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En Argentina tensión frente al Congreso: la policía rodeó a la escuela itinerante de los docentes

Decenas de policías rodearon la escuela itinerante instalada fuera del Congreso. El operativo duró algunos minutos y las fuerzas de seguridad se retiraron sin dar ninguna explicación.

«Fue una actitud patoteril, amenazante», dijo Alejandro Demichelis, el vocero de Ctera que estaba en la escuela al momento de la llegada de los policías.

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«Venían acompañando una marcha de bancarios y por un momento se desplazaron para formar el cordón fuera de la Escuela. No hay explicaciones para esta actitud patoteril», dijo Demichelis a El Destape.

El hecho ocurrió cuando los maestros reclaman que el aula se quede hasta el 5 de mayo. Cuando quisieron instalarla por primera vez, fueron víctimas de una feroz represión porque el Gobierno porteño argumentó que no tenían permiso para estar allí.

Fuente: http://www.eldestapeweb.com/tension-frente-al-congreso-la-policia-rodeo-la-escuela-itinerante-los-docentes-n27988

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La Internacional de la Educación asegura que en Uruguay hubo un cambio discursivo a favor de la educación privada

Uruguay/Abril de 2017/Fuente: La Diaria

La Internacional de la Educación, federación que agrupa a sindicatos de la educación de todo el mundo, publicó el documento La privatización educativa en América Latina: una cartografía de políticas, tendencias, y trayectorias. En el capítulo sobre Uruguay asegura que es de los países de la región en que la educación privada tuvo un desarrollo limitado, pero en las últimas décadas se observan “síntomas de cierto impulso pro-mercado”; llaman a esa trayectoria “privatización latente”.

La Internacional destaca que el porcentaje que cubre la educación privada se mantuvo constante, entre 15% y 20%, durante todo el siglo XX. Si bien existen formas de transferencia de recursos públicos al sector privado, no hay ningún programa de subsidio en un sentido estricto. Comparado con el resto de los países de América Latina, las instituciones católicas son menos preponderantes y coexisten con otras de tipo cultural, como “la escuela alemana, italiana y judía”. Explican el escaso desarrollo del sector privado por la fuerte tradición laica del país.

El documento señala que en las últimas décadas emergieron ofertas con orientación comercial, dirigidas a un público menos vinculado con las clases dirigentes. Durante la dictadura aumentó la cantidad de alumnos de clase media en institutos privados, en especial en secundaria y, más allá de la fluctuación de la matrícula, lo que se verifica es un cambio “significativo en el orden discursivo”: se asocia a la educación privada con la eficiencia, y hay una percepción de que la educación pública está en crisis. “Si bien este cambio no se traduce inmediatamente en un crecimiento del sector privado, contribuye a crear un clima propicio a las propuestas de reforma educativa de corte privatizador”, señala el documento. Durante los últimos diez años se propusieron reformas, que no prosperaron, pero demuestran un cambio en la agenda política.

“Entre los grupos sociales y políticos que proponen el impulso de establecimientos de financiamiento público y gestión privada destacan los partidos en la oposición, como el Partido Colorado [PC], y colectivos ligados a la Iglesia Católica. Estos grupos proponen medidas de índole diversa, incluyendo un aumento de las exenciones tributarias a las empresas o instituciones privadas que contribuyan al financiamiento de establecimientos educativos, o subsidios directos mediante un mecanismo de vouchers, inspirado en el que ya se implementa en el nivel preescolar. En el año 2013, por ejemplo, el proyecto de ley impulsado por el senador Pedro Bordaberry proponía el financiamiento público de aquellas instituciones de gestión privada que ofrezcan un servicio educativo a tiempo completo acompañado de servicio de alimentación en zonas desfavorecidas y, si bien la propuesta no prosperó, se puede considerar sintomática del giro discursivo que se pone de relieve en Uruguay”.

