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España: Se busca al profe más innovador

Europa/España/26 Junio 2016/Fuente: El Pais/Autora:María Robert

Sociedad industrial versus sociedad del conocimiento. Coinciden los expertos en que es un momento de transición. El debate lleva años servido, más en un ámbito tan controvertido como la educación. Pronto la cuestión dará que hablar también en televisión camuflada bajo el formato del entretenimiento. El programa lleva el nombre de Poder Canijo, y pretende, señala la pública, resaltar la labor de los docentes que apuestan por la innovación educativa. Aún habrá que esperar hasta después del verano para verlo en pantalla, puesto que acaba de cerrar la fase de casting. EL PAÍS ha asistido al proceso de selección de Madrid, al que se han presentado más de 300 personas.

«Existen un montón de profesores que van por el buen camino, al mismo nivel o más que lo pueden estar haciendo en países de referencia. Por eso queremos poner en valor a esos docentes que enseñan siguiendo los nuevos tiempos», opina Alejandro Díaz-Garreta, director del área de Educación de la Fundación Telefónica, productora e impulsora también del proyecto. Esa es, subraya Díaz-Garreta, la principal razón de ser de Poder Canijo, que los cambios que están aconteciendo en la manera de enseñar en España calen en el gran público.

Desde el punto de vista del directivo, la transformación va apegada inevitablemente a la modernización tecnológica. «La irrupción de la tecnología provoca una renovación que afecta también a la enseñanza. Y por tanto, la manera de que el proceso de aprendizaje se lleve a cabo tiene que cambiar radicalmente», subraya Díaz-Garreta. En contrapunto, el programa no busca métodos educativos punteros ni sofisticados.  «Poder Canijo tendrá tanta tecnología como existe hoy en los centros escolares, que es mucha, pero no como fin, sino como herramienta sin la cual otra manera de enseñar no es posible».

La idea de innovación de los impulsores del programa va por otros derroteros. Buscan profesionales que hayan implantado en sus aulas métodos pedagógicos sencillos, ideas originales, diseños propios o adaptados de otras fórmulas. Que hayan probado empíricamente su proyecto en las aulas, demostrando su efectividad, es una condición primordial para superar el proceso de selección, al que se han presentado más de 1.000 docentes de toda España. Perfiles como el de Ana Mínguez, una profesora del colegio Divino Corazón de Madrid, que imparte clases a chavales de 1º a 3º de la ESO. Mínguez presenta al casting su método de enseñanza basado en el aprendizaje cooperativo. «Los chavales trabajan en grupo, y se dan clase a sí mismos. Yo estoy como mera guía, solo los voy orientando». Cuenta que, según su experiencia, los métodos funcionan. «Son muy efectivos, el nivel de aprobados sube muchísimo».

Cuarenta docentes en activo, de primaria o secundaria, serán los elegidos y tendrán que convencer a un jurado, compuesto por niños, de que su método de enseñanza es el más atractivo a la par que efectivo. Los afortunados explicarán cómo abordan, en su día a día, las maneras de despertar la inquietud de sus alumnos en las diferentes materias, desde matemáticas a inglés, pasando por los conocimientos de música. «Ni estarán todas las asignaturas que se imparten en los centros educativos, ni los elegidos serán los mejores profesores. Pero sí una buena muestra del esfuerzo de muchos docentes por reinventarse, con mucho sacrificio, por sus alumnos», apunta Díaz-Garreta.

No obstante, el director del área de educación de la Fundación Telefónica rehúsa utilizar el término concurso. No habrá ganadores, solo la posibilidad de dar visibilidad a los proyectos para que algún centro decida tomarlos de ejemplo. Por tanto, no hay jurado ni puntuaciones. «Simplemente habrá un grupo de niños que dirán que les parece esas maneras de enseñar, pero sin decir que uno es mejor que otro. No vamos a elegir al mejor profesor de todos, porque todos son buenos».

