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Vietnan: Free secondary education a vital stepping stone

Vietnan/Enero de 2018/Fuente: Vietnam News

Resumen:

Hoàng Thị Thảo es un desertor. La última vez que asistió a la escuela, en octavo grado, fue hace 14 años, cuando tenía 14 años.

Pero Thảo nunca perdió su pasión por aprender y todavía lamenta la oportunidad perdida.

La joven mujer de la norteña provincia de Ninh Bình tuvo que abandonar el país para ofrecerle a sus tres hermanos menores la oportunidad de ir a la escuela porque sus padres eran demasiado pobres para poder pagar la escolarización de todos sus hijos.

Poco después de dejar la escuela, Thảo se mudó a la ciudad capital, Hà Nội, para trabajar y mantener a su familia en casa. Unos años más tarde, Thảo tuvo la suerte de ser admitido en un centro de capacitación de cocina de caridad en Hà Nội, donde se capacitó, de forma gratuita, para ser chef. Con su gran pasión por el aprendizaje y la estudiosa, Thảo fue una de las mejores estudiantes del centro, y ahora está trabajando como chef para un hotel de tres estrellas en Hà Nội.

Hoàng Thị Thảo is a dropout.

The last time she attended school, in eighth grade, was 14 years ago, when she was 14.

But Thảo never lost her passion for learning and still rues the missed opportunity.

The young woman from northern Ninh Bình Province had to drop out to give her three younger siblings a chance to go to school because her parents were too poor to afford schooling for all their children.

Soon after she left school, Thảo moved to the capital city, Hà Nội, to work and support her family back home. A few years later, Thảo was lucky to be admitted to a charity cooking training centre in Hà Nội, where she was trained, free of charge, to be a chef. With her strong passion for learning and studiousness, Thảo was one of the best students at the centre, and is now working as a chef for a three-star hotel in Hà Nội.

“I still wish to have a chance to continue my education. At that time, watching my friends go to school, all I could do was cry my heart out,” Thảo said.

“And although I could not go to school, I have tried to learn whenever I can, from friends, colleagues and from books,” she said.

Thảo is one among millions of children in the country who either don’t get a chance to attend school or are forced to drop out at an early age. And most are not as lucky as Thảo, who got the opportunity to get trained and find a stable job.

According to a UNICEF report, released in 2014, over 1.1 million children aged between 5 and 14 in Việt Nam were out of school, including those who’d never attended one and those who dropped out.

According to the Ministry of Education and Training, the percentage of children who attend but subsequently drop out of school tends to increase dramatically with age, from 0.2 per cent at 5 years (kindergarten) and 1.16 per cent at primary school age to16 per cent at 14 (secondary school age) and 39 per cent at 17 (high school age).

Poverty barrier

The UNICEF report analysed barriers and bottlenecks from both the demand side – children and their parents – and the supply side – the education system and related agencies at all levels.

The supply side barriers concerned bottlenecks related to infrastructure and resources, teachers, education management and other systemic issues such as learning programmes, data systems, governance, capacity and financing mechanisms.

On the demand side, poverty was a key barrier preventing children from getting access to proper education.

The out-of-school rate was highest among children with disabilities, children from poverty-stricken families and remote areas, ethnic minority children and children of migrants (from rural areas), according to the study.

The country’s 2014 population and housing survey also showed that the national secondary education graduation rate was low, at 29.5 per cent.

The 2002-2010 Living Standards Survey of the General Statistics Office of Việt Nam cited difficult circumstances and high costs as major reasons for children dropping out of primary school. The survey found that among 20 per cent of the population with the lowest incomes, 7.8 per cent of children 15 years old and above had never attended school, six times as high those among the 20 per cent higher income bracket.

Far-reaching proposal

As part of efforts to universalise education access, the Ministry of Education and Training has proposed free tuition for all public secondary schools.

At present, free tuition only applies to public primary schools.

