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Docentes de Costa Rica se solidarizan con Oaxaca

ei-ie/25 de junio de 2016

 

Los Estudiantes y Docentes mostraron su indignación por los hechos ocurridos en Oaxaca.

La tarde del 23 de Junio del 2016, una representación de la Asociación Nacional de Educadores (ANDE), afiliada a la Internacional de la Educación para América Latina, además de representantes del BUSSCO y de estudiantes de la Universidad de Costa Rica, se manifestaron frente a la Embajada de México en San José, en solidaridad con los docentes, estudiantes y civiles fallecidos, agredidos y reprimidos por el Gobierno mexicano, al defender sus derechos.

Carmen Brenes Pérez, Secretaria General de ANDE expresó que «este es un grito de apoyo y de solidaridad, le decimos a los docentes que resistan, que es una lucha justa. Es indignante lo que están viviendo y nos unimos a la lucha de este país».

Tomado de: http://www.ei-ie-al.org/index.php/1274-docentes-de-costa-rica-se-solidarizan-con-oaxaca

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Los “presidenciables” y la educación

Por: Abelardo Carro Nava

Lo ocurrido el pasado fin de semana en Nochixtlán, Oax., entre los integrantes de la Coordinadora Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación (CNTE) y policías federales y estatales, dejó entrever la lucha desmedida por el poder que, en los últimos días, ha arreciado en las más altas esferas de la política mexicana; de manera particular, entre los futuros “presidenciables” del partido tricolor: Osorio Chong, Videgaray y Nuño Mayer. Obviamente, Manlio Fabio Beltrones, los descartamos por el momento, dada su renuncia a la dirigencia nacional del Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI) que hizo pública el pasado lunes. Explico por qué, de buenas a primeras, afirmo esto.

El tema de la educación, desde la llegada de Enrique Peña Nieto a Los Pinos, causó revuelo, al igual que la detención de la profesora Gordillo, ex líder vitalicia del Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación (SNTE), el más grande de América Latina. La inminente implementación de la reforma educativa, a través del Pacto por México, llevo a los integrantes de las Cámaras de Diputados y Senadores, aprobar un “proyecto” que, a decir del Presidente y de ellos mismos, mejoraría la educación en un país tan vapuleado como el nuestro.

Se dijo, por esos días, que la detención de La Maestra se debió a su franca oposición a dicha reforma, de ahí que “sorpresivamente” se haya puesto al descubierto la malversación de fondos de los trabajadores de la educación adheridos a su organización sindical, motivo por el cual, fue aprehendida en pleno aeropuerto.

Con este cuadro, un personaje que inteligentemente guardó su distancia fue el ex Secretario de Educación, Emilio Chuayffet. La bronca que mantuvo con la CNTE fue mesurada, ¿acaso sabía el costo político que le traería si aplicaba la ley recién aprobada a rajatabla? Imagino que sí, tan es así, que a mitad del sexenio, y por razones no tan claras, fue removido de su cargo para dar paso a un completo desconocido, Aurelio Nuño Mayer, jefe de la oficina de la Presidencia cuyo mentor, Luis Videgaray, lo empujó en su carrera política.

nuño-peñaY es precisamente en este momento o a partir de esta designación que el juego de ajedrez se tornó interesante; la llegada de un personaje cercano al Presidente agitó el enjambre. Y no me refiero precisamente al educativo, al de la reforma, al de la Coordinadora o al del Sindicato, sino a aquel en el que varios políticos vieron en Nuño, una amenaza seria rumbo al 2018. De ahí que pueda entenderse los jaloneos, dimes y diretes, encuentros y desencuentros, en fin, todos aquellos momentos en los que la educación, cual pelota en un partido de tenis, ha ido de un lado a otro –de una Secretaría a otra–, sin que alguien les haya puesto un alto pensando en los millones de niños, jóvenes y adultos que así lo requieren.

Es claro que la Secretaría de Gobernación (SG) –dentro de su marco normativo y organizacional– debe cumplir con ciertas funciones; es clarísimo lo que la Secretaría de Educación Pública (SEP) tiene que hacer en esta materia; y bueno, es más claro lo que la Secretaria de Hacienda y Crédito Público (SHCP) tiene que realizar para que el país camine, hacia el desarrollo y el crecimiento.

No obstante esta afirmación, ha sido evidente que los titulares de las Secretarías que he referido, principalmente las de Gobernación y Educación, han jugado un papel preponderante, pero perverso, en la implementación de esta famosísima “reforma educativa”. Y es que mire usted, por una parte, Aurelio Nuño, cuando así le ha convenido, ha manifestado que esta reforma, aunque tiene fines políticos, su esencia es eminentemente educativa; sin embargo, y como se ha visto, nada de educativa ha tenido pero si mucho de laboral y, por ello, la oposición magisterial y social ha ido en aumento en buena parte del país. Ojo, no estamos hablando de una oposición al modelo educativo, ni a los contenidos curriculares, ni a las formas de gestión y planeación educativa, el meollo de este asunto se encuentra en una Ley que ha violentado los derechos laborales de los trabajadores a partir de una evaluación punitiva, formas de despido y descuentos injustificados, además de la contratación irregular que acontece en varios estados de la República Mexicana – solo por citar algunos ejemplos –.

