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México: Con el apoyo del IEEPO inauguran producción radiofónica en la Secundaria Técnica 108

México/Mayo de 2017/Fuente: ADN Sureste

Con el apoyo del Instituto Estatal de Educación Pública de Oaxaca (IEEPO), la Escuela Secundaria Técnica 108, ubicada en la colonia del Maestro del municipio de Oaxaca de Juárez, inauguró la producción “Radio Joven 108, la voz de hoy y de mañana” que realizan escolares de esta institución.

La transmisión radiofónica se realizó en el marco de la celebración de los 35 años de este plantel, esto, con el fin de brindar herramientas didácticas a los alumnos para promover temas escolares a través de este medio de comunicación. Esta producción forma parte del proyecto de “Radios Escolares” que realiza la Dirección de Desarrollo Educativo del IEEPO para que los jóvenes estudiantes tengan un espacio de expresión sobre diversos temas de interés escolar.

Al inaugurar la cabina de radio que se instaló en este plantel educativo, el Supervisor de la Zona 02 de Secundarias Técnica, José Bravo García reconoció el interés y trabajo de los alumnos en este proyecto, y dijo, que así podrán ejercer el derecho que tienen a todos los adolescentes a la libre expresión. El director del plantel, Bernardo Osorio Marín, indicó que estas actividades se suman a las realizadas con motivo de los 35 años de esta institución, la cual ha formado de centenas de generaciones. Durante su primera transmisión, los estudiantes que participaron dieron muestra de las destrezas que desarrollan para comunicar diversos temas de interés, entre los que destacan; cuidado de la salud, medio ambiente, aprendizaje, cultura y recreación. La coordinadora del proyecto de “Radios Escolares” del IEEPO, Verónica Arlette Victoria Velasco, explicó que previamente fueron capacitados las y los alumnos interesados en participar en este proyecto con el fin de que conocieran y desarrollaran habilidades para el uso efectivo de este medio de comunicación. Explicó que la radio es una herramienta idónea para reforzar los conocimientos aprendidos en el aula y compartirlos con el resto de la población escolar. Además argumentó que después de un año de capacitación comolocutores, programadores y guionistas, los alumnos consolidaron este proyecto, sumando esfuerzo con directivos, maestros y padres de familia.

Fuente: http://adnsureste.info/con-el-apoyo-del-ieepo-inauguran-produccion-radiofonica-en-la-secundaria-tecnica-108-1600-h/
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China compiles its own ‘Wikipedia,’ but public can’t edit it

China/Mayo de 2017/Fuente: Hindustan Times

Resumen: Será gratis. Será únicamente chino. Será una enciclopedia en línea para rivalizar con Wikipedia, pero sin la participación del público. Y no espere entradas en «Tiananmen Square 1989» o «Falun Gong grupo espiritual» para subir en sus búsquedas, tampoco. Estudiosos y expertos elegidos por Pekín para trabajar en el proyecto dicen que sólo podrán hacer entradas – el último ejemplo de los esfuerzos del gobierno chino para controlar la información disponible en Internet. Los eruditos dicen que la verdad es su luz de guía, y su proceso de edición y revisión es riguroso. Si hay una diferencia de opinión, un comité debe entenderlo, dijo Zhang Baichun, editor jefe de la historia de la ciencia y la sección de tecnología. «Por supuesto, la ciencia no proviene de los votos democráticos, para convencer a otros que usted tendrá que presentar la prueba más convincente», dijo a The Associated Press.

It’ll be free. It’ll be uniquely Chinese. It’ll be an online encyclopedia to rival Wikipedia — but without the participation of the public. And don’t expect entries on “Tiananmen Square 1989” or “Falun Gong spiritual group” to come up in your searches, either.

Scholars and experts hand-picked by Beijing to work on the project say only they will be able to make entries — the latest example of the Chinese government’s efforts to control information available on the internet.

The scholars say truth is their guiding light, and their editing and review process is a rigorous one. If there is a difference of opinion, a committee should figure it out, said Zhang Baichun, chief editor of the history of science and technology section.