Fuente de la noticia: http://cultura.elpais.com/cultura/2016/06/01/television/1464792524_367368.html

Fuente de la imagen: http://ep01.epimg.net/cultura/imagenes/2016/06/01/television/1464792524_367368_1464795272_noticia_normal_recorte1.jpg

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Tanzania: Free education plan costs 18.8 billion each month

África/Tanzania/26 Junio 2016/Fuente: Dailynews /Autor:Daily News Reporters

Resumen:  A medida que continúa la ejecución del programa de educación gratuita en las escuelas públicas a nivel de primaria y secundaria, el gobierno ha realizado el desembolso de  18.8bn por mes para financiar el plan. El Viceministro de la Oficina del Presidente Regional (Administración y gobiernos locales), Suleiman Jaffo, realizo una  explicación al responder a una pregunta básica por asientos especiales MP, Tunza Issa Malapo (Chadema).

Dodoma — As it continues implementing the free education programme in public primary and secondary schools, the government disburses 18.8bn/- each month to fund the plan, the National Assembly heard yesterday.

Deputy Minister in the President’s Office Regional (Administration and Local Governments), Suleiman Jaffo, made the explanation when answering a basic question by Special Seats MP, Tunza Issa Malapo (Chadema).

In her question, Malapo had wanted to know how the government was implementing the free-education by footing costs at the schools such as electricity and water bills, meals for students in boarding schools as well as other teaching materials.

The MP had expressed worries that implementation of the plan could spark disputes between heads of schools, teachers, parents and students as far as footing the costs is concerned.

In his response, Jaffo said the plan had started smoothly in many parts of the country and that guidelines were issued to regional authorities on implementation of the programme.

«The government is well prepared to ensure that there are no disputes between respective players in execution of the plan,» Jaffo explained, noting, however, that implementation of the plan has faced a number of challenges.

The Deputy Minister explained as well that the free-education programme does not prohibit parents and other stakeholders to contribute to improve the education sector, provided the contributions are made at will.

In another development, the government has pledged to improve facilities at teachers’ resource centres across the country in a bid to improve efficiency in the education sector.

Fuente de la noticia: http://dailynews.co.tz/index.php/home-news/50431-free-education-plan-costs-18-8bn-each-month-minister

Fuente de la imagen: http://dailynews.co.tz/images/jafonzuri.JPG

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EEUU: 12,000 Inmates to Receive Pell Grants to Take College Classes

América del Norte/EEUU/Junio 2016/Autor: Danielle Douglas-Gabriel,/ Fuente: The Washington Post

Resumen:  Nada menos que 12.000 reclusos podrán utilizar subsidios federales Pell para financiar clases de la universidad el próximo mes, a pesar de una prohibición del Congreso de 22 años en la prestación de ayuda financiera a los presos.

As many as 12,000 prison inmates will be able to use federal Pell grants to finance college classes next month, despite a 22-year congressional ban on providing financial aid to prisoners.

The Obama administration selected 67 colleges and universities Thursday for the Second Chance Pell Pilot Program, an experiment to help prisoners earn an associate’s or bachelor’s degree while incarcerated. The schools will work with more than 100 federal and state penitentiaries to enroll inmates who qualify for Pell, a form of federal aid that covers tuition, books and fees for college students with financial need. Prisoners must be eligible for release within five years of enrolling in coursework.

Congress prohibited inmates from accessing Pell grants in 1994, arguing that it was unfair for prisoners to receive a share of already limited financial aid dollars. Critics of the ban said it was a rash decision because educating people behind bars reduces the chances of them committing more crimes upon release.

Although the ban remains firmly in place, the Obama administration is using its authority to create limited experiments in the deployment of federal student aid. Other recent experiments include extending Pell grants to high school students enrolled in college course and people participating in computer coding bootcamps.

“We all agree that crime must have consequences, but the men and women who have done their time and paid their debt deserve the opportunity to break with the past and forge new lives in their homes, workplaces ad communities,” Education Secretary John B. King Jr. said on a call with reporters Thursday. “This belief in second chances is fundamental to who we are as Americans.”

King said the administration will provide approximately $30 million in Pell grants to inmates in 27 states. He said the funding is less than 0.1 percent of the overall $30 billion Pell program, and the pilot won’t affect funding to eligible Pell recipients who are not incarcerated.

A majority of the schools invited to participate in the pilot are public community colleges and four-year universities, including Anne Arundel Community College, University of Baltimore and Rappahannock Community College. Most will offer classroom-based instruction at corrections facilities. Others will offer online education, or a hybrid of classroom and online instruction. Participating schools can begin offering courses as early as July 1. Roughly 37 percent of the schools will offer prison-based education for the first time.

