is famous for requiring rote memorization of its students. But schools are also increasing classwork on communist ideology, Confucian thought and even Traditional Chinese Medicine. The emphasis should instead be on skills — such as creativity and unstructured problem-solving — that will help drive entrepreneurship and innovation, and ensure that students can compete in a world of robots and drones.

Although other countries will face many of these problems in the years ahead, China is starting with some especially severe handicaps. Xi may be right that China’s people are resilient and creative enough to achieve his goals. But the journey will be a rocky one.

Fuente: https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2017-11-19/china-s-top-economic-risk-education

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