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Biggest Education Exhibition of Pakistan

Pakistan/October 24, 2017/Source: http://middleeast-business.com

BIGGEST EDUCATION EXHIBITION OF PAKISTAN TO TAKE PLACE ON 28-29 APRIL 2018

EdEx Pakistan – The Higher Education & Training Exhibition will be held from 28 – 29 April 2018 at the Karachi Expo Centre. The largest Education Expo to be held in Pakistan, it will feature over 80 leading local and international universities, colleges and higher education institutes, various training institutes from all across the globe.

Organized by Expology Private Ltd., EdEx Pakistan will provide an ideal platform for local and international universities and colleges to promote their accredited courses – ranging from Bachelor›s Degree, Post-Graduation/Masters and Doctorate Programmes. The Expo also opens a window of opportunity for these higher education institutes to meet with key Government entities, professionals and local students seeking to study abroad.

Apart from playing a prominent role in the country’s development, the exhibition is organized with the objective of helping institutes of higher learning reach a cross section of Pakistani students who have the qualification and the means to contemplate further education in Pakistan or abroad. Faculty, admission officers and career counselors will interact with the visiting students directly on a one-on-one basis.

One of the largest and complete education fairs, EdEx Pakistan sets the stage to meet aspiring and promising students interested to study in Pakistan and abroad. You cannot afford to miss out Pakistan’s most important event of international universities, business schools and colleges which brings you thousands of potential students face-to-face, parents and agents from all over the country. Students can be informed about the study opportunities offered at your campus.

EdEx Pakistan is a unique education fair showcasing universities, colleges and other educational Institutions from all across the world. This fair is the most exciting platform for introducing your institutions to an eager and growing market of potential students ready to study abroad.

Pakistan is one of the leading international markets in Asia for recruiting students in to educational institutions from all over the world.

For Exhibiting Enquiries and Sponsorship Opportunities in EdEx Pakistan, please contact Mr. Muhammad Usman, Expology on Mobile No: +92 322 2711608 or e-mail media@edexpak.com, Website: www.edexpak.com

Source:

http://middleeast-business.com/biggest-education-exhibition-pakistan/

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Namibian: Hardap schools struggle to implement inclusive education

Namibian/October 24, 2017/By: Hilma Hashange/ Source: https://www.namibian.com.na

SCHOOLS in the Hardap region are struggling to implement the curriculum introduced into the education sector in 2012 to end the segregation and exclusion of individuals.

The curriculum is designed to end discrimination or segregation on the grounds of academic performance, gender, race, culture, religion, lifestyle, health conditions and disability. The ministry’s policy on inclusive education states that the curriculum is based on the understanding that all pupils have the right to be educated with peers, friends and family members, in their own neighbourhood or local community.

However, according to Veronika Axakhoes, principal of A A Denk Memorial School at Kalkrand in the Naukluft circuit, even though inclusive education entails that pupils should be taught inclusively without anyone being left out, some pupils are automatically left out because of the lack of learning support from the teachers.

“As long as a pupil is not taught on his or her level of ability in that subject, that learner is automatically left out of this inclusive teaching system,” she said.

Axakhoes further said pupils taught in a normal classroom and who experience learning difficulties find it hard to achieve the basic competencies in that lesson because the lesson is usually beyond the pupil’s basic understanding.

“If a pupil is, however, taught on his or her level no matter what level the teacher has to start from, the pupil will show some improvement and at least get some understanding and his or her mind will be opened up,” said Axakhoes.

She said for inclusive education to work, learning support is needed and that phonics should be the basics. “Reading should be integrated during lessons so that every pupil should at least know what phonics are because if you do not know phonics, you will not be able to read, and if you cannot read, there is no way you will be able to study and if you cannot study, you will fail. All these leads to pupils being transferred until they reach Grade 10 and it is from there that the problem escalates,” she added.

Axakhoes, who has 22 years experience in teaching, said she has also taught in other regions such as Erongo, Otjozondjupa and Omaheke where she conducted special learning sessions.