En este sentido, es claro que el Secretario de Gobernación tiene que entrar al quite para dialogar con los profesores sobre temas eminentemente políticos, no educativos, al final de cuentas, su obligación es atender la política interna del país pero no la educativa. Por su parte, es claro que Nuño no quiere dialogar sobre el tema educativo, a ojos vistos, es un tema que desconoce porque lo confunde con el político, pero que no quiere dejar porque tiene la mira puesta en la silla presidencial.

nuño-osorio-reunion-junioEn suma, y dados los recientes acontecimientos que ha vivido el país, ¿cómo podemos llamarle a la postura del Secretario de Educación y “futuro” presidenciable: arrogancia, prepotencia y cerrazón? Desde mi perspectiva, él tiene claro que hasta el momento ha ganado puntos y ha arrancado algunos aplausos de gente que ha visto con buenos ojos sus acciones pero, esta misma razón lo ha cegado, la mayoría de los mexicanos no lo considera ni lo ha considerado así, muchos, me incluyo, nos hemos preguntado ¿por qué no quiere dialogar con los maestros? Contradictorio es que en discurso mencione que está dispuesto al diálogo con todos los actores educativos pero en los hechos no sucede de esta manera. En fin.

Si los lamentables eventos ocurridos el pasado fin de semana en Nochixtlán son un asunto político y éstos serán atendidos por Gobernación, propongo que el de Educación deje de meter las manos en temas políticos y se aboque al educativo, al “supuesto modelo educativo” que desde hace meses seguimos esperando los mexicanos pero, como esto no sucederá, quiero pensar que la educación seguirá siendo, como lo ha sido, un botín eminentemente político más que un beneficio para el pueblo de México.

Por cierto, ¿usted imagina quién ganará la partida en este juego de ajedrez o tenis y se quedará con el triunfo que lo llevará a contender por la Presidencia de la República?

Fuente del Artículo:

Los “presidenciables” y la educación

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EEUU: New Data Shows Blood Lead Levels Spiked in Children in Flint, Michigan

América del Norte/EEUU/Junio 2016/Autor: Brady Dennis / Fuente: The Washington Post

ResumenLa malograda decisión, hace dos años, para cambiar las fuentes de agua potable en Flint, Mich., dio lugar a un aumento repentino en el número de niños pequeños con niveles de plomo en la sangre, según los datos publicados hoy por los Centros para el Control y la Prevención de Enfermedades .

The ill-fated decision two years ago to switch drinking-water sources in Flint, Mich., resulted in a sudden spike in the number of young children with elevated blood lead levels, according to data released Friday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Public health officials have long known that the city’s water crisis left nearly 9,000 children 6 and younger exposed to lead, a toxic contaminant that can cause permanent learning disabilities, behavioral problems and, at higher levels, a number of diseases. But to better understand the impact Flint’s tainted water had on the city’s most vulnerable population, CDC officials looked at lead tests before, during and after the switch.

Researchers found that Flint children had a 50 percent higher chance of having elevated blood lead levels after the switch in 2014. After the city switched back to Detroit water in late 2015, the percentage of children with elevated blood lead results «returned to levels seen before the water switch took place,» the agency said.

«This crisis was entirely preventable, and a startling reminder of the critical need to eliminate all sources of lead from our children’s environment,» Patrick Breysse, director of the CDC’s National Center for Environmental Health, said in a statement Friday.

The lead problems in Flint’s water began after the city switched to the Flint River for its water supply beginning in April 2014, as part of a cost-cutting move. State regulators failed to ensure that anti-corrosion chemicals were added to the water, which became contaminated when lead leached into it from aging underground pipes. The city eventually switched back to Detroit water in October 2015.

While there is no level of lead in the blood that is considered safe, CDC considers anything greater than five micrograms per deciliter as a «level of concern.» Public health officials continue to recommend that all children under age 6 living in Flint have their blood tested for lead.

Friday’s study had some limitations. For example, researchers were not able to account for exposure to lead-based paint or other potential environmental sources that could have exposed children to the toxic substance. In addition, researchers lacked information about the precise amount of lead-tainted water consumed by individual children, which limited their analysis to evaluating changes in the results of blood tests over time as the city’s water source changed.

The CDC’s work builds on initial findings from local pediatrician Mona Hanna-Attisha, who played a major role in bringing Flint’s lead crisis to the public spotlight. In August 2015, she was startled by what she found when looking back over the lead tests of 1,750 children taken at a local hospital.

“We found that when we compared lead levels before and after the [water] switch, the percentage of kids with lead poisoning doubled after the switch,” she told The Washington Post in an interview earlier this year. “In some neighborhoods, it tripled. And it all correlated with where water lead levels were the highest.”