Más allá del bloqueo de las políticas pro mercado en el ámbito educativo, otras leyes sí crean un clima propicio para la iniciativa privada en materia de provisión de servicios sociales. “La reforma tributaria de 2007 estableció una exoneración fiscal de 82,5% para donaciones empresariales a entidades educativas y sociales, e implicó en la práctica una transferencia indirecta de recursos públicos al sector privado”. Hasta ahora no se tradujo en un aumento de las iniciativas privadas, pero sí ha tenido un efecto de consolidación de las dinámicas preexistentes, “a la vez que ha alentado la creación de un reducido núcleo de nuevos establecimientos de gestión privada y de acceso gratuito. Se trata de instituciones ligadas a órdenes religiosas y/o mantenidas con donaciones privadas, dirigidas a un alumnado en situación de vulnerabilidad socioeconómica, y que se caracterizan por una amplia oferta extracurricular así como por una jornada escolar extendida”.

Fuente: https://ladiaria.com.uy/articulo/2017/4/la-internacional-de-la-educacion-asegura-que-en-uruguay-hubo-un-cambio-discursivo-a-favor-de-la-educacion-privada/

Imagen: http://archivo.e-consulta.com/blogs/educacion/?p=1217

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World Bank says world is experiencing a ‘learning crisis’ for school leavers

Africa/Abril de 2017/Fuente: Devex

Resumen: El mundo está experimentando una «crisis de aprendizaje», con muchos niños pobres y vulnerables aún siendo excluidos de la escuela, y muchos de los que asisten, emergen con bajos niveles de alfabetización y aritmética que hacen que sea difícil encontrar trabajo, de acuerdo con un informe del Banco Mundial. A los educadores globales se les dio un vistazo preliminar del próximo Informe de Desarrollo Mundial 2018 durante una sesión en el Foro de la Sociedad Civil, una serie de eventos paralelos que forman parte de las Reuniones de Primavera del Banco Mundial en Washington, DC. El informe se centrará por primera vez en la historia del estudio insignia de la institución. Los investigadores que trabajan en el informe dijeron que optaron por centrarse en la educación porque las persistentes deficiencias que identifican son en gran parte no reconocidas por los gobiernos y el sector de desarrollo. «Queremos dejar claro para la comunidad de desarrollo en su conjunto este problema de la exclusión ocultada y la educación de aquellos que necesitan el impulso de la educación», dijo Halsey Rogers, co-directora del próximo informe.

The world is experiencing a “learning crisis” with many poor and vulnerable children still being excluded from school, and many of those who do attend emerging with low literacy and numeracy levels that make it hard to find work, according to a forthcoming World Bank report.

Global educators were given a sneak preview of the upcoming 2018 World Development Report during a session at the Civil Society Forum, a series of side events part of the World Bank Spring Meetings in Washington, D.C. The report, titled “Learning to Realize Education’s Promise,” will focus on education for the first time in the history of the institution’s flagship study.

Researchers working on the report said they chose to focus on education because the persistent shortcomings they identify are largely going unacknowledged by governments and the development sector.

“We want to make it clear for the development community as a whole this problem of the hidden exclusion and education failing those who need the boost from education the most,” Halsey Rogers, co-director of the forthcoming report, said.

The WDR2018, which will be officially launched at the next set of World Bank meetings in October, will address what World Bank Senior Economist Shwetlena Sabarwal described as a “learning crisis” in low- and middle-income countries, where many students are leaving school with low literacy and numeracy levels and without the skills needed to get jobs, she said.

These deficits are likely to be felt even more keenly as markets continue to globalize and advances in technology and automation transform the workforce, making it even harder for students to catch up, Sabarwal said.

“What this means is that when students finish primary school, having spent 4 or 5 years at great personal and opportunity costs to attend school, they are leaving without literacy or numeracy skills. This is what we call the learning crisis,” she said.

For example, in Malawi and Zambia, more than 80 percent of students at the end of the second grade (aged 7) could not read a single word, while in India three-quarters of grade 3 (aged 8) students could not calculate a simple two-digit subtraction. Among older children across 10 Francophone African countries, studies reveal that nearly half of grade 6 students (aged 12) had only basic maths skills and 71 percent could only make basic inferences from reading, according to a concept note published in January.

Sabarwal also referred to “persistent gaps” between levels of achievement between rich and poor students and also between genders, so much so that in some cases “schooling exacerbates social inequity,” she said.

Middle-income countries are also experiencing the learning crisis, Sabarwal said, with attainment levels failing to keep pace with more developed countries. In some instances the highest performing students in middle-income countries perform worse than the lowest performing students in high-income countries, she said. For example, this occurs in Algeria, the Dominican Republic, Republic of Kosovo, and Tunisia, according to the concept note.