“I have noticed that the sessions we had with the pupils in those regions were fruitful because they are improving. When I started here at A A Denk Memorial School, the teachers were trying hard to provide learning support and from experience I advised them to have phonics cards for every lesson, clear pronunciation of words from the teachers and especially integrate reading in all subjects,” said Axakhoes.

She said she had informed the circuit inspector, Herbert Britz, about the concerns of pupils with learning difficulties and held several meetings with both the inspector and several education officers earlier this year.

She appealed to the ministry to separate pupils with learning difficulties so that they can be taught from the basic level of their understanding.

“We understand that the inclusive education policy does not allow for pupils to be separated but if government can allow that they be taught separately, then the system will have a huge impact on these pupils. Teachers, especially in lower primary, should also be given training on how to offer learning support to pupils with learning difficulties,” Axakhoes pleaded.

Echoing the principal’s sentiments, head girl of A A Denk Memorial school, Legine Garises pleaded on behalf of the pupils with learning difficulties at the school. She said although the inclusive education is well thought out on paper and does not discriminate or stereotype slow learners, the programme has its challenges.

“The fact that we are taught in one classroom with pupils who are average and above average achievers, teachers find it difficult to reach our level. Although we are not labelled as slow learners, it becomes evident within ourselves that we cannot do what the other pupils can do. Frustrations build up and our self-esteem suffers, which eventually results in a lot of pupils dropping out of school,” said the Grade 7 pupil.

Teachers at the school said one of the biggest problems they face is with reading. The teachers also said the pupils have difficulties with phonics, and said the learning support in a 40 minute lesson cannot cater for the different levels of learning abilities.

The teachers also pleaded with the parents and guardians to offer support to their children.

Confirming the difficulties by the schools in the Naukluft circuit, Britz said the issue is not a regional, but a national problem.

“We have discussed the issue at length at my office and had a brainstorming exercise on how to deal with it and identified a few challenges. We try to address this issue in our circuit by using experts to train teachers on how to offer learning support. It is difficult, however, because we cannot reach all the teachers in the circuit let alone the region,” he said.

He said although certain measures are in place, it is simply not enough because a lot of pupils develop a backlog that is not easy to erase.

“Learning support is something that should be an ongoing exercise, not only in primary schools but also in high schools,” said Britz, adding that the matter had been brought to the attention of the education regional director.

“The director is fully aware of the challenges. We, however, tried to address them but budget cuts are hampering our efforts. All schools address the issue against their own circumstances,” he said. Contacted for comment, acting education regional director Ernfrieda Stephanus said she is not aware of the concerns raised by Axakhoes on inclusive education as she is acting on behalf of regional director Mzingisi Gqwede, who is on sick leave.

Source:

https://www.namibian.com.na/60709/read/Hardap-schools-struggle-to-implement-inclusive-education

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Skills Gap – The achilles of Sri Lanka’s education sector

Sri Lanka/October 24, 2017/Source: Lanka Bussines Online

As Sri Lanka enters an increasingly competitive international environment with a renewed emphasis on transforming itself into a modern economy, the importance of promoting technological innovationsand generating an educated workforce with market oriented skills cannot be over emphasized. High quality human resources with science and technology knowledge and a skilled labour force are necessary to keep up and improve on the country’s global competitiveness.

Link between Access to Tertiary Education and Skills Mis-match

As of 2014, only 5 per cent of 20-24 year olds were enrolled at a university, while another 8 per cent were enrolled in other educational institutions and only a 3 per cent of the same age group were enrolled in technical education and vocational training (TEVT) courses. The main reasons behind this lower tertiary enrolment include capacity constraints of the state university system, unavailability of a proper parallel higher education system with private sector involvement, and an underdeveloped TEVT sector. Given these, most of the school leavers usually find unskilled work or engage in casual jobs. This limited higher educated human capital acts as a constraint in catering to the labour market demand for advanced skilled workers.

ICT and English language are the most demanded soft skills in the country. Individuals competent in English have access to better quality jobs with higher salaries and benefits in the domestic labour market as well as internationally. However, the Census of Population and Housing 2012 dataconducted by the DCS reveals that of the age 15 and above population, English literacy (ability to speak, read and write) and computer literacy were around 22 per cent and 23 per cent, respectively. This situation creates a gap in meeting the demand for soft skills as previously noted.