The proposal is part of draft amendments to the Law on Education that the ministry has submitted to the Government.

Under this proposal, public schools will charge no tuition fees until students finish their secondary education (grade 6-9).

Nguyễn Đình Hương, former vice chairman of the National Assembly’s Committee for Culture, Education, Youth and Children, said it was time to universalise education through secondary education, adding that it was also a global trend.

“Children need to get (free) access to education until they finish their secondary school (grade 9) and it is better if they can do that until they finish the grade 10. It would equip the children with basic knowledge and skills, from that, they can continue higher education (if they can afford it) or choose vocational training to have a better future,” he said.

Nguyễn Quốc Vương, an education expert, said providing free tuition fee for students through secondary school would be a fulfilment of the responsibility and obligations of the State towards people as also the responsibility of a society as a whole.

“The current tuition fee level is affordable for many people, but there is a huge gap between different regions in Việt Nam, so it is still a barrier preventing many children from going to school,” he said.

The tuition fee for the 2017-2018 academic year is VNĐ110,000 (US$4.8) per month per student for secondary schools in urban areas, VNĐ55,000 in rural areas and VNĐ14,000 in mountainous areas, according to the education ministry.

According to a recent study carried out by the ministry covering 18 countries representing four continents – Asia, Europe, America and Africa – including low-income, middle-income and developed countries, 33 per cent provide free tuition for preschool education, 100 per cent for primary schools, 61 per cent for secondary schools and 44 per cent for high schools.

Vương, author of the book “What Việt Nam can learn from Japanese education”, said that in Japan, the idea of education universalisation was accepted very early. After the Second World War, equal education opportunity for all became the nucleus of Japanese education system.

In Japan, since 1947, students from grade 1 to 9 do not have to pay any tuition fee under its Fundamental Law of Education.

“Particularly worth noting is that Japan issues textbook free of charge to all students,” Vương said.

“Việt Nam can learn from Japan in effectively implementing the principle of equality in providing education opportunities,” he said.

Is it feasible?

Many people, including experts, have expressed concerns about the State being able to afford universalisation of secondary education in the country, given the context of State Budget overspending and the small portion typically allocated for education.

Ngô Văn Thịnh, deputy head of the ministry’s Department of Planning and Finance, said basing on the ministry’s initial calculations, State Budget spending on education would not increase by much if the policy was implemented.

It is estimated that the State will spend around VNĐ2 trillion ($89 million) per year to cover tuition fees for public secondary education.

The ministry would work with Ministry of Finance to build a plan to ensure enough funds to implement the policy if it was approved and would submit the plan to the Government and National Assembly for consideration, he told Tuổi trẻ (Youth) newspaper.

The policy was in line with the 2013 Resolution of the Party Central Committee on basically and comprehensively renewing education and training, he added.

To help ensure efficiency if the policy is approved, the ministry and local authorities would increase inspection and supervision, preventing illegal collection of other fees at schools and strictly punish violations, Thịnh said.

Education expert Vương noted that wastefulness and corruption still existed in the education sector. Many investment projects had proved ineffective and the management there was a lack of good management over the purchase of education equipment or infrastructure construction.

“If we review and have reasonable and effective inspection and supervision mechanism to prevent wastefulness, we would have enough funds to provide free tuition for students through secondary education,” he said.

Just a step

Providing secondary education for free will be a big step in improving access to basic education and training for all children, but more needs to be done if the country’s human resource quality is to improve and meet the demands of the fourth industrial revolution.

Việt Nam has provided free compulsory education for primary pupils for nearly 30 years, but the quality of the nation’s workforce has remained low.

According the 2014 population and housing survey done by the General Statistics Office of Việt Nam, over 82.8 per cent of workers aged 15 and older received no technical training.

The latest Global Competitiveness Report of the World Economic Forum released last September ranked Việt Nam 89 out of 137 surveyed countries in terms of education quality. Other countries in the region did better, like Singapore, ranked second, and Malaysia, 19.