Talking about some of the causes of this learning crisis, Sabarwal referred to insufficiently prepared teachers and high absenteeism rates; education and training systems that are out of date and not linked to the needs of the economy; and funding that never reaches the classroom.

The forthcoming report will argue for an increased emphasis on measuring learning and data, drawing on lessons from within and outside the school system to improve education outcomes, such as looking at health and nutrition of the child and addressing technical and political barriers.

The report’s recommendations draw on new thinking, such as advances in cognitive neuroscience, which better our understanding about how children learn; innovative approaches to teacher management; and recent evaluations about education interventions, Rogers said.

The WDR2018 will emphasize the need for better information and metrics about education levels, saying that the learning crisis is currently not being acknowledged by many governments because of a lack of data — “very few countries have systematically measured learning before it’s too late,” Sabarwei said.

“Counties need to start acting as if learning really matters to them — systematically measuring learning and skills, which will allow them to track progress and find gaps,” she added.

However, focusing on measurement and metrics can actually work against school children as standardized testing and a push for results leads to scripted approaches to teaching and an excessive emphasis on examinations, according to Linda Odour-Noah, research consultant at the East African Centre for Human Rights Education.

Odour-Noah said she “did not see daylight” during her final years at school in Kenya due to the obsession with grades and performance.

“Too much of an emphasis on results can lead to schools engaging in teacher-centric approaches and scripted approaches, which don’t elevate needs for children,” she said.

She also criticized the WRD2018 outline for not focusing enough on financing for education, pointing to a “worrying trend of decreasing education budgets” in Kenya, which dropped from 22 percent to 16 percent over the past few years. “There is no chance we can assure accessible, quality education if we are not financing it sufficiently,” she warned.

Katie Malouf, policy advisor at Oxfam International, agreed that the report needs to focus more on financing. “There is a loud silence on the importance of financing for education and the relationship between financing and learning,” she said, pointing to recent research from the OECD’s Programme for International Student Assessment showing a “clear correlation between expenditure on education and learning outcomes increasing.”

Fuente: https://www.devex.com/news/world-bank-says-world-is-experiencing-a-learning-crisis-for-school-leavers-90093

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Political Indoctrination in Chinese Colleges

China/Abril de 2017/Fuente: The Jamestown

Resumen: En un sistema en el que los ministros están incentivados a informar sólo una buena noticia, el ministro de Educación de China censura pública de los fracasos en la educación ideológica y política (思想 政治 教育, IPE) en las universidades chinas fue una sorpresa (FRI, 12 de marzo). Se está llevando a cabo una campaña para intensificar el IPE desde la conferencia de diciembre de 2016 sobre el trabajo ideológico y político en las universidades y colegios de China. En la conferencia, el presidente chino Xi Jinping reafirmó enérgicamente la supremacía del marxismo y el socialismo en las instituciones chinas de enseñanza superior, y presionó para fortalecer el trabajo ideológico y político para adoctrinar a los 37 millones de estudiantes universitarios del país (Xinhua, 9 de diciembre de 2016).

In a system where ministers are incentivized to report only good news, China’s Minister of Education public censure of failures in ideological and political education (思想政治教育; IPE) at Chinese universities came as a surprise (FRI, March 12). A campaign has been underway to intensify IPE since a December 2016 conference on ideological and political work in China’s universities and colleges. At the conference, Chinese President Xi Jinping strongly reaffirmed the supremacy of Marxism and socialism in Chinese institutions of higher learning, and pressed for strengthening of ideological and political work to indoctrinate the country’s 37 million college students (Xinhua, December 9, 2016). Yet the Minister of Education’s criticisms indicate that IPE is not proving successful.

The Status Quo of IPE

Chinese colleges have a long history of radicalism that stirs fear among Party elites. Whether it was the Red Guard movement, the 1989 student demonstrations, or the recent nationalist protests, the college campus, with its proclivity for freethinking, is a place where the Party cannot afford to let go of the reins. Chinese universities are firmly controlled by the state through finances and appointment of administrative leadership. Even outwardly independent private colleges are falling under the control of newly installed Party secretaries with the clear intention of being the “backbone of ideological and political work (China Wenming Online, January 13).”