Hanna-Attisha and several colleagues released the results at a news conference in September 2015, but the backlash was swift. State officials questioned the findings and accused Hanna-Attisha of causing unnecessary hysteria. The state later agreed that her figures were accurate.

The episode, Hanna-Attisha said, has caused a “community-wide trauma” in a city ravaged by crime, poverty and widespread unemployment.

“Our families are already riddled with every possible stress,” she said. “Every obstacle to a kid’s success, we already had. . . . And then they gave a population lead poisoning.”

In April, researchers from Virginia Tech said Flint’s water system is in far better shape since the city switched its water source in the fall and began adding chemicals to control the corrosion of aging pipes. But they made it clear that the threat of lead contamination remains.

This week, the federal government lifted a recommendation that pregnant women, nursing mothers and children under 6 in Flint drink only bottled water.

The advice was based on tests of filters that have been distributed for months for free by the state of Michigan. The Environmental Protection Agency has been testing water from the filters and has said they remove or reduce lead well below the federal action level of 15 parts per billion.

President Obama drank filtered water several times during a visit last month to Flint.

«It confirms what we know scientifically that if you use a filter … then Flint water at this point is drinkable,» he said. «That does not negate the need to replace some of those pipes, because ultimately we want a system where you don’t have to put a filter on it.»

Federal officials said they have provided millions of gallons of bottled water to the state of Michigan, along with more than 50,000 water filters. Government aid has included expanding medical services to thousands of Medicaid-eligible pregnant women and children.

Fuente de la noticia: http://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/37648-new-data-shows-blood-lead-levels-spiked-in-children-in-flint-michigan

Fuente de la imagen: http://readersupportednews.org/images/stories/article_imgs21/021593-lead-test-062516.jpg

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México: Salud y Educación, las más afectadas por recorte

InsurgenciaMagisterial/25 de junio de 2016

Las secretarías de Educación Pública, Salud y la de Agricultura serán las que carguen con el mayor peso del recorte preventivo al gasto por 31 mil 715 millones de pesos que anunció esta mañana la Secretaría de Hacienda, tras la salida del Reino Unido de la Unión Europea.

El recorte será y se aplicará solo al gobierno federal, sin que se afecte a Pemex.

Este monto es adicional a la disminución presupuestal por 132 mil 300 millones de pesos anunciado en febrero pasado para este año.

El 91.7 por ciento de este nuevo ajuste adicional será en gasto corriente, por lo que se calcula sean 29 mil 71 millones de pesos.

RECORTES

Secretaría de Salud – 6 mil 500 mdp

Secretaría de Educación Pública – 6 mil 500 mdp

Secretaría de Agricultura, Ganadería, Desarrollo Rural, Pesca y Alimentación – 4 mil 205 mdp

Entidades no sectorizadas – 3 mil 100 mdp

Secretaría de Comunicaciones y Transportes – 2 mil 174.5 mdp

Secretaría del Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales – mil 664.1 mdp

Secretaría de Desarrollo Social – mil 550 mdp

Secretaría de Gobernación – mil 88.1 mdp

Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología – mil 800 mdp

Secretaría de Desarrollo Agrario, Territorial y Urbano – mil mdp

Secretaría de Turismo – 705.6 mdp

Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores – 632.4 mdp

Secretaría de Economía – 600 mdp

Secretaría de Energía – 90 mdp

Comisión Reguladora de Energía – 50 mdp

Comisión Nacional de Hidrocarburos – 35 mdp

Secretaría del Trabajo y Previsión Social – 20 mdp

ajuste_al_gasto_MILIMA20160624_0360_8

 

Fotografía: yucatan

Tomado de: http://insurgenciamagisterial.com/salud-y-educacion-las-mas-afectadas-por-recorte/

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Contingencia Educativa

Por. Manuel Gil Antón

Profesor del Centro de Estudios Sociológicos del Colegio de México

mgil@colmex.mx

@ManuelGilAnton

 

La cantidad de partículas suspendidas (alumnos con resultados bajos) activó la emergencia en el ámbito educativo. Año tras año los IMECAS pedagógicos superaban cualquier norma. Desde el poder, más allá del Congreso, decidieron transformar al país, no administrarlo. Pactaron acciones de gran calado. Una de estas – dieron en llamarla reforma – se dirigió al campo de la educación.

¿Qué hacer frente a la contingencia? Primero, determinar la causa, después, enmendar el entuerto. Con la seguridad que proviene de la ignorancia y el prejuicio, arribaron a una conclusión simple: tal como en el caso de la contaminación en las ciudades, eligieron un factor: la explicación para el desastre ambiental recayó en los automóviles. En el asunto del aprendizaje fueron acusados las y los profesores.

De manera análoga, ante un problema complejo, se redujo la explicación a un elemento del conjunto. No el más importante, sino sobre el que se podía influir con base en amenazas: el “no circula” para todos los autos, y doble si es preciso. ¿No le parece? Habrá de cumplir so pena de multa y corralón. Complementa la estrategia simplificadora mejorar la evaluación de las emisiones de los coches en los verificentros inmunes a la corrupción.