Former NA deputy Hương said it was time for the education sector to upgrade its training curricula to mould learners into global citizens in the context of regional and global integration.

“Thailand, for example, embarked on a program in 2016 to ensure that all primary schoolchildren are able to speak enough English to handle everyday situations within 10 years,” he said.

Thailand’s target is to achieve greater integration with the ASEAN Community and to increase business, social, cultural and employment opportunities among Southeast Asian countries.

«Việt Nam also needs to attract more qualified teaching staff to help train high-quality human resources,» Hương said.

“It is essential to tailor research as well as teaching and learning for a more globalised world. A creative labour force has the most advantage nowadays, not low-skilled, cheap labour as in the past,” he said.

The draft amendments to the education law will be submitted to the National Assembly for discussion at its fifth session in May and is expected to be adopted at the sixth session in October.

Chef Thảo got the last word: “I hope that younger generations will have a chance to get full access to secondary education, not like me. If this happens, they will have better chances of enjoying a better future.”

Fuente: http://vietnamnews.vn/society/421590/free-secondary-education-a-vital-stepping-stone.html#EIH1okZGDYL5C6DD.97

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Primary school pupils in Singapore second in global reading literacy study

Singapur/Enero de 2018/Fuente: Straitstime

Resumen:

Los alumnos de la escuela primaria 4 en Singapur han quedado segundos en una prueba internacional que midió qué tan bien pueden leer, de 58 territorios.

Los resultados del estudio Progress in International Reading Literacy, que se publicó el mes pasado, también descubrieron que los alumnos superaron a sus compañeros en otros países en lectura y navegación de texto en línea.

Los alumnos de Singapur llegaron a la cima, superando otros 13 territorios, como los Estados Unidos, en la tarea en línea, lo que les obligó a responder preguntas relacionadas con la información en la Web.

Primary 4 pupils in Singapore have emerged second in an international testthat measured how well they can read, out of 58 territories.

The results of the Progress in International Reading Literacy Study, which was released last month, also found that pupils here outperformed their peers in other countries in reading and navigating online text.

Singapore pupils came up tops – surpassing 13 other territories such as the United States – in the online task, which required them to answer questions related to information on the Web.

This is the first time that the study – which has been administered every five years since 2001 – has included a component to assess how pupils understand online information, to capture the changing nature of how young people gather and process information in a digital age.

About 6,500 pupils from all 177 primary schools here took part in the test in 2016. More than 319,000 pupils worldwide took part.

Russia was top out of 58 education systems in this round, while Hong Kong was third, Ireland fourth and Finland fifth.

 Singapore was fourth out of 45 education systems previously in 2011.

The test, sponsored by the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement, evaluated pupils’ reading and comprehension skills, such as retrieving and connecting pieces of information, and making inferences from text.

Pupils were given two reading passages – narrative fiction as well as information-based texts such as news articles – and had to answer multiple-choice and written-response questions.

More than a quarter – or 29 per cent – of Singapore pupils achieved the “advanced” benchmark – the highest level of attainment in the 2016 study, similar to 2011’s results. The international proportion of such pupils was only 10 per cent.

The results mean that the pupils did well in higher-order skills such as interpreting and evaluating information.

The Ministry of Education (MOE) attributed Singapore’s improvement in literacy performance to changes in the way the English language has been taught in schools in the past decade.

These include the introduction of the Strategies for English Language Learning and Reading (Stellar) in primary schools.

Under the Stellar programme, grammar and vocabulary are taught through children’s stories and text, instead of textbooks and worksheets.

Mr Sng Chern Wei, MOE’s deputy director-general of education (curriculum), said: «We are heartened that the curricular strategies – such as Stellar – which are engaging and factor in our local diverse context, have shown success.

«Our students have displayed stronger literacy as well as communication and higher-order reading skills, which will ensure they are confident and well positioned to navigate today’s ever-changing society.»