“Of course, science does not come from democratic votes, to convince others you will have to present the most convincing proof,” he told The Associated Press.

The effort to compile 300,000 entries that span science, literature, politics and history is being led by the ruling Communist Party’s central propaganda department, which guides public opinion through instructions to China’s media, internet companies and publishing industry as well as overseeing the education sector. They have instructed the Encyclopedia of China Publishing House, known for its offline Chinese Encyclopedia, to produce it.

The ruling party has struggled to manage public opinion in the internet age, when citizens can comment on news and topics of outrage and post photos of protests on social media — at least until such messages are scrubbed away or rendered unsearchable by censors. China also regularly blocks overseas sites including Facebook and Twitter, and has periodically blocked Wikipedia’s English and Chinese versions. Currently, the Chinese Wikipedia is inaccessible in the mainland.

Jiang Lijun, senior editor at the Encyclopedia of China Publishing House, said Thursday that they plan to have entries on political leaders, the history of the Communist Party, and subjects including virtual reality, artificial intelligence and the European Union.

The online Chinese Encyclopedia will focus primarily on entries that are less likely to change as opposed to recent events, and with academic value, “while also trying to strike a balance between that, being timely and what people are searching for,” she said. She declined to comment on how events that are politically sensitive in China, like the Cultural Revolution and the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown, would be treated.

Qiao Mu, an independent media analyst in Beijing, said the Chinese Encyclopedia would be “quite different” from Wikipedia because of the need to toe the line on political taboos.

“If it’s not blocked in China, the publisher must accept censorship, either self-censorship or censored by authorities,” he said.

He said the encyclopedia would likely present a single, official version of sensitive historical events, and exclude items like the Tiananmen crackdown and the outlawed Falun Gong spiritual group, which “never exist on the internet.”

The publishing house behind the Chinese Encyclopedia is paying 20,000 scholars and experts from universities and research institutes to write entries and it is slated to go online next year. Jiang said initially the encyclopedia will just be in Chinese, but they are also doing research to see how viable an English version would be.

Jiang said they met with a team from San Francisco-based Wikipedia to learn from their experience.

Wikipedia is edited and maintained by hundreds of thousands of volunteers around the world, and has more than 40 million articles encompassing nearly 300 languages. More than 900,000 entries are in Chinese, compared with more than 5 million in English.

“There is Chinese content on Wikipedia too, but sometimes it is not as accurate as it could be,” said Jiang.

Jiang said that as Wikipedia’s content is generated by users, they can create more entries faster. “But we try to eliminate self-promotion and inaccuracy as much as possible.”

Zhang, the professor of history of science and technology, said the online version will make it easier to reach more people, particularly young readers.

To create the history of science and technology entries, Zhang said professors from the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Natural Sciences first hold meetings with veterans and young experts in their fields to form a committee. The committee will then find the most authoritative person on the topic to write the draft, including sometimes foreign experts, said Zhang, who is director of the institute.

The draft is reviewed by a section chief editor and then the committee.

“If there is a difference of opinion, all deputy and chief editors should participate in the discussion and figure it out together,” Zhang said. “We will reason things out with the author until we reach an agreement, or change the author.”

Fuente: http://www.hindustantimes.com/world-news/china-compiles-its-own-wikipedia-but-public-can-t-edit-it/story-oyJYv2NOI7ontPlgHLwrKO.html

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España: La UPCT y la UCAM desarrollarán proyectos de robótica para niños hospitalizados

España/Mayo de 2017/Fuente: La Verdad

El Consejo de Gobierno aprobó este martes, a propuesta de la Consejería de Educación y Universidades, dos convenios con la Universidad Politécnica de Cartagena (UPCT) y la Universidad Católica San Antonio de Murcia (UCAM) para elaborar y desarrollar los proyectos ‘UPCT Ingeniosanos’ y ‘Emotion Bot: modelo didáctico-mecánico para guiar la gestión emocional’ en las aulas hospitalarias de la Región.

Las actuaciones a realizar con estas dos universidades impulsan la introducción de la tecnología en general y, en concreto, la robótica educativa en el aula hospitalaria, donde puede convertirse en un elemento importante de motivación para el aprendizaje del alumnado.