Frente a la densa capa de smog en el campo de la formación, construyeron con todos sus recursos mediáticos la explicación más apegada al análisis superficial del asunto: por su pésima preparación y falta de profesionalismo, el magisterio – todo y nadie ni nada más – es el productor de la catástrofe. Por ende, lo que se requieren son verificentros: imponer procesos de evaluación, como sea, y solo los que consigan el holograma de satisfactorios y buenos podrán circular todos los días. Los destacados también, pero con vales de “gasolina”. Los que no pasen la evaluación, van directo al taller para que aprendan, mecánicamente, a resolver los exámenes. ¿No le parece? Lástima: habrá de someterse (verbo preferido y lleno de significado del secretario Nuño) a la evaluación; de lo contrario, perderá el empleo. En caso de protestar, despido. Y la clásica forma de impartir justicia: selectiva y sesgada. Apresar maestros por presuntos manejos irregulares en los descuentos de préstamos, cuestión a probar, pero no tocar, ni por asomo, a presuntos delincuentes como el diputado del PANAL, Quezada, quien, con una inversión proveniente de sus honrados ahorros, compró, era una ganga, departamentos de lujo en Miami: 7.4 millones de dólares. Y vade retro satanás: ningún gobernador cómplice, para nada un dirigente del SNTE, tan sospechoso de lo mismo pero aliado al Ogro Educativo, y cuantimenos a mandatarios con casas ilegales, presas, bancos o trapacerías mayores. Cuando la justicia es desigual, si se orienta el poder judicial por instrucciones del ejecutivo, no solo advertimos la falta de división de poderes, sino la ausencia ética más rotunda desde la que una reforma educativa, insisto, carece de legitimidad. A los aliados, complacencia en sus delitos y privilegios. Con los enemigos o adversarios, el uso oportunista de acusaciones y sentencias previas.

Así como el lío ambiental es complejo, pues interviene la calidad de los combustibles, la corrupción, las industrias y otras fuentes de contaminación, derivado de un modelo urbano que privilegió al transporte privado, el problema educativo requiere una mirada a los planes y programas, las condiciones desiguales de las escuelas y alumnos, el desajuste entre formación inicial y práctica cotidiana y otros factores, pero, sobre todo, contar con un proyecto de formación de ciudadanos cultos que oriente, de forma integral, una reforma tan necesaria. No lo hay. No lo necesitan: el nombre del juego es sojuzgar y controlar a partir de la afrenta. Propaganda: los IMECAS en el aprendizaje es lo de menos.

 

 

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Mexico’s Teachers Stand Up Against the Violent Neoliberal Order

América del Norte/México/Junio 2016/Autor: A.S. Dillingham and René González Pizarro / Fuente: Jacobin

ResumenLos maestros en huelga mexicanos están luchando por la justicia en el aula – y contra el orden neoliberal violenta de México.

Ten years ago, as a group of striking teachers slept in their encampment during the early hours of June 14 in the state capital of Oaxaca, Mexico, government forces launched an attack to remove them from the zócalo, or town square. Riot police cleared the plaza while helicopters dropped tear gas from above.

The striking teachers were beaten, arrested, and pushed out of the city center. But not for long; the teachers and their supporters quickly regrouped, fighting back, block by block, and took the plaza back by midday.

The violent repression of striking teachers in 2006, ordered by the state governor, launched a social movement — called the “Oaxaca Commune” by supporters — that grew to encompass much more than the local teachers’ union.

The movement mobilized large swathes of Oaxacan society against the repressive governor. Aggressive federal intervention hobbled the movement, but failed to wipe it out. Today the dissident teachers’ movement is in the streets again, this time in opposition to the federal government’s “education reform” program.

The teacher’s movement is also more widespread than in 2006. Militarized attacks on striking teachers have occurred in Mexico City and throughout the country’s southern states. In the last month, the state of Chiapas has seen pitched battles between teachers and police forces, and the Zapatistas have spoken out in favor of the striking teachers.

Last week the Mexican attorney general’s office arrested two of the leaders of the Oaxacan section of the teachers’ union, Local 22, on corruption charges. Then on June 19, federal and state police attacked protesters in Nochixtlán, Oaxaca, a town on the highway between the state capital and Mexico City, resulting in the death of at least eight protesters.

The blatant attack on outspoken government opponents unleashed a wave of protests in the state capital in response.

It’s become somewhat of a cliché to describe the situation in Mexico as a “crisis.” Indeed, la crisis is frequently satirized in Mexican film and popular culture, with Mexicans unsure when the last crisis ended and the next began.

Yet it’s true that in Mexico has experienced a wave of tragedies since 2006. Over one hundred thousand thousand people have died, over twenty-five thousand have been disappeared, and more than one hundred journalists have been killed in the decade since former president Felipe Calderon declared war on the drug cartels.

Some of the crisis’s numbers are unforgettable. The forty-nine children burned to death in a government-outsourced daycare center without safety protections in the northern state of Sonora in 2009; the seventy-two migrants found in a collective grave in the state of Tamaulipas in 2010; and most recently the 2014 disappearance of forty-three Ayotzinapa Normal School students in the southern state of Guerrero. Tragedy’s numbers are a defining part of daily life and conversation in Mexico.