Weaker pupils showed a marked improvement as well. Only 3 per cent of pupils here performed below the “low” benchmark in reading in 2016, compared with 14 per cent across all participating education systems.

In 2011, Singapore’s proportion of such pupils was also 3 per cent, but the figure was 10 per cent in 2001.

Ms Sofia Gita Parkash, head of the English language department at Fairfield Methodist Primary School, said that Singapore has a high standard of English language, and students benefit from a strong national curriculum.

She said her school is constantly thinking of ways to imbue pupils with a love for reading, especially among those who may not have been exposed to the English language at home, as well as improving their comprehension and speaking skills.

In its daily Buddy Reading Programme, upper primary pupils pair up with Primary 1 pupils who are weaker in the language, to listen to them read storybooks, help them along the way and explain the meaning of certain words if necessary.

Fairfield Methodist Primary School’s Buddy Reading Programme

The school has also started to train selected pupils to be reporters and ambassadors for their school, with the aim of getting them to use communication skills in authentic settings.

This means hosting school visitors and leading them on tours of the school compound, learning to use a software to put together news video clips, and writing for a school publication.

About 120 pupils are currently part of this programme, which started three to four years ago.

Ms Parkash said that communication skills are important when it comes to the English language. «We’re not just concerned about the conventions of grammar. We want pupils to learn how to greet people, how to code switch, how to react to different situations, cultures and contexts.»

The Progress in International Reading Literacy Study also found that parents play an important role in their children’s reading literacy.

Children whose parents engaged them frequently in activities such as reading or talking when they were younger, or sang to them, did better than their peers who did not get the same level of exposure, even if they came from similar home backgrounds.

Primary 6 pupil Nathaniel Tang said that his father, a 44-year-old manager in a telecommunications company, read picture books to him every day when he was younger.

«Now it’s become a habit. Whenever I have free time, I will read,» said the 11-year-old, who likes reading novels, National Geographic and military magazines.

Similarly, Ms Kam Sook Wei has exposed her Primary 2 daughter and Kindergarten 2 son to a daily routine of reading from as young as four months old.

“I read to them every night, whether or not they were listening. At that time (four months), it was more about voice recognition,” said the 35-year-old who runs her own business.

“In the car, I also play audio books, turn on the BBC, and we have books in the car for them to read.”

But beyond doing well in comprehension and language tests, more can be done to encourage children to be spontaneous in situations, said Ms Kam.

“I find that our children don’t do very well in answering off-the-cuff questions,» she said.

Fuente: http://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/education/primary-school-pupils-in-singapore-take-second-place-in-global-benchmarking

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China: China Education Resources Inc. Soccer Program Update

China/Enero de 2018/Fuente: Nasdaq

Resumen:

China Education Resources, Inc. («CER») (TSX-V: CHN) (OTC: CHNUF), una compañía de tecnología de la información con tecnología líder de sistemas inteligentes y contenidos para proporcionar aprendizaje en línea / fuera de línea, cursos de capacitación y redes sociales para maestros, estudiantes y profesionales de la educación, hoy ofrece a los accionistas e inversionistas una actualización de su programa de fútbol.

Además de su comunicado de prensa del 6 de diciembre de 2017, CER está trabajando en un programa de entrenamiento de fútbol para niños. Sobre la base de los productos y contenidos de educación de fútbol existentes de CER, CER ha alquilado un espacio de 2,900 pies cuadrados en un centro comercial para comenzar su programa de entrenamiento de fútbol para niños. El programa ofrecerá entrenamiento de fútbol cara a cara junto con la plataforma de entrenamiento de fútbol en línea de CER con contenidos de video y la interacción en línea / fuera de línea entre los estudiantes, entrenadores y padres.

China Education Resources, Inc. («CER») (TSX-V:CHN) (OTC:CHNUF), an ed-tech company with leading technology of intelligent system and contents to provide online/offline learning, training courses and social media for teachers, students and education professionals, today provides shareholders and investors with an update on its soccer program.