The primary reason behind this skills mismatch is that the quality of the general and higher education systems – provided mainly by the public sector – does not transmit much productive skills to students. Also, there are supply side bottlenecks for more demanding subjects such as Science, ICT education, etc. at the school level — out of 10,162 schools only 10 per cent have the facilities to teach A-Level in the science stream.These have resulted in mismatches between the demands of the market and the skills of school and university graduates.

Sri Lanka also does not appear to produce graduates with the necessary skills needed for the job market. There is a mismatch in the courses offered by universities and competencies needed by the private sector. A major reason for the skill mismatch is the outdated curricula, aggravated by the lack of interaction with the private sector when designing degree programmes. For example, of those who do attend a university, nearly one-third are studying in the Arts Stream, whereas these Arts graduates are less employable when compared to graduates of other subject streams.Finally, there is no proper career guidance system to advise school leavers leading to an inadequate flow of information between youth and the labour market. Inadequate information flows between the youth and the labour market such as of the types of job opportunities in the labour market, limit the aspirations, and life goals of youth.

Reforms to BridgeSkill Gaps to World of Work

It is essential to reform the school and university curricula by introducing more market oriented subjects such as ICT/technological subjects as core subject in each A-Level subject stream, especially in the arts stream, in order to bridge the gap between demand and supply for these vital skills.

It is also a necessity to provide access to equal opportunities for education to all students across the country. Opportunities for education in science should be extended to remove involuntary discrimination for science education. While the number of science teaching schools needs to be increased to address equitable distribution, the technology stream should be strengthened where provision of science teaching is not possible.

It is essential setting national standards for all tertiary providers to revamp controversy surrounding of private higher education providers. Also, state universities should change to become dynamic centers of teaching and learning that will react to changes in the market in a timely manner. Curriculum should be reformed to match the skills demands of the globalized labour market with sufficient practical applications. Linkages should be developed between universities and private sector when designing the courses, securing the relevance of training to the changing needs of enterprises and labour markets.

A minimum of two years training is recommended for students after sitting for O-Levels to address the skill gaps of school leavers. Training programme should be more work-oriented technical training in different fields such as hotel, construction, textile and garment sectors, etc. Vocational education systems should be linked with industries that can absorb these students.

To address the labour market information gap among school leavers, awareness and absorptive capacities of industries, as well as education and training institutes needs to be developed. Raising awareness should be done at the school level after sitting for O-Levels. This awareness campaign should be done in a well-planned manner, with the involvement of vocational training authorities, private sector institutes, etc.

Source:

http://education.einnews.com/article/411285973/pEyjzJxrAfoM0Pk0?lcf=eG8zt30RHq4WcGF5PkFdHg%3D%3D

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Indian government to announce new education policy in December: Union minister

Indian/October 24, 2017/Source: Times of Oman

A new education policy to «correct» the education system, which follows a «colonial» mindset, will be brought out in December, Union minister Satya Pal Singh said on Monday.

He said threadbare discussions were held on the new education policy, which is in its final stages. «The NDA government’s new education policy is in its final stages and the same will be out in December. The policy envisages correcting the education system that has followed a colonial mindset,» the minister of state for human resources said.

After Independence, most academicians unfortunately followed the footsteps of British and western scholars and «deliberately» denigrated Indian culture, he said.

The minister said the biggest challenge facing the education system and government was how to «decolonise» the Indian mind, and added that the nation has to keep pace with the world in this field. Some issues to be addressed are — improving the quality of education at the primary level, making higher education affordable and ensuring more people have access to education, he said after inaugurating the National Academic meet here.

Skill development was a major area to which the government has given thrust. But more has to be done on this, Singh said. To prevent exodus of students abroad for education,he said higher education institutions matching the standards of centres of international excellence should be developed.

The MoS said accessibility to higher education in India was only 25.6 per cent while it was 86 per cent in USA, 80 per cent in Germany and 60 per cent in China.

«The aim is to improve the higher education system in the country to make it available to more,» he said. Singh said the challenge before the government was to remove social and regional disparities in students having access to higher education and to make it affordable to all.