Enrique Peña Nieto’s election in 2012, coming after years of drug-war-related violence, was seen by many as a possible reprieve, a return to the nostalgic days of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) rule when governance was at least stable, if not democratic or transparent.

Yet President Peña Nieto’s sexenio (six-year term) has been marked by continued mass violence, corruption, and impunity at seemingly all levels of government. From shady government contracts in Mexico City, to his wife’s extravagant home paid for by dubious means, to the flagrant and repeated government lies over the forty-three missing students, Peña Nieto’s popularity has plummeted.

Recent state-level elections saw the PRI lose power in a number of its former strongholds. Mayors in Mexico are targeted by cartels, in a way that suggests they are siphoning funds directly from the state, in addition to drug and human trafficking.

The multiple captures and escapes of “El Chapo” Guzman, the infamous drug trafficker, lent credence to the popular belief among many Mexicans that the line between the traffickers and the state is blurry, at best.

Peña Nieto’s 2013 education reform plan — the piece of legislation under contention today — is just one component of a broader set of structural reforms pushed through by the president and the PRI.

While other reforms — such as the partial privatization of the state-run oil company, PEMEX, and corporate tax reform — have been relatively successful (on their own terms), the education initiative has proven the most difficult to implement, sparking opposition by not only the dissident section of the teachers’ union, the Coordinadora Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación (CNTE), but also broader sectors of the national teachers’ union, the Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación (SNTE).

This opposition and the militarized approach of the government employed to implement the reforms, with thousands of federal police securing teacher testing sites, has led the international press, much of which until recently was supportive of Peña Nieto, to declare him a failure.

The education reform is better understood as an attack on labor. Much like the discourse of recent education reform movements in the United States, the Mexican reformers invoke notions of “accountability” and “quality” instruction.

But the reform itself contains numerous measures aimed at undermining the power of teachers’ unions including measures that weaken the union’s control of the hiring process at normal schools (which they historically controlled), eliminate teachers’ ability to pass down a position to their children, make it easier to fire teachers who miss work, and limit the number of union positions paid by the state.

These measures are all directly aimed at undermining the union’s power, but the central point of contention has been the evaluation of teachers through state-administered standardized tests.

At the end of last year, teachers across Mexico sat down for new nationwide teacher evaluations. In Oaxaca, the scene outside the testing site resembled a military exercise.

Ten thousand federal police were deployed to facilitate the administration of the evaluations, reflecting both the federal government’s desire to see their reform implemented as well as the widespread opposition to the new law.

Oaxaca is home to one of the most outspoken union locals in Mexico, Local 22, a member of the dissident CNTE movement — a movement that emerged in the late 1970s in opposition to the authoritarian, PRI-aligned SNTE.

In the 1970s and 1980s, the CNTE struggled against entrenched PRI control of union locals, with newly minted indigenous teachers playing a key role in southern states such as Oaxaca and Chiapas. The CNTE has remained a powerful force and controls, in addition to Local 22, sections of union locals in Michoacán, Guerrero, Chiapas, and the Federal District (Mexico City).

Given Local 22’s historic militancy, the state’s response was not surprising. Yet similar scenes of police coercion played out across the country, alongside a massive media campaign denouncing the dissident teachers’ union as self-interested and corrupt.

Historian A. S. Dillingham sat down with René González Pizarro, a Oaxacan teacher and member of Local 22, as well as a former delegate to its assembly, to discuss the nature of the reforms, the government’s strategy, and the history and culture of Local 22.

Can you first tell us a little about your own experience as a teacher? Why did you choose the teaching profession?

My professional training was originally in graphic design, but I’ve been immersed in the education world ever since I can remember. Actually, as a baby I was part of the teachers’ demonstrations of the 1980s and I remember that as a six- or seven-year-old I’d chant along with the slogans of the teachers.

After eight years teaching in private schools, I entered Local 22 thanks to my father. One of the benefits of the union members (eliminated by the recent reform) was the ability to inherit the position of one’s parents upon their retirement, as long as one had initiated their teacher training.

My father was in the indigenous education system, so I started there, with lowest category of promotor bilingüe or bilingual promoter. These positions were created in the 1970s and it is the category I continue to hold.

I started work in an indigenous boarding school in Coixtlahuaca, a rural, mountainous region in the western half of the state.

Let’s begin with the June 19 attacks on the teachers’ blockade in Nochixtán.

The federal and state police’s recent violence merely demonstrates the total obstinacy and refusal to negotiate on the government’s part. The teachers’ movement and much of the public generally have spoken out against the structural reforms, not just the against the education program.

On Sunday, the federal police first denied their use of live ammunition against demonstrators. Then later, after the confirmation of the first two dead, the secretary of government claimed it wasn’t police who fired, and said the photographs of police firing assault rifles were from another date and time.

But the media reaction was quick and the Associated Press confirmed the photographs of police firing on crowds were indeed from that Sunday and not manipulated.