Los acuerdos establecen las condiciones de colaboración entre ambas partes para el diseño y desarrollo de actividades, cuyo objetivo es contribuir a la superación del trauma hospitalario, despertar la curiosidad y el interés por la tecnología, a través de talleres específicos, al alumnado en situación de enfermedad atendido en las aulas hospitalarias.

Las actividades a realizar por alumnos y profesores de la UPCT y la UCAM en el desarrollo del programa se harán bajo la supervisión del personal del Equipo de Atención Educativa Hospitalaria y Domiciliaria de la Consejería de Educación y Universidades y con la autorización de la gerencia del hospital donde se realicen.

Las aulas hospitalarias plantean unos objetivos de marcado carácter educativo-formativo, entendiendo por esto la puesta en marcha de actuaciones dirigidas a que el alumnado no sólo alcance los objetivos propiamente pedagógicos, determinados por su centro de referencia, sino las actuaciones destinadas a superar, de la forma más satisfactoria y menos traumática posible, su periodo de hospitalización.

Fuente: http://www.laverdad.es/murcia/201705/02/upct-ucam-desarrollaran-proyectos-20170502141752.html

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¿Mochilas transparentes?: La última medida de México para atajar la violencia escolar

México/Mayo de 2017/Fuente: RT

La Unión Neolonesa de Padres de Familia y la Secretaría de Educación de Nuevo León (México) han repartido 892 mochilas transparentes en la escuela secundaria técnica Emilio Guzmán Lozano de Monterrey para inhibir a los estudiantes que pretendan llevar armas o materiales prohibidos al centro educativo.

Luz María Ortiz, integrante de esa asociación, asegura que los progenitores «somos conscientes» de que estrategia para combatir la violencia y mejorar la seguridad en los planteles escolares «no es una solución», pero valora que se trata de «una señal de cambio» porque, «como padres de familia, debemos estar vigilando la salud de nuestros hijos».

Por su parte, el secretario de educación de Nuevo León, Arturo Estrada, habría destacado que se trata de una buena medida de seguridad, aunque habría subrayado que no es obligatorio utilizar esos artículos y habría recalcado que son las familias quienes deben inculcar valores desde el hogar.

Опубликовано Unpf NL 3 мая 2017 г.

En total, las autoridades entregarán 2.500 mochilas, parte de las cuales fueron donadas por Waldo Fernández, un diputado federal del Partido de la Revolución Democrática (PRD).

La tragedia

Este enero, un joven de un colegio privado disparó en pleno salón contra sus compañeros y una maestra antes de suicidarse. Esa tragedia revivió la opción de que las autoridades educativas revisen las mochilas de los estudiantes, una opción en la que se tratan de combinar los derechos de los menores y el modo en que se podría detener la violencia escolar que vive México.

Publican un video del momento en que un alumno abre fuego en un colegio de Monterrey

La discusión ya tiene una década —desde que comenzó la lucha oficial contra el narcotráfico en ese país latinoamericano— y algunas organizaciones estiman que los resultados no son medibles. Por ejemplo, en 2009 Ciudadanos en Apoyo a los Derechos Humanos valoró que la revisión de mochilas, como parte de un programa más amplio llamado Escuela Segura, no atacaba el origen del consumo de droga y la violencia: «la ruptura del tejido social», consolidada por «un quehacer gubernamental ineficiente».

Según la última evaluación de la Organización para la Cooperación y Desarrollo Económicos (OCDE) sobre acoso y violencia en los recintos educativos, México es el país con más casos de acoso infantil y juvenil de las 34 naciones que componen ese organismo, con 18 millones de menores víctimas de ‘bullying’ cada año que, en ocasiones, provocan intentos de suicidio y consumo de estupefacientes.

Fuente: https://actualidad.rt.com/actualidad/237665-regalan-mochilas-transparentes-fronterizo-mexico

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Chile será la sede del Instituto Iberoamericano de la Primera Infancia

Chile/Mayo de 2017/Fuente: El Economista

El IIPI surge como una iniciativa conjunta entre el Gobierno de Chile y la OEI, debido a la alta prioridad otorgada a la primera infancia tanto por la OEI como por los dos gobiernos de la Presidenta Michelle Bachelet.