«In some places access to higher education is as low as nine per cent, but in others it is 60 per cent…higher education is very expensive and has to be made more affordable to all sections of the society,» he said.

Singh pointed out that 50 per cent of the teachers posts were lying vacant in universities. «In Delhi University, there are 4,000 vacancies,» he said. Singh said though India produces 30,000 to 40,000 PhD holders every year, the nation’s contribution to the world economy was only 0.2 per cent and added that a lot of improvement has to be brought about in research and development in the country. He said changes are necessary in the Right to Education Act as the act «lacked teeth».

«The Act provides the right to compulsory primary education. But what is the remedy if parents do not send their children to school? So many things have to be done to improve primary education in the country,» he added.

The meet was organised by Bharatheeya Vichara Kendram as part of the navathi celebration of P. Parameswarn, Sangh Parivar ideologue and director of the BVK.

Source:

http://education.einnews.com/article/411328283/kmri2asCGk8J4fKb?lcf=eG8zt30RHq4WcGF5PkFdHg%3D%3D

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New school offers education ‘salvation’ for Syrian girls in Lebanon

Lebanon/October 24, 2017/By: Dahlia Nehme/Source: http://uk.reuters.com

A new girls’ school for Syrian refugees in Lebanon’s poor Bekaa region is aiming to give girls from conservative backgrounds the chance at a formal education.

Gaining access to education in general is difficult for Syrian refugees in Lebanon, but for girls from socially conservative families who disapprove of mixed schools, it is even harder.

Zahra al-Ayed, 14, and her sister Batoul, 17, were from a village in Syria’s northern Idlib province where women were expected to marry young.

 But the experience of fleeing war and living in harsh poverty woke her parents to the life-changing importance of education, the girls’ mother Mirdiyeh al-Ayed said.

“My eldest daughter tells me that she will not marry until after she finishes her education. She even wants to travel abroad and learn,” she said.

Human Rights Watch organisation said in its latest report in April that more than half a million refugee children are out of school in Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey.

In Lebanon, international donors paid for 200,000 public school spaces for Syrian children in 2015-2016, according to the HRW report, but only 149,000 children actually enrolled.

Lebanese and international non-governmental organisations have been striving to fill the gap, and to eliminate the legal, financial and language barriers preventing refugee children from getting their education.

For the al-Ayed family, used to Syria’s system of gender segregation after the age of 12, one big barrier to enrolling the girls was the lack of single-sex schools in Lebanon that accept refugees.

SYRIAN REFUGEES

The new school that Zahra will attend is in Bar Elias in the Bekaa valley and was opened on Thursday by the Kayany Foundation, a Lebanese charity. It educates 160 Syrian girls aged from 14-18 who have missed school for several years.

Those who manage to pass the Lebanese system’s eighth grade exams – usually taken at the age of 14 or 15 – can join the local Lebanese public school in Bar Elias, which Batoul al-Ayed has done.

The Kayany Foundation school teaches the official Lebanese curriculum, which includes science, mathematics, Arabic and English, in addition to vocational skills.

The school, built from colourful pre-fabricated classrooms, is its seventh in the Bekaa valley, where the majority of the Syrian refugee communities are located in Lebanon.

It was meant to address the Syrian parents’ concerns about sending their teenage daughters to schools for both girls and boys. All its teachers are women and it provides transportation for students between home and school.

 “Education is salvation for the refugee girls,” said Nora Jumblatt, head of the Kayany Foundation, at the opening ceremony.

Funding for the school was secured for this year from international charity Save the Children and the United Nations Women For Peace Association, according to Kayany officials.

“I have a dream to become a pharmacist,” Rama, 19, who is preparing to apply for the eight grade exams at Kayany school said. In normal times, Rama would already have been applying for university at that age.

“I still want to go back to Syria and fulfill my dream there, in Damascus University,” she added.

Source:

http://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-mideast-crisis-lebanon-education/new-school-offers-education-salvation-for-syrian-girls-in-lebanon-idUKKBN1CS2C8

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México: Urgen a incorporar a indígenas en sistema educativo del estado

México/23 octubre 2017/Fuente: El Financiero

Especialistas en el tema indígena recomendaron a los gobiernos estatales tomar en cuenta en sus planes educativos a la población indígena y con ello erradicar el racismo para valorar diversidad cultural.