Finally, at a press conference late that afternoon, the police admitted to their use of live ammunition.

The key from the government’s point of view has been the implementation of last year’s teacher evaluations. More than ten thousand federal police arrived in Oaxaca to facilitate the new evaluations.

The state government and Ministry of Education claimed it was a success. How do you view what took place with the evaluations?

The new state education ministry (IEEPO), which was legally reconstituted during the summer of 2015 to weaken the union’s control, has been trying to legitimize itself since its restructuring last July.

They’ve begun a series of actions, particularly on social media, to try to show that the Oaxacan teachers wanted to get rid of the “yoke” of the union.

On social media they have bombarded Oaxacans with messages like, “The new IEEPO is better, nothing remains in the union’s hands, now union coercion is no longer needed to access labor rights, the evaluation isn’t meant to take peoples’ jobs, now children will have all their classes.”

But the message is funny, if not ironic, in the face of the deployment of federal forces, not just in Oaxaca but in other states where the CNTE hasn’t had much presence.

Two or three years ago, before the reforms began in earnest, many non-CNTE teachers in the rest of the country viewed the evaluations as a good thing. (Actually some Oaxacan teachers did, as well.)

But with the full implementation of the reform there has been an upturn in the scale of opposition to it. Even in places where one hasn’t seen teacher protests before, one sees them now; the state of Jalisco and the state of Mexico are clear examples of this.

You mentioned the “new IEEPO” and what took place last July when the state government legally abolished — with the support of the federal police — the previous education ministry, in order to facilitate President Peña Nieto’s reforms.

How do you view that action? Does this constitute a death blow to Local 22’s power?

The government’s actions last July were a major blow to Local 22. But they weren’t a death blow. It wasn’t enough to merely freeze the union’s bank accounts, prosecute them financially, invent connections to organized crime, or try to do something from the financial side.

Nor has it been sufficient to detain the leaders. Actually, the detainment of four leaders and recently three members of Local 22’s executive committee sparked more desire to resist within the union.

Now the new state education ministry, supported by the reforms and federal education authorities, says that there will be no more marches and no missed class days. Three absences will mean the loss of one’s job, one absence will mean your pay would be docked.

The same happened with the federal ministry, after the first three days of the strike that began on May 15, 2016 the federal education ministry announced the firing of over four thousand teachers in Oaxaca, Michoacán, Guerrero, and Chiapas.

Do the authorities have the power to do that? To fire the teachers? That seems to be something new, given the union’s previous control over hiring.

According to the new reforms, yes they do have the power. The IEEPO asked the teachers to either go to class or have a day of pay deducted, because that is what the new law stipulates. Many teachers took to the streets. Some, out of fear or because they didn’t want their pay to be docked, stayed in the classrooms. Yet the threat of firing hasn’t stopped collective action. In fact, since May 15, the start of the strike, the movement has only grown.

The reform has allowed the state authorities to change how the IEEPO functions, right?

The new IEEPO is a mess. Within the actual office building, they have no idea what they are doing and they dismantled the apparatus, which, even if it was overly bureaucratic, knew how to function.

That is why they have turned to their massive publicity and social media campaigns, to improve the image of the new IEEPO.

In your opinion, what is the worst part of the education reforms?

That it’s not about education. That is the part that bothers me the most. From reading Peña Nieto’s reforms, the laws, and the auxiliary laws, it isn’t at all clear — and I’m not the only one that says this — that it’s about education reform.

It’s about yet another neoliberal government attack on trade unions that demonstrate any type of opposition. When one looks at the structural reforms in this country (and globally) one notices these reforms are directed at eliminating trade unions.

The strong unions have either been co-opted or eliminated. This happened in Mexico first with the railway workers, then the telecommunications workers’ union, the Luz y Fuerza union, the Federal Electricity Commission, and PEMEX. All that’s left are the teachers and public health workers.

With each reform, there is a direct attack on trade unions or civil society organizations.

You mentioned that you attended teachers’ marches as a baby with your parents. Not just in Oaxaca, but also in many other states, the democratic teachers’ movement emerged around that time. Local 22 and the CNTE nationally have their origins in that period. Is that history important for those in the movement today?

Yes. That generation from the 1980s just retired a few years ago (my father is one of them) and now there is a whole new generation of teachers. I know the history of that struggle because I lived through it but I’m not sure other comrades do because even those whose parents were also teachers in the 1980s don’t always seem very interested today.

There are two factors that might explain this dynamic. One is the distance that has developed recently between the union leadership and its bases, and the other is social pressure, particularly in the media, that casts the union in a negative light.

So the new comrades are often not interested in, nor committed to, the idea of struggle, either because they don’t feel represented by their leadership — because of corruption or poor management of the union — or because the media accuse the movement of being lazy and something bad for the country.

Yes, and many teachers say the relationship between the union leadership and the rank-and-file has changed dramatically since the 1980s.

Among the comrades that do participate, one major difference between today and the 1980s is the mandatory participation in union activities.