Esta iniciativa tiene como misión contribuir, mediante la cooperación entre los países, al desarrollo de políticas públicas y prácticas sociales que garanticen el bienestar, protección y desarrollo integral de niños y niñas menores de 8 años y el pleno ejercicio de sus derechos.

El secretario general de la OEI Paulo Speller, uno de los impulsores de este instituto, comentó que «este es un compromiso que asumimos por la iniciativa de la Presidenta Michelle Bachelet, y este instituto se crea en Chile porque este país es un ejemplo para toda Iberoamérica, en el sentido que se han institucionalizado con políticas de Estado y eso es un paso importante que se ha dado y nosotros seguiremos impulsando con este Instituto para la primera infancia».

La comunidad iberoamericana está compuesta por 23 países que trabajarán en estrecha colaboración con instituciones públicas y organismos de la sociedad civil de dichas naciones, y otros organismos internacionales que intervienen en la primera infancia, con el fin de fortalecer el posicionamiento de este tema en la agenda internacional.

El Ministerio de Educación tiene una importante participación en la formación de este instituto, a través de la Subsecretaría de Educación Parvularia que suscribió un convenio con la OEI en donde se establece el compromiso de fomentar el desarrollo y mejoramiento permanente de la educación en todos los niveles y modalidades, propender a asegurar la calidad y equidad del sistema educativo.

En este sentido, la Subsecretaria Díaz señaló que «el compromiso de la Presidenta Bachelet con las políticas para la educación en la primera infancia ha sido claro, decidido e irrenunciable. Y en este camino estamos alcanzando valiosos logros. En este contexto, el Instituto Iberoamericano de Primera Infancia viene a coronar lo que se ha estado impulsando en políticas de pro-equidad para la etapa de los primeros años de formación de las personas».

«Se ha requerido mucha energía para robustecer las agendas públicas con acciones políticas que permitan alcanzar mayor equidad y calidad en la primera infancia, lo fundamental es no abandonar aquel objetivo al que se quiere llegar: que la educación asegure una mejor vida para todas y todos, en países más justos, inclusivos e integradores», agregó la autoridad Mineduc, al dar su discurso de clausura de la jornada.

Fuente: http://www.eleconomistaamerica.cl/actualidad-eAm-chile/noticias/8336674/05/17/-Chile-sera-la-sede-del-Instituto-Iberoamericano-de-la-Primera-Infancia.html

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Why Education Reform is so Important for Myanmar

Myanmar/Mayo de 2017/Autor: Brandon Aung Moe/Fuente: Irrawady

Resumen: Aunque las sanciones estadounidenses se levantaron el 7 de octubre de 2016, la economía de Myanmar todavía está luchando por despegar. Se prevé que la inversión extranjera para el año que termina el 31 de marzo de 2017 será 30 por ciento menor que la del año fiscal anterior. La inversión extranjera sigue centrándose en gran medida en las industrias extractivas como el petróleo y el gas. Un plan concreto para la diversificación no se ve en ninguna parte. La mayoría de estos problemas de infraestructura e inversión se pueden atribuir a una única raíz: la calidad de la educación. Todas las escuelas privadas, centros de idiomas y escuelas vocacionales contactadas por Consult-Myanmar para nuestra investigación sobre educación respondieron con la respuesta inequívoca de que el actual sistema educativo ya no es adecuado para apoyar el crecimiento de Myanmar en una economía industrializada y no puede ser Confiaron en reducir la dependencia de Myanmar de la exportación de recursos naturales que se están agotando cada día.

I was born in the small town of Kanyutkwin in Bago Division, Myanmar. I left the country in 2005 to further my education in Singapore. When I came back to Yangon to work as a research officer at Consult-Myanmar, a Myanmar-based research and consultancy firm, I noticed that the streets were more crowded, the traffic was worse, there were more high-rises in the downtown area and Yangon was teeming with foreigners. But I realized that some aspects of the country have never really changed. The persistence of poor quality education is one of them, leaving profound impacts on the development of Myanmar – both as a society and as an economy.