According to surveys completed by Chinese researchers, the Party enjoys majority support among college students—with one poll showing that 73.3 percent “support” or “strongly support” the Party’s leadership. [1] Although we must be aware that China’s political climate deeply influences how interviewees answer a survey, research has shown that the Party does have a healthy level of support among college students. [2] Nonetheless, student support for IPE, the Party’s signature indoctrination program, is comparatively low.

Mixing Marxism, patriotism, and some traditional Chinese values, IPE aims to rally mass support for the Party, its ideology, and its governance. Taught as a required course, one study shows that 64.4 percent of students are “unsatisfied” with IPE, with another 17.9 percent “very unsatisfied.” [3] Likewise, 50 percent of respondents in another study find IPE “almost pointless,” but forced themselves to attend due to school rules. Plagiarism and cheating are common due to students’ falling enthusiasm. [4] Despite interest in Red Culture (红色文化), a set of state sponsored cultural values based on the Chinese Communist Party’s revolutionary experience—a notable minority (28.3 percent) of students find Red Culture events (a component of IPE) boring. Over half (53.2 percent) said they were forced to attend, and 60.5 percent view these events as irrelevant to real life. [5]

Why is IPE so Unpopular?

Political indoctrination is rarely fun, especially for students living in a relatively open society. While students demand more discussions, debates and field work, IPE teachers can only continue with monotonous lectures because any exercise involving critical analysis will shatter the perfect image of Marxism. [6] Thus, while Chinese college students loathe IPE for being a “single-voice class” (一言堂) where the teacher dominates the conversation, changes are less likely to come as it could possibly destroy IPE in its entirety. [7]

IPE is fighting an uphill battle in three areas. The increasing Internet usage by Chinese college students is corroding the hold of official ideology. For example, the officially championed myth of the Chinese Communist Party as the mainstay in expelling Japanese invaders is slowly losing believers, because more and more students are learning the truth from the Internet. [8] Eighty percent of Chinese college students spend more than two hours a day surfing the Web, 92 percent say they use the Internet as a source of information, and 88.9 percent use Weibo (Chinese equivalent of Twitter) and WeChat (Chinese equivalent of WhatsApp)—two apps that allow students some modicum of privacy when discussing current affairs. [9]

The arrival of organized religion to Chinese campuses poses another threat to official ideology. Besides offering mental comfort, organized religious groups serve as a social safety net for students, in comparison to communist political organizations that are fraught with corruption and exclusivism. Recent studies show that interest in religion is gaining strength in Chinese colleges, even in the Communist Youth League. [10] Forty-nine percent of students do not know that Party members must be atheists, and a third (31.4 percent) do not mind campus proselytizing—an act forbidden by the state. [11] While the growing interest in religion has not openly challenged the Party’s dominance of campuses, one trend might spell trouble in the near future. In one survey of Xinjiang colleges, 5.8 percent of respondents believe one can force a religion on others. [12] More alarmingly, 8.6 percent agree with the extreme position that spreading one’s religion using violent means is permissible. [13]

IPE educators face additional difficulties in areas dominated by ethnic and religious minorities, in particular among Tibetans and the Turkic Muslims of Xinjiang. Few of these groups played major roles in the events of the 20th century that conditioned the contemporary Chinese psyche. Compared to Mongols and Hui Muslims that allied with Chinese communists in the fight against Japan, Tibetans and Turkic Muslims played next to no role in the in the War of Resistance Against Japan (1937–1945) which forms the core of the CCP’s national narrative. Moreover, Marxism’s anti-religion doctrine makes IPE difficult when teaching Tibetan college students who hold Lamaism in high regard. Most Tibetans live their entire life according to Buddhism precepts and hold deep reverence for their religious leaders. To teach religion as obsolescent is not only deeply offensive to Tibetans, but also counterproductive to IPE in general. [14] The same can be said for Xinjiang, where ethnic Turkic Muslims constitute more than half of the province’s population. Although students would pay lip service to the curriculum just so they can graduate, the doctrinaire system of pedagogy is not truly winning over hearts and minds.