Today (although the state education ministry says the restructuring has taken this power away from the union), los puntos sindicales, the union point system, determines whether teachers can change their job category, school, or school zone, move between levels, and it also determines benefits, such as union-sponsored personal loans.

How do you see the Oaxacan struggle relating to the national context in Mexico? After Ayotzinapa, and the struggle for the missing forty-three students, have things changed in Oaxaca?

Unfortunately, Local 22 didn’t immediately join the movement for the missing forty-three students. The lack of solidarity among resistance and left movements in Oaxaca and Mexico generally is symptomatic.

After 2006, it has been virtually impossible to organize and unite the Left in Oaxaca. Many of us teachers have watched and followed the Ayotzinapa issue, and we are part of that movement, but not formally as Local 22.

It was only during the one-year anniversary of the disappearances that Local 22 made official statements of solidarity. I remember the first national teachers’ action in Mexico City after the disappearances; there was nothing in the official accords or assembly demands about Ayotzinapa.

The march was full of signs and banners addressing what had happened but it wasn’t even discussed, let alone made an official demand, by the organized union movement.

And why do you think the union leaders haven’t focused on supporting Ayotizinapa?

I’m not sure. Since I joined the union I’ve noticed a lack of interest in other movements and a basic lack of solidarity.

And that dynamic, of not taking up demands of other movements, contributes to the notion that the union is only concerned about its own interests. You can’t ask for support if you’re not supporting other struggles.

Exactly.

This brings me to a longstanding frustration with the reporting on teachers’ struggles in Mexico that leaves out important conflicts and problems within the union. As Benjamin Smith points out, there are problems within the dissident union movement itself, like the ability of teachers to pass their job on to their children, corrupt internal arbitration practices, and pay scales that benefit the union hierarchy.

What we shouldn’t lose sight of is that, even with the problems within the CNTE leadership, we cannot blame teachers themselves entirely for the education situation in Oaxaca or Mexico.

And there are real fights within Local 22 for internal union reform and alternative education reform. For example, Local 22 has developed a counter-proposal to the government’s so-called reform over the last few years.

Our counter-proposal is an effort from the union and the base-level membership, organized around two important points. First, it proposes a curriculum based in the local culture and context of Oaxaca, which is diverse, indigenous, and multicultural. Secondly, it is based in the theories of critical pedagogy.

Of the most important changes it proposes, in my view, regards the system of teacher evaluation. The union’s proposal eliminates standardized testing (there will be exams but the use of standardized exams will be abolished) to evaluate either students or teachers. It focuses entirely on the qualitative aspect of education.

I served as advisor for a process in which indigenous teachers from all over the state of Oaxaca discussed and debated methods of evaluation that fit indigenous education and what we aim to accomplish as indigenous teachers.

With the imposition of the new law, our proposal has lost steam. Now there is no openness on the part of the government or education authorities to even listen to our proposals.

In terms of the crisis of participation and distancing between the base and the leadership within Local 22, that is something far too complex to be solved with one or two actions but I would venture two reforms that, to me, would be fundamental in shifting toward a more democratic and militant unionism.

Within the union, one important change would be to eliminate the mechanisms of coerced participation. The teachers’ movement of the 1980s had a genuine interest from the bases in fighting against union corruption and in favor of the people and their right to a public and quality education.

Teachers participated with conviction. They slept on sidewalks waiting for the results of the state union assembly and valued the actions decided there.

Over time, that same leadership promoted a system of coerced participation, in which, through the point system, gave benefits or transfers, even salary raises, to those with the highest points.

This has meant that in the last few years union activities continued to have large levels of participation but not necessarily due to political conviction.

The other important change would be for us teachers to regain the parents and general public as allies in our struggle. In many communities the teachers left to participate in union actions without explaining to the parents why they did so or convincing them of the importance of their activities.

In the recent struggles it’s encouraging that more parents seem to be upset about how the reform will affect public education and are joining us in the streets.

It’s important that the school becomes once again part of the community and that the community itself becomes part of the education system.

For example, since June 19 of this year many NGOS, be it local, national, or international, have shown their solidarity with the movement and rejected the government’s use of police repression.

As I mentioned, the support of the communities and parents’ groups is decisive to reinvigorating the movement and one has begun to see that in the recent highway blockades, maintained for many days by parents and community members.

That popular participation is what held back the federal police across the state. The state violence over the weekend has only released a bigger wave of support from local communities.

What you raised at the beginning, that one cannot isolate the teachers from the broader social context in Mexico, seems crucial. Even the OECD, whose statistics are trotted out frequently to describe the poor quality of education in Mexico, notes the statistical correlation between poverty and education outcomes in southern Mexico.

The notion that poorly administered teacher evaluations will solve this problem is laughable and that teachers are primarily to blame for poor education conditions in their communities absurd.

Precisely. One has to keep in mind the structural poverty in this country.

The education reform doesn’t address the physical conditions of public schools, classroom technology, continuous teacher training, nor the distinct pedagogies that might fit particular regional contexts throughout the country. For me poverty is the principle problem affecting the education system.