Although US sanctions were lifted on Oct. 7, 2016, Myanmar’s economy is still struggling to take off. Foreign investment for the year ending on March 31, 2017 is predicted to be 30 percent lower than that of the previous fiscal year. Foreign investment is still largely focused on extractive industries such as oil and gas. A concrete plan for diversification is nowhere to be seen.

After almost 50 years of economic mismanagement and under-investment, Myanmar’s infrastructure is creaking alone under the load of a growing population and increased foreign investment in factories and real estate – all of which demand even more power and a sound infrastructure.

Most of these problems in infrastructure and investment can be traced to one single root – quality of education. All of the private schools, language centers and vocational schools that were contacted by Consult-Myanmar for our research on education responded with the unequivocal answer that the current education system is no longer adequate to support the growth of Myanmar into an industrialized economy and cannot be relied upon to reduce Myanmar’s dependence on the export of natural resources which are being depleted every day.

The previous government did try to tackle the problem by embarking on education reforms such as allowing private schools to operate. But, more needs to be done and Myanmar cannot afford to drag and delay the implementation of comprehensive reforms in the education sector.

Notwithstanding some entrenched problems, Myanmar, as a latecomer, can leapfrog in education just as it did in telecommunications. The fact that mobile phone penetrationjumped from a mere 7 percent at the end of 2013 to 90 percent at the end of 2016 and that 4G is widely available in Yangon, Mandalay and Naypyidaw – in such a brief time – is nothing short of breath-taking, even if it was achieved mainly as a result of foreign investment and talent brought in by multinational telecommunications firms like Telenor and Ooredoo.

Where education is concerned, Myanmar need not look far for inspiration. Among Myanmar’s ASEAN neighbors, Singapore and Vietnam provide encouraging examples. Even though Singapore topped the PISA 2015 (Program for International Student Assessment) in all subjects, Vietnam was the surprise. As a lower-middle income country, its performance was expected to be in the same league as Indonesia, Kosovo, Moldova and Tunisia, as PISA performance is correlated to GDP per capita and how affluent the country is. However, Vietnam surprised everyone by coming ahead of advanced countries like Germany and Switzerland in science and ahead of the US in science and math.

Professor Paul Glewwe from the University of Minnesota found that the parents of the Vietnamese students taking part in the exam had a much lower educational background and less wealth than their peers in other countries. “The 10 percent of the most disadvantaged children in Vietnam – and they grow up in very poor households – those children do better than the average American child,” OECD Education Director Andreas Schleicher said, as cited by CNN. Vietnam shows that one does not need a developed economy to have a quality education, he said.

What many researchers found was that there were certain commonalities in the education systems of Singapore and Vietnam. One of them is curriculum. Their curricula are focused on both academic as well as practical skills. In other words, they are designed for students to gain deep understanding and knowledge of core theoretical concepts as well as the ability to apply them in real life situations. As a result, students love to inquire, learn and apply their knowledge.

Myanmar’s curriculum, on the other hand, is outdated and disconnected. Take high school math for example. Each chapter is treated as entirely separate from another and questions do not test students’ ability to use various concepts from different chapters to solve real-life problems.

English is the language of science and technology. It is also the language of the Internet. If you have a good command of English and a good Internet connection, you can educate yourself by using free education websites like Khan Academy, Coursera and so on. Google search and the worldwide web have allowed students to move away from mere memorization to focusing on query, learning, collaboration and application. However, the teaching of English in Myanmar schools leaves much to be desired.

To gauge the level of English literacy among Myanmar’s working youth, I surveyed job applicants at Consult-Myanmar in February. Ten out of 11 shortlisted applicants had attended at least one English course and were able to produce certificates of completion. They were also asked, before sitting for a simple English test, to rate their English language ability – only 1 chose ‘basic’; 6 ‘fair’; 3 ‘good’; and 1 ‘excellent’. The test results are not encouraging in spite of the candidates’ modest confidence. None of them was able to get a perfect score, even though the comprehension passage was fairly easy. They all stumbled over open-ended writing, being unable to write more than three to four sentences, not to mention that those sentences were full of grammatical mistakes.