For participants like Goucher College, the pilot simply builds on an existing effort to educate the incarcerated. The private liberal arts school outside Baltimore runs a program with private funding at a Maryland state prison complex in Jessup. Education Department officials estimate that 100 inmates will be able to receive grants to obtain bachelor’s degrees through Goucher. The school enrolls 60 to 100 prisoners at a time.

A year ago, then Education Secretary Arne Duncan and Attorney General Loretta Lynch visited the Goucher program to announce the pilot program.

On Thursday, Lynch said, in a statement, “Access to high quality education is vital to ensuring that justice-involved individuals have an opportunity to reclaim their lives and restore their futures. This program will help give deserving incarcerated individuals the skills to live lives of purpose and contribute to society upon their release.”

A study by the Rand Corporation found that inmates who participated in educational programs in jail were 43 percent less likely to return to prison within three years than those who did not. Researchers also estimated that for every dollar poured into correctional education programs, four to five dollars are saved on three-year re-incarceration costs.

“Helping incarcerated men and women to gain new knowledge, skills and credentials increases their chances of living successful lives, saves public dollars and makes our communities and our country safer and stronger,” King said.

The Second Chance Pell Pilot is a part of a broader set of policies the Obama administration has proposed to reform the incarceration system, including improving education in juvenile justice facilities and helping colleges to remove barriers to education for people with criminal records.

Fuente de la noticia: http://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/37657-12000-inmates-to-receive-pell-grants-to-take-college-classes

Fuente de la imagen: http://readersupportednews.org/images/stories/article_imgs21/021596-prisoner-students-062516.jpg

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Sudan: President Al-Bashir Directs Fund for Students’ Welfare to Deal in Wise Educational Manner With Students Issues

África/Sudán/Junio 2016/Autor: Editor / Fuente: http://allafrica.com

ResumenEl Presidente de la República, Mariscal de Campo Omar Al-Bashir, ha dirigido el Fondo Nacional para el Bienestar de los Estudiantes para hacer frente a los problemas de violencia psicológicas, sociales y estudiantiles como una sabia vía educativa.

President of the Republic, Field Marshal Omer Al-Bashir, has directed the National Fund for Students’ Welfare to deal with the psychological, social and student violence issues in a wise educational way.

This came when he received in his office at the Republican Palace Wednesday the Secretary General of the National Fund for Students’ Welfare, Dr. Mohamed Abdalla Al-Nagarabi.

President Al-Bashir has underscored the importance of creating student support programs and expanding the establishment of university housing campuses in the coming period.

In a press statement, Dr. Al-Nagarabi said that he informed the President of the Republic on the performance of the fund in the past period, the preparations to accommodate the new higher education students, providing services for the higher education institutions in the states and the obstacles facing the fund’s performance.

He said that the meeting also reviewed the future projects of the National Fund for Students’ Welfare.

Fuente de la noticia: http://allafrica.com/stories/201606230147.html

Fuente de la imagen: https://www.google.co.ve/search?q=Smriti+Irani&client=ubuntu&hs=Gou&channel=fs&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwif3PX36cPNAhVCdj4KHQJ1COgQ_AUICCgB&biw=1366&bih=671#channel=fs&tbm=isch&q=Al-Bashir

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Venezuela: Avanzando hacia la paz necesaria en Nuestra América

AgenciaPrensaRural/25 de junio de 2016

“Sólo un pueblo escéptico de la guerra y maduro para el conflicto es un pueblo también maduro para la paz” Estanislao Zuleta

Desde la Venezuela Bolivariana, tierra de libertadores, con alegría recibimos la noticia del acuerdo para el cese al fuego y de hostilidades bilateral y definitivo. Saludamos este firme paso dado en La Habana hacia la terminación de la guerra. El comandante Chávez fue enfático y consecuente en predecir que el conflicto armado no podía ser eterno en Colombia, y fue solícito en prestar todos los apoyos para la concreción de la solución pacífica que hoy se muestra cercana. La Paz en Colombia, es obra colectiva, también se debe en gran parte a los esfuerzos de la Revolución Bolivariana. Desde el movimiento popular Venezolano consideramos lo siguiente:

1. Este importante acuerdo marca el inicio de una nueva etapa en la región ya que la guerra en Colombia ha servido de excusa para el intervencionismo norteamericano y sus planes desestabilizadores en contra de los gobiernos democráticos no alineados a la política neoliberal.