The Role of Political Counselors

Outside of the classroom, Political Counselors (政治辅导员; PCs) take care of a student’s all-around needs while attending college, and are tasked with shaping his/her ideological and political values. As the “backbone of ideological and political education for college students,” PCs are “the organizer, implementer and mentors of college students in everyday ideological and political education and management” (Ministry of Education, July 23, 2006).

Working closely with selected student cadres, the PCs spread the Party’s message when students are outside of the classroom. Although the law stipulates that there should be one PC to every 200 students, in reality, personnel shortage makes the ratio much higher. One to 300 or 400 is not an unusual number. In extreme cases, it has been reported that a PC have to take care of 1,000 students, making the job impossible. [15]

Besides being over-encumbered, 56 percent of PCs are unsatisfied with their salary and benefits. To add to the already tense environment, PCs are governed by a dual command regime, where school and department leadership can sometime issue conflicting orders. [16]

Under these circumstances, it is not a surprise to find that some PCs do not even agree with the Party line themselves. One poll shows that 31.92 percent of PCs do not believe in the Marxist dogma that a communist society is inevitable. Straying from the government narrative, close to half (47.1 percent) of PCs do not believe that the income gap will close in ten years. [17]

The Role of Protection Divisions

If IPE teachers and PCs are the softer side of political indoctrination, then Protection Divisions (保卫处) are the “stick” that police political behavior. Present in every university bureaucracy, the Protection Division have several functions—public safety, fire prevention, registering visitors and temporary workers—and most importantly, political policing. Underneath each Protection Division there is a Political Protection Section (政保科; PPS). While taking on different names at different colleges, the mission of the PPS remain more or less the same—propagate official ideology and counter any attempts by “hostile forces” in influencing students. Although the PPS do not have law enforcement power, a power reserved for the public security police, it does have the power to investigate. [18] Political Protection Informants (政保信息员), selected from the student body, serve as the PPS’s “eyes and ears (耳目)” (Xi’an Shiyou University, June 6, 2014).

Given the secrecy surrounding its work, most PPSs do not publicize their duties, but the PPS of the Harbin Institute of Technology, self-referred to as the Political Protection and State Security Office (政保国安办), openly declares its responsibilities as the following:

  1. Responsible for propaganda and education of the national security concept, enemy awareness, and political stability.
  2. Responsible for understanding, controlling, tracking, and ideological education of key people that can influence political stability.
  3. Responsible for carrying out research and information gathering; grasp the ideological trends among faculty and students in a timely and accurate manner to provide the basis for higher-level leadership decision-making.
  4. Cooperate with public security and state security police in detecting and investigating cases endangering state security.
  5. Responsible for security of important leaders and foreign dignitaries. Assist relevant agencies in implementing security measures for foreign experts, teachers, exchange students, compatriots from Hong Kong, Macau, Taiwan, and visiting foreign staff.
  6. Assist relevant agencies to prevent and punish infiltration, incitement, and sabotage of schools by domestic and foreign hostile forces, illegal religious forces, and ethnic separatist forces.
  7. Assist relevant agencies in secure management of the campus’s computer network system and identification of sources of harmful information.
  8. Assist relevant agencies in confidential work.
  9. Conduct political review of school staff in accordance with the requirements of relevant agencies.
  10. Assist relevant agencies in managing student associations.
  11. Conduct basic business work. Establish and improve the management of various data files.
  12. Assist other sections and offices in completing tasks. Complete any other mission assigned by the division director (Harbin Institute of Technology).

In essence, PPS is the monitor of campus security and ideological uniformity, in addition to serving as the workhorse of counterintelligence. While IPE staff focus on pedagogy, it is the PPS’s mission to keep out unofficial people and ideas. This repressive regime is likely to receive greater state investment due to the risks associated with liberalizing IPE.

Conclusion

Among Chinese college students, support for the Party and government remain strong—at least on paper. However, most students have shown their dissatisfaction with IPE and their inability to intake additional political coursework void of liberal teaching methods. In the future, the state will likely strengthen IPE in the following ways. Firstly, the state will try to assert greater control of the cyber sphere by clamping down on alternative sources of information popular among students—also by intensifying propaganda and counterpropaganda on Weibo and WeChat. Secondly, more PCs will be trained to alleviate the current personnel shortage. Thirdly, greater attention will be diverted to indoctrination in ethnic areas, especially to the Tibetan and Turkic Muslims most susceptible to what the state calls the “three evils” of terrorism, separatism and religious extremism. Finally, there will be a renewed pushback against the spread of religion in colleges, a trend, if unchecked, will present significant challenges in winning over China’s brightest young minds.