I have always been skeptical of the quality of most private English courses in Myanmar that sprang up amid lack of government regulation of private schools and language centers. The test results reinforce my hypothesis that most Myanmar youths’ command of English is still basic despite what they say about how good their English is and how many external courses they take.

In addition, Vietnam and Singapore have also focused on STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering & Mathematics) in their push for industrialization and modernization and continue to do so. It is no different for Myanmar. Only STEM skills can push the country towards industrialization, modernization and improvements in the standard of living over a period of time. Qualified engineers must build all of the new towns, Special Economic Zones, power stations, bridges and roads that Myanmar desperately needs. Starved of a curriculum that can produce STEM-strong engineers, the country will not be able to build the foundation for economic growth.

Myanmar currently does not have this sort of curriculum. For example, my friend, a civil engineer graduate from a Myanmar university, was offered the position of site engineer in Singapore by a Japanese construction firm about three years ago. His joy of landing an overseas job was short-lived as he soon came to realize that the brick building techniques he learned in the Myanmar university cannot be applied to the steel structures that grace modern cities.

In my interview with Neelam Bhusal, the co-founder of Impact Skill Development Centre, which offers a variety of high quality English courses, she agreed that Myanmar needed to upgrade its provision of STEM skills. Only then will the country be able to rely upon its own skilled workforce needed in finance, construction, scientific research and many other job sectors as the economy grows, she said.

It is also to be noted that qualified and committed educators are to a good curriculum as wheels are to an engine. Well-trained teachers and a great curriculum are never mutually exclusive. In the case of Vietnam’s education reforms, the government regularly offers overseas scholarships to promising teachers who later return to assist in imparting knowledge and skills necessary to raise the standard of education in the country.

Myanmar should do likewise by asking for teaching scholarships from friendly countries supportive of reforms. The tendency of government scholars to not return home from overseas tenure can be resolved by a bond system which make the parents or guardians the guarantor. It is, after all, for the good of the country and not too stringent a term to ask. Most importantly, returning scholars must commit by going to rural areas and under-performing schools and working hard to close the gap between the ‘elite’ schools and the ‘poor’ man’s schools. That is the most towering achievement of both Singapore and Vietnam, where neighborhood or rural schools perform just as well as elite schools. One is a democratic country and the other is a socialist country. But, there is one thing that they agree upon: their education systems must serve the rich and the poor alike and provide everyone the same level of quality education, regardless of their class or religion.

Lastly, education reforms also entail educating the public – especially the poor – to change attitudes towards education. Phung Xuan Hua, Vietnam’s education minister,has said: “Vietnamese parents can sacrifice everything, sell their houses and land just to give their children an education.” I don’t doubt that many middle and lower-middle class families in Myanmar can do the same. But, the same attitude must seep in to the poor class.

But now, some poor families in Myanmar ask their children to work as indentured labor and collect in advance from business owners about six months of the child’s salary. As a result, children are seen as an economic unit that must be put to work to support families. Consequently, child labor is rampant. Scenes of kids working days and nights at the tea shops that dot the country are not uncommon. This is a practice that must be stopped and children must be enrolled in school. Otherwise, Myanmar will have a group of uneducated, unskilled workers who are not employable in the offices and factories of the future.

Even if all these suggested reforms are implemented, the country will not reap maximal benefits unless it addresses the problem of low morale and work ethics of its citizens. Thailand’s Institute for Promotion of Teaching and Science and Technology found thatthe work ethic of Vietnamese teachers is admirable. They rarely take time off. Whereas in Myanmar, citizens are still upset over the reduction of the New Year holidays from 10 to 5 days even though the total number of public holidays remains at 28 days a year, which is already one of the highest in the world.

Under the previous regime, the government provided the people with more holidays along with cheap liquor and cigarettes. Myanmar should now be more circumspect and improve morale slowly by weaning its citizens off those cheap drugs. Myanmar needs to look at how it can improve its citizens’ work ethic so that its workforce becomes more productive. It can become a mecca for manufacturers globally, only if endemic problem of low motivation to work hard is addressed.