2. Mientras se forja la paz en Colombia, los enemigos de los pueblos, en la OEA y otros escenarios, claman por sumir en violencia y aislamiento a Venezuela. Nuestro bravo pueblo resiste y sabrá afrontar las adversidades impuestas, ¡para los guerreristas: el basurero de la historia!

3. La paz en Colombia es un triunfo contra el imperialismo, guerrerista en esencia. Ellos han intentado, por todos los medios, ponernos a pelear, pero nosotros somos pueblos hermanos, hijos de Bolívar y Chávez. Por eso Nuestra América debe ser por siempre región de paz con justicia social.

4. La paz en Colombia le quita el negocio a los que se lucran con la guerra y la muerte. La salida política al conflicto armado que azotó la hermana República por más de 60 años configura una verdadera apertura democrática que permite desatar, efectivamente, todos los poderes creadores del pueblo, de los que nos hablaba Aquiles Nazoa.

5. Sabemos que este acuerdo no se trata del fin de los conflictos sociales, pero estamos esperanzados en que de una vez por todas se abran las compuertas para una democracia cabal, donde los argumentos sean respondidos con argumentos y se erradique de una vez por todas la práctica represiva de la eliminación física de los adversarios y contradictores políticos. Que se difumine el estruendo de la guerra, para que suene la inmensa polifonía de las voces populares. En la mesa de diálogo se delinean acuerdos programáticos para transformar a Colombia, en calles y campos tocará hacerlos realidad.

6. Exigimos al gobierno colombiano que se asuma con seriedad la palabra empeñada. Qué cumpla los compromisos adquiridos, producto de las recientes movilizaciones a lo largo y ancho del país, con la Cumbre Agraria, Étnica y Popular espacio de convergencia del movimiento popular colombiano. También exigimos el inicio inmediato, sin más dilaciones, del proceso de paz con el ELN.

7. Que este acuerdo sirva para cerrar de una vez y para siempre el ciclo de violencia que ha sumido a nuestra Colombia en “100 años de soledad” para que, al vuelo de la vida, el pueblo pueda continuar en la construcción -y lucha- por la suprema felicidad posible.

Con el bolivarianismo y la solidaridad que nos inculcó el comandante Chávez, decimos al pueblo colombiano y a sus organizaciones: sigan contando con nosotros para las adversidades que nos depara el futuro, para seguir andando, en cuadro apretado, como la plata en las raíces de los andes, a decir del buen Martí. Para Colombia y nuestra América ¡‪#‎SonHorasdePaz‬!

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Tomado de: http://prensarural.org/spip/spip.php?article19669

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EEUU: What summertime means for black children

América del Norte/EEUU/Junio 2016/Autor: Keffrelyn Brown y Anthony L. Brown / Fuente: theconversation.com

ResumenLa llegada del verano genera entusiasmo. Pero también podría traer retos para los padres y los educadores. Muchos estudiantes experimentan una pérdida en el aprendizaje de matemáticas durante los meses de verano, conocidos comúnmente como «summer slide.«

The arrival of summer generates excitement. But it could also bring challenges for both parents and educators. Many students experience a loss in math learning during the summer months known commonly as “summer slide.”

Students from middle-class families may not be as affected as they have access to more resources to make up for the learning loss. However, those from lower-income backgrounds could experience significant losses, particularly in math and reading.

Researchers point to the summer slide as a contributing factor in the persistent academic achievement gap between students from lower-income backgrounds and their middle-class peers.

But, does race also conflate with class, when it comes to summer slide? What does summertime mean for black children and the parents and caregivers who care for them?

We are education researchers who are black and parents to two black children – one in elementary school and another in preschool. If the U.S. imagination constructs summer as a time for swimming, free play, baseball and lazy days on the beach, it has never played out this way in our home.

We feel the weight of summer – both for its limitations and its possibilities. To us, the summer is less a time to focus solely on fun and more of what we call the “summer soar.”

Summer goals for black parents

The term “summer soar” is not taken from research or policy studies. We use it to reflect the triple burden that some parents of color – in our case, black parents – could endure during the summer months.