Fuente de la noticia: http://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/37639-mexicos-teachers-stand-up-against-the-violent-neoliberal-order

Fuente de la imagen: http://readersupportednews.org/images/stories/article_imgs21/021588-oacaca-062416.jpg

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Las elecciones provocaron dos renuncias (PRI, PRD) y una candidatura presidencial (PAN)

Por: Pedro Echeverria V.

1. PRI, PAN, PRD, firmaron con el presidente Peña Nieto un “Pacto por México” al inicio de su sexenio. Después de aprobar todas la “reformas estructurales” entraron en contradicciones pero conservaron el “pacto” porque el gobierno del PRI les siguió manteniendo a los partidos los subsidios y obsequios multimillonarios. Así que entre esos partidos sigue un acuerdo permanente en beneficio del sistema político de dominio capitalista. Los tres partidos (PRI, PAN, PRD y sus seguidores) son de derecha, conservadores, corruptos y privilegiados; pero en los procesos electorales juegan a la “oposición” para seguir engañando a los electores.

2. Esos partidos son garantes de la propiedad privada, de la acumulación de capital en pocas manos, de las leyes que amparan los negocios privados y garantizan la seguridad de ellos. El PAN y el PRD buscan derrotar al PRI para quedarse con los negocios del gobierno; no para enterrar el sistema de explotación que es el causante de la miseria, el hambre y la muerte. ¿Qué beneficios recibió el pueblo después de 12 años de gobiernos del PAN? ¿Qué mejoras a la población se han registrado con los gobiernos del PRD en varios estados? Por ello nosotros gritamos junto al pueblo en las calles: “Ni PRI, ni PAN, ni PRD, queremos a los trabajadores en el poder”.

3. En estas farsas electorales en medio de la gran miseria económica del pueblo, los votos se compran y se venden masivamente por unos cuantos pesos, con regalos, despensas, materiales de construcción y promesas. El pueblo aprovecha los periodos de campañas de todos los partidos para recibir algo de obsequios para mantener a la familia. A la hora de votar lo hace a favor de quien le dio más regalos porque sabe que todos los partidos y políticos son iguales, poseen el mismo pensamiento; así que más prácticos los electores buscan “quién les da más”. El gobierno y los partidos se aprovechan de esa realidad para usar como mercancía a los electores.

4. El panista Ricardo Anaya lleva muchos meses preparando su candidatura presidencial y con los resultados electorales a su partido, parece que ha reconfirmado y asegurado su candidatura; además su única competidora, la señora Zavala, es esposa de un expresidente asesino, el señor Calderón. Lo que nunca he entendido: ¿Cómo pueden ser tan cínicos los partidos y los políticos que después de gobernar, robar, reprimir, asesinar al pueblo, sigan apareciendo en la plaza pública como si no hubiera pasado nada? Así como los expresidentes de la República, los dirigentes del PRI, PAN, PRD, deberían estar en la cárcel por apoyar el sistema.

5. Manlio Fabio Beltrones, el presidente del PRI, renunció ayer lunes porque fue absolutamente derrotado por la unión del PAN/PRD. No le quedaba otra salida porque en todo el país se hablaba ya de su renuncia obligada. Por último hace unos cinco días renunció el presidente del PRD Agustín Basave porque el PRD se convirtió en simple apéndice del PAN. Con su actuación terminó de enterrar al PRD que de “socialdemócrata” se convirtió en derechista declarado. ¡Pobre PRD, se convirtió en una piltrafa de esas que les tiran a los animales para tragar! ¿Todavía le quedan militantes? ¿Qué esperan los bejaranos para salirse y recuperar su política?

6. Lo único que queda en el panorama electorero es el lópezobradorismo que este domingo 26 hará una manifestación en la ciudad de México. Ese mismo día se cumplirán 21 meses de la desaparición de los 43 estudiantes normalistas de Chiapas. Espero que la CNTE, los padres de los 43 y Morena pudieran coordinar un acto conjunto donde pudieran hablar las tres organizaciones y la gente que asista haga conciencia del significado de la unidad en la diversidad. Nadie se subordina a nadie y cada quien tiene el derecho de externar sus posiciones quizá cuidando no agredir. Pienso que es una oportunidad para comenzar un proceso de unidad que en parte podría ser anticapitalista.

7. Puta, si llegara a suceder esa coincidencia de actos, los medios de información, los empresarios, el gobierno y la misma embajada yanqui, pondrían el grito al cielo. Continuarían agudizando una gran campaña contra el Lópezobradorismo que de socialdemócrata se hace de izquierda y los maestros de la CNTE que por ese solo hecho se les acusaría de recibir dinero de López Obrador. Si esta alianza se logra pienso que los electricistas, mineros, telefonistas, zapatistas, grupos de la izquierda radical, comenzarían a buscar estrategias unitarias para fortalecer la lucha social en México. Entonces ahora sí el gobierno tendría que estar llamando a mesas de diálogo y no de monólogo.

Fuente:http://www.rebelion.org/noticia.php?id=213788

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