En el marco del foro sobre educación indígena, organizado por el Instituto de Investigación, Innovación y Estudios de Posgrado del estado de Nuevo León (IIIEPE) y el Consejo Nuevo León, señalaron que en el caso de Nuevo León que tiene una población indígena creciente producto de la migración desde estados originarios, se debe de asegurar su plena inclusión escolar.

Sylvia Schmelkes del Valle, consejera del INEE, señaló que la educación intercultural para todos es la manera de transitar hacia un país en el que nos relacionamos con base en el respeto y desde planos de igualdad y en el que el acercamiento a los otros resulte enriquecedor.

“La pluralidad étnica y lingüística puede ser vista como una riqueza pedagógica, para lo cual debe erradicarse el racismo, que ha sido interiorizado por los propios indígenas”, manifestó en su conferencia Diversidad e interculturalidad en el ámbito educativo.

Informó que el INEE emitió las directrices para mejorar la atención educativa de niñas, niños y adolescentes indígenas, cuyo objetivo es que el servicio educativo se adapte a las necesidades de esta población, independientemente del tipo de escuela a la que asistan.

Durante su participación, la coordinadora del departamento de Educación Indígena de Nuevo León, María Irene Cárdenas Castro, destacó que hay 352 mil 222 personas que se reconocen como población indígena en el estado, de los cuales tres mil 609 están actualmente inscritos escolarmente.

Indicó que en México 7.9 millones de habitantes mayores de tres años hablan una lengua indígena, lo que representa el 6.6 por ciento de la población nacional. Además, dijo que nuestro país es el más diverso de América con 68 grupos etnolingüísticos y con 364 variantes de esas 68 lenguas.

Schmelkes del Valle señaló que en México nos reconocemos como país pluricultural desde 1992, lo cual es motivo de nuestro orgullo y en ello estriba nuestra riqueza, porque cada grupo tiene una visión distinta del mundo y formas diversas de solucionar problemas comunes.

La también socióloga y consultora de organismos internacionales afirmó que la educación puede contribuir a crear una sociedad intercultural.

Fuente: http://www.elfinanciero.com.mx/monterrey/urgen-a-incorporar-a-indigenas-en-sistema-educativo-del-estado.html

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Venezuela: Niños se adentran en el mundo de la astronomía

Venezuela/23 octubre 2017/Fuente: Mppeuct

La idea de esta actividad es fortalecer la cultura espacial en el pueblo venezolano

Con la emoción característica de los niños ante nuevas aventuras y experiencias, la Agencia Bolivariana para Actividades Espaciales (Abae) realiza este viernes, en el marco de la Semana Mundial del Espacio, una jornada de creación y lanzamiento de cohetes espaciales, creado con materiales reciclables, en la Escuela Básica Nacional “Generalísimo Francisco de Miranda”, ubicada en el Complejo Tecnológico “Simón Rodríguez”, en La Carlota.

Tulio Salazar, jefe de la Unidad de Educación Espacial de la Abae, señala que la idea de esta actividad es difundir el conocimiento espacial lo mejor posible. “Este año la temática es ‘Descubriendo Nuevos Mundos en el Espacio’, con la que hemos desarrollado actividades para masificar el conocimiento espacial en el país. La Abae tiene un programa de formación dirigido a todos los niveles de la educación, con la finalidad de que el conocimiento espacial se vuelva cultura en Venezuela y llegue a todas y todos sus habitantes. Este es el tercer año que trabajamos la Semana Mundial del Espacio”.

En medio de la fiesta y el mundo mágico que significa construir un cohete que será lanzado al espacio, Federson Terán, estudiante de cuarto grado, expresa su alegría por participar en esta actividad y poder construir un artefacto ecológico y aprender sobre el tema de la astronomía y el espacio. “Nos estamos divirtiendo mucho con esta construcción del cohete, se siente una emoción muy grande aprender sobre el espacio y las estrellas”.

Fuente: https://www.mppeuct.gob.ve/actualidad/noticias/ninos-se-adentran-en-el-mundo-de-la-astronomia

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