For these parents, summertime provides time to accomplish three goals: (1) reinforce what was learned in the previous year, (2) get a head start on the upcoming year and, most importantly, (3) supplement valuable yet missing curriculum knowledge generally not offered in traditional schools that reflects students’ racial and cultural identities.

Let’s look at what we mean by missing curriculum knowledge.

We offer an example of this in a study we conducted with a researcher at Sacramento State College, Julian Vasquez-Heilig. The study examined how culture and race were addressed in the most recently adopted 11th grade U.S. history Texas state standards.

Findings highlighted that topics in the social studies standards did not fully address the contributions of people of color in the U.S. In the case of black people, much of the focus centered only on cultural contributions and not on the other ways black people contributed to the U.S. narrative.

Added to this was the tendency to give partial attention to the legacy of racism. This history of U.S. racism was not discussed as foundational to the development and maintenance of the country.

Black students’ mis-education

This is not unique to Texas nor found in the area of social studies alone. Education researchers have long acknowledged how official K-12 school curriculum and approaches to teaching fail to affirm black students’ cultural identities. They also reinforce the belief that black people have not made any contributions to the U.S. society.

As far back as the turn of the 20th century, notable scholars including W.E.B. Du Bois, Carter G. Woodson and Anna Julia Cooper addressed the problems and limitations of schooling for African-Americans.

As a result, black students run the risk of experiencing what historian Carter G. Woodson called “mis-education.” Mis-education is a process where school knowledge helps to foster a sense of contempt or disregard for one’s own histories and experiences, regardless of the level of education attained.

So, for us as parents and educators, the “summer soar» is not just about further developing our son’s academics. It is also about fostering a consciousness to help ward off the subtle effects of mis-education – a concern shared by many black families.

Why it is uniquely burdensome

We recognize that black parents are not the only ones worried about their children’s academic achievement and social development. Families, in general, are critical about the overreliance on standardized testing that makes school less a place for meaningful engagement.

Yet what makes the “summer slide” and as a consequence the “summer soar” experience of black parents uniquely burdensome is the context in which it occurs.

Along with the curriculum and teaching problems black children encounter in schools around race and culture, there is a legacy of positioning black males and black children in troubling, dehumanizing ways.

For example, scholars note that black children, specifically black boys, are often viewed as mature and “adult-like.” Their behaviors and experiences are not seen as part of the normal arc of childhood development. Scholars find that in this “adultification” process, black children are not given the allowance of childhood innocence.

These “deficit-oriented” perspectives are found not only in academic literature, but also in public policy, popular media and everyday conversations. A contemporary reflection of this is found in the call for the popular #BlackLivesMatter movement.

Being black in the summer

To be clear: We don’t feel we are approaching the “summer slide” or our “summer soar” from a place of unfounded anxiety or as parents too focused on their child’s education.

Black people have been and continue to be dealt with in schools and society in deeply problematic ways. Just consider the growing number of black families that are choosing to homeschool their children.

In a study that examined the perspectives of 74 African-American homeschoolers in the U.S., researchers Ama Mazama and Garvey Lundy found that the second most important reason that black parents chose to homeschool, right behind concerns with quality of education, was to protect against the racism found in traditional school settings.

Being black in the summer (or anytime really) is not easy. The challenge black families face is navigating an educational context that requires excelling in mainstream school settings, while buffering against the very same education systems that deny one’s humanity.

This summer, like all summers for us, is filled with ambitious goals. We want to help our rising second grader memorize multiplication facts, advance his reading level and improve his writing. But we also want to introduce him to poetry and literature by black authors, teach him about ancient African civilizations and expose him to the concepts of fairness and justice as key to the black struggle in the U.S.

Our task is not easy. But it is our reality – one that we share with countless others – that goes unrecognized in the popular discussions around “summer slide” and the idyllic dream of a lazy summer.