In conclusion, Myanmar is at an inflection point after 50 years of a downward slide; it has the opportunity to turn its education and economy around with a government that is elected by the people. There will not be any shortcut or silver bullet that will make everything better overnight. However, what the educational success of Vietnam and Singapore has shown is that with a well-designed curriculum, qualified and committed teachers, self-sacrificing parents and industrious teachers and students alike, significant improvements can happen in Myanmar’s education sector, thereby paving the way for an economic miracle many Myanmar citizens are waiting for.

Fuente: https://www.irrawaddy.com/opinion/guest-column/education-reform-important-myanmar.html

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Singapur: Education system should be aligned with needs of the economy: Ong Ye Kung

Singapur/Mayo de 2017/Fuente: The Strait Times

Resumen: El sistema educativo debe estar alineado con la estructura de la economía, para que la gente continúe armada con las habilidades necesarias para encontrar trabajo en la era actual, dijo el Ministro de Educación Ong Ye Kung e Jueves (4 de mayo). En Singapur, esto significa limitar la proporción de graduados en una cohorte de alrededor del 30 al 40 por ciento, mientras que la formación del resto debe destinarse para las vocaciones en diversas industrias. Este enfoque, añadió, asegura que no haya exceso de graduados en Singapur, y ma el desempleo graduado bajo, a diferencia de  algunos países asiáticos.

The education system needs to be aligned with the structure of the economy, so that people will continue to be armed with the required skills to find jobs in the current age of disruption, Minister for Education (Higher Education and Skills) Ong Ye Kung said on Thursday (May 4).

In Singapore, this means capping the proportion of graduates in a cohort at about 30 to 40 per cent, while training the rest for vocations in various industries.

This approach, he added, has ensured there was no glut of graduates in Singapore, and kept graduate unemployment low, unlike in some Asian countries.

Mr Ong was a member of a panel discussing politics and education in the age of disruption at the 47th St. Gallen Symposium in Switzerland.

Also on the panel were Mr Johann Schneider-Ammann, a federal councillor of Switzerland, and Mr Anders Samuelsen, Denmark’s Minister for Foreign Affairs.

During the discussion moderated by Al Jazeera English presenter Mehdi Hasan, Mr Ong said Singapore had an over-emphasis on academic qualifications in education.

But to successfully deal with disruption, the education system needed to shift and adopt a «dual-education track», in which young people can become craftsmen in a wide range of fields. In this, Singapore can learn from countries such as Switzerland, Denmark and Germany, Mr Ong added.

«Today there is a strong emphasis on skills, and there is a logic to that,» he said. «Information and knowledge are all on the Internet. You can Google everything in the world, but skills you get from experience, you can’t Google for skills.»

Mr Ong cited the SkillsFuture initiative as an example of what the Government was doing to encourage people to learn new skills.

An education system focusing on skills will help people find jobs and improve their lives, Mr Ong said.

In doing so, it will help governments address one of today’s key challenges: rebuilding the social compact between political elites and the masses.

Politics is about giving people a better life, he said, adding: «And that has to do with employment and education, (helping people find) a sense of self even in a very globalised world.»

Mr Schneider-Ammann said «one of the medicines» to disruption was maintaining a first-rate education system.

Panellists were also asked about political disruptions, such as Brexit and the Trump presidency, which have led both Britain and the United States to look inwards.

Mr Samuelsen said the problem the poor face in this age of disruption is not globalisation, but not being part of it. «That is a big problem because that is what’s keeping people in poverty,» he said.

The symposium is an annual conference attended by business and government leaders, as well as students and young professionals.

Mr Ong arrived in Switzerland on Tuesday for a four-day working visit. He also met Mr Schneider-Ammann, who heads Switzerland’s Federal Department of Economic Affairs, Education and Research, and visited various institutions of higher learning and companies.

Fuente: http://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/education-system-should-be-aligned-with-needs-of-the-economy-ong-ye-kung

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