Fuente: https://jamestown.org/program/political-indoctrination-chinese-colleges/

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Argentina: Mantendrán el reclamo para que no descuenten los días de paro

Argentina/Abril de 2017/Fuente: Río Negro

La titular de la Unter, Patricia Cetera, aseguró que la demanda por el no descuento de los días de paro seguirá en pie, debido a que las medidas “no fueron declaradas ilegales ni a nivel nacional ni en Río Negro”. Consideró que “no hay motivos para que nos descuenten” y agregó que hasta ahora “la ministra [de Educación, Mónica Silva] tuvo bastante apertura al respecto”.

“Los paros fueron determinados por la Confederación de Trabajadores de la Educación de la República Argentina (Ctera), y nosotros como entidad de base los llevamos adelante”, recordó Cetera. Reiteró que “no fueron declarados ilegales en el Ministerio de Trabajo de la Nación, ni rechazados por la Secretaría de Trabajo de la Provincia. Es decir que hay un respeto por cómo se llevaron adelante”.

Fuente: http://www.rionegro.com.ar/region/mantendran-el-reclamo-para-que-no-descuenten-los-dias-de-paro-DC2631959

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Colombia necesita nuevas universidades públicas de calidad

Colombia/Abril de 2017/Fuente: El Espectador

El programa ser pilo paga surgió en 2014 con el fin de beneficiar a los jóvenes de estratos 1 y 2 del Sisben. Anualmente han sido favorecidos alrededor de 40.0000 estudiantes que han ingresado universidades públicas y privadas con la garantía de que el gobierno cubrirá la totalidad de la matrícula. Desde el primer año de la implementación del programa Ser Pilo Paga, varias han sido las críticas que estudiantes y expertos han hecho a la iniciativa.

Por cada estudiante que entra al programa, el gobierno colombiano realiza una inversión anual de $ 3 billones de pesos (Lea: ¿Vale la pena el esfuerzo del Estado para financiar Ser Pilo Paga?). Es por este motivo que varios críticos han expresado que el programa Ser Pilo Paga no garantiza el derecho a la educación superior ya que no todos los jóvenes logran ingresar a la universidad. Lo anterior debido a que el 98% del dinero destinado al programa ser pilo paga está destinado a universidades privadas.

El presidente Juan Manuel Santos presentó un proyecto de ley para que el programa ser pilo paga se convierta en una política de estado. Carlos Caicedo, magister en Dirección Universitaria de la Universidad de los Andes expresó que “Ese modelo de financiación profundiza la desigualdad en el país, pues con los mismos recursos que se paga el estudio a 40.000 beneficiarios de Ser Pilo Paga se hubiera podido pagar la educación de 200.000 estudiantes en universidades públicas de calidad”.

Varios expertos han sugerido que, para aumentar la cobertura en el sistema educativo, se debe fortalecer la educación pública en el país. Precisamente, Caicedo expresó que “Ser Pilo paga es un lucrativo negocio que legitima la exclusión universitaria de los más pobres del país. Si las universidades privadas tienen algún sentido de responsabilidad social deben ser ellas las que financien el programa Ser Pilo Paga y dejar quitarles ese dinero a las universidades públicas”.

De acuerdo con el Ministerio de educación, Ser pilo paga ha beneficiado a 30.500 jóvenes de escasos recursos que provienen de 984 municipios. El 82% de los pilos están estudiando en universidades privadas y el 18% restante en públicas.