Fuente de la noticia: http://theconversation.com/what-summertime-means-for-black-children-60152?utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Using%20bacteria%20to%20clean%20up%20oil%20spills&utm_content=Using%20bacteria%20to%20clean%20up%20oil%20spills+CID_6962ba4afb74d53eae0c4c57865f53ca&utm_source=campaign_monitor_us&utm_term=What%20summertime%20means%20for%20black%20children

Fuente de la imagen: https://62e528761d0685343e1c-f3d1b99a743ffa4142d9d7f1978d9686.ssl.cf2.rackcdn.com/files/127588/width926/image-20160621-12995-c6qikt.jpg

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Nigeria: Ogun Private School Owners Protest Over Multiple Levies, Others

Nigeria/25 junio de 2016/Fuente: Allafrica

Resumen:

Protesta del propietario de Ogun escuela privada a través de gravámenes Múltiples, Otros

Las puntuaciones de los propietarios de escuelas privadas bajo los auspicios de la Asociación Nacional de Propietarios de Escuelas Privadas, capítulo Ogun han llevado a cabo una protesta por supuestas múltiples gravámenes y cargas por el gobierno del estado.

Los propietarios de escuelas privadas que irrumpieron en la Unión de Nigeria Secretaría periodistas, Oke Ilewo, Abeokuta lamentaban el 50 por ciento de aumento en los cargos por el primer certificado de estudios examination.They dijo que se ha aumentado de N500 a N2,000.

Hablando en nombre de los propietarios, el presidente de la asociación, Alhaji Rilwan Hassan, dijo que el gobierno también ha aumentado las tasas para el certificado de examen de la Educación Básica en un 50 por ciento de N2,500 a N5,000.

Él explicó que no había disparidad entre las tasas que deben abonarse por las escuelas públicas y privadas para el gobierno del estado en estos dos exámenes.

Hassan dijo que la asociación había escrito tantas cartas a las autoridades competentes, incluido el Alake de Egbaland, Oba Adedotun Gbadebo, para intervenir en la situación, pero no hay respuesta.

El dijo: «Hemos llegado a apelar a través de usted y el público en general para ayudar llamamiento a Su Excelencia, el gobernador del estado de Ogun, el senador Ibikunle Amosun, para dar un respiro sobre temas que nos afectan como titulares de los centros privados y los padres que confían su niños en nuestras manos, que también son contribuyentes.

«Queremos que el gobierno a las decisiones sobre los cargos por BECE, FSLC, la señalización, la tasa de vecindad, las tasas de renovación y múltiples impuestos inversa.

___________________________________________________________

Scores of the private schools owners under the aegis of National Association of Proprietors of Private Schools, Ogun chapter have staged a protest over alleged multiple levies and charges by the state government.

The Private schools owners who stormed the Nigeria Union of Journalists Secretariat, Oke Ilewo,Abeokuta lamented 50 per cent increase in the charges for the First School Leaving Certificate examination.They said it has been increased from N500 to N2,000.

Speaking on behalf of the proprietors, the President of the association, Alhaji Rilwan Hassan, said the government had also increased the fees for the Basic Education Certificate Examination by 50 per cent from N2,500 to N5,000.

He explained that there was disparity between fees and charges payable by the public and private schools to the state government on these two examinations.

Hassan said that the association had written so many letters to the relevant authorities, including the Alake of Egbaland, Oba Adedotun Gbadebo, to intervene in the situation but no response.

He said, «We have come to appeal through you and the general public to help appeal to His Excellency, the Governor of Ogun State, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, to give respite over issues affecting us as owners of private schools and the parents who entrust their children in our hands, who are also tax payers.

«We want the government to reverse decisions on charges for BECE, FSLC, signage, tenement rate, renewal fees and multiple taxes.

«The disparity is what we say we don’t want, we are not saying there is no justification for the increment because of stationery, but for it to have been jacked up by 400 per cent, it is quite disheartening. We are not enjoying any benefit as private schools owners.

«We are assisting the government to employ staff into our schools and a lot of us are on loans. It is a social service we are rendering.»

Hassan said pupils from the private schools in the state have been doing well in the West African Examinations Council, where 55 private secondary schools were among the best performed schools, last year.

He said, «We are among the best 1,000 schools in WAEC last year, no single public school in Ogun State in the last WAEC is among the 1,000 and we have 55 private schools from Ogun State, that are among.»

Reacting to the allegation, the State Commissioner for Education, Modupe Mujota, said the increments were necessary given the current economic reality in the country.

Mujota said the increments were not a routine exercise adding that they have not been touched in the last four years.

She said, «The intention of the government was not to kill the schools adding that the decision was in line with the school fees being charged .

Fuente de la Noticia:

Nigeria: Ogun Private School Owners Protest Over Multiple Levies, Others

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