Fuente: http://www.elespectador.com/noticias/nacional/colombia-necesita-nuevas-universidades-publicas-de-calidad-carlos-caicedo-articulo-689915

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Estados Unidos: Protesters would like to keep education funds local

Estados Unidos/Abril de 2017/Fuente: Times Bulletin

Resumen: Más de una docena de manifestantes pacíficos del noroeste de Ohio se reunieron en el estacionamiento de la Escuela Intermedia Van Wert antes de la llegada de la secretaria de Educación de Estados Unidos Betsy DeVos el jueves por la mañana. El grupo incluía miembros del Partido Demócrata del Condado de Van Wert y del Distrito 5 Indivisible de Ohio y otras entidades de base anti-Trump. Sus signos apoyaron la educación pública y denunciaron los recientes recortes de financiamiento al sector público y los aumentos a la elección de escuelas o escuelas privadas.
«Casi todos los estudiantes en el condado Van Wert asisten a la escuela pública», dijo el manifestante Gay Garman. «Cuando se quitan los fondos de las escuelas públicas y se dan a las escuelas privadas, los ricos se hacen más ricos y los pobres se hacen más pobres. Una vez más, las personas pequeñas están recibiendo el eje y el 1 por ciento se están beneficiando «. El nuevo presupuesto de la administración Trump lanzado a mediados de marzo reduce drásticamente el financiamiento para el Departamento de Educación en un 13.5 por ciento, o $ 9.2 mil millones. Bajo el nuevo presupuesto, la administración Trump quiere gastar 1.400 millones de dólares para expandir vales en escuelas públicas y privadas, lo que conduce a un financiamiento de 20.000 millones de dólares al año. Alrededor de $ 250 millones de estos fondos se destinarán a un programa de elección de escuelas privadas, mientras que $ 168 millones serán reservados para escuelas charter. Un adicional de mil millones de dólares se destinaría al título I, un programa para estudiantes desfavorecidos, cuya estructura actual se opone a muchos legisladores.

More than a dozen peaceful protesters from northwest Ohio gathered in the parking lot at Van Wert Middle School prior to United States Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos’s arrival Thursday morning. The group included members of the Van Wert County Democratic Party and Ohio Indivisible District 5 and other grassroots anti-Trump entitities.

Their signs supported public education and denounced recent funding cuts to the public sector and increases to school choice or private schools.

“Nearly all students in Van Wert County attend public school,” protester Gay Garman said. “When they take away funding from public schools and give it to the private schools, the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. Again, the small people are getting the shaft and the 1 percent are benefiting.”

The Trump administration’s new budget released in mid-March slashes funding for the Education Department by 13.5 percent, or $9.2 billion. Under the new budget, the Trump administration wants to spend $1.4 billion to expand vouchers in public and private schools, leading up to an eventual $20 billion a year in funding. About $250 million of these funds will go toward a private school-choice program, while $168 million will be set aside for charter schools. An additional $1 billion would go toward Title I, a program for disadvantaged students whose current structure is opposed by many lawmakers.

Trump’s budget plan would remove $2.4 billion in grants for teacher training and $1.2 billion in funding for summer- and after-school programs.

The protesters came from Van Wert, Wood, Mercer and Hancock counties with representation from bigger and smaller municipalities.

Van Wert resident Dan Miller would have liked to share his views with DeVos.

“I would tell Betsy that Ohio has been a petri dish for school choice policy and it hasn’t gone nearly as well as planned or they would have you believe it is going. She just needs to look at the facts,” Miller said. “There aren’t even any private schools in Van Wert County so our money that is diverted to school choice is going out of the county and even the state. We need our money to go to our schools for our students.”

Public schools are held to rigorous state standards and testing. The group cited accountability and oversight as problems with School Choice.

“Private schools schools are not assessed or held accountable like the public schools are,” Miller added. “Her solution to the education issue is more for urban areas, not rural Ohio. Our public schools are the heart or our communities. They bring everyone together for events and activities.”

The protest also became a teaching moment for students in Jeff Kallas’s government/current events class. Student Nathan Murphy agreed with some of what DeVos has been saying about public education.

“If a public school is failing, a student should have the right to go to a better school,” Murphy said. “However, if a school is doing well and is successful and shows it is providing a good education, the money shouldn’t be taken away.”

Murphy was glad DeVos was visiting his school and seeing public education firsthand.

“I think DeVos needs to educate herself on what public schools do and provide for their students and community and she seems to lack knowledge on a lot of the laws governing public education,” Murphy said. “Hopefully she’ll learn something here today, too.”

Fuente: http://www.timesbulletin.com/Content/News/News/Article/Protesters-would-like-to-keep-education-funds-local/2/4/209363

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