Further to its press release of December 6, 2017, CER is working on an indoor kids soccer training program. Building upon CER’s existing soccer education products and contents, CER has rented a 2,900 square feet space in a shopping mall to start its indoor kids soccer training program. The program will offer face to face soccer training together with CER’s online soccer training platform with video contents and online/offline interaction among students, coaches and parents.

Shopping malls in big cities of China now house early-stage educational institutes that offer classes covering every conceivable subject, ranging from English language to arts. According to research reports, the early-stage education market is still nascent in China, with 2017 sales revenue expected to top $30 billion USD. «Asian parents spend seven times more money on their kids’ education than American parents do. Connecting users and teachers through the internet is another way to solve the imbalance in the educational resource distribution.» industry observers said.

The Central Government of China is in the process of implementing national soccer plan with the aim of popularizing soccer knowledge and skills, developing soccer interests through organizing soccer activities on campus in various forms, and supporting family -oriented social soccer activities. The Government also encourages in-depth integration of internet technology with soccer education, with a focus on mobile internet, e-commerce, data, new technology and new industry; supporting the development of soccer mobile applications, internet and mobile phone soccer games, soccer theme animation and film and television works.

Without a doubt, there is a huge soccer market in China, and we believe soccer education has a great potential. We are pleased to have made progress on our soccer program and will continue to update shareholders on CER’s future development.

In collaboration with China’s education administrators and experts, China Education Resources has been helping to transform the curriculum of the world’s largest educational system. Recognizing the need to address education reform changes, China Education Resources has created educational tools and curriculum for China’s entire kindergarten through twelfth grade system. The Company is playing an integral part in transforming China’s educational system through helping to convert the existing educational system from a memory-based learning system to a creative thinking and interactive approach. Presently, China Education Resources has over 1 million kindergartens through twelfth grade teachers registered through its Web portal. For more information, please visit www.chinaeducationresources.com or call (604) 331-2388.

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The TSX Venture Exchange has not reviewed, and does not accept, responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of the contents of this press release.

Fuente: http://www.nasdaq.com/press-release/china-education-resources-inc-soccer-program-update-20180122-00571

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Libro: El árabe del futuro 3 (comic)

Reseña: Riad Sattouf expone en el superéxito editorial francés ‘El árabe del futuro’ su infancia en Oriente Medio con un padre universitario y una madre francesa condicionados por su particular ambiente. En la tercera entrega el pequeño rubio de pelo rizado intenta encajar con el resto de chavales de su edad al tiempo que intenta comprender un mundo adulto con voces muy diferentes.

Link de descarga: http://salamandra.info/sites/default/files/books/press/dossier-arabe_del_futuro.pdf

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UNICEF pide invertir en los tres millones de niños a los que la guerra en Irak ha dejado sin educación

Irak/22 de Enero de 2018/Europa Press

El director regional del Fondo de Naciones Unidas para la Infancia (UNICEF), Geert Cappelaere, ha pedido a los donantes que se reunirán entre el 12 y el 14 de febrero en Kuwait para discutir la aportación de fondos a Irak que inviertan en la educación de los más de tres millones de niños que no han podido formarse en estos años de guerra contra el Estado Islámico. Cappelaere ha indicado que el conflicto armado ha sido especialmente devastador para los niños.

Cappelaere ha indicado que el conflicto armado ha sido especialmente devastador para los niños. Más de cuatro millones de ellos se han visto afectados por la «extrema violencia». Solo durante el año pasado, murieron 270 menores a causa de los combates. «Les han robado su infancia (…) y tendrán que lidiar con las cicatrices físicas y psicológicas de por vida», ha lamentado.

En Mosul, la capital iraquí del ‘califato’, escenario de «una destrucción inenarrable», Cappelaere ha visitado uno de los colegios reconstruidos por UNICEF y ha podido hablar con Noor, de 12 años, en su nueva clase. «Me ha contado cómo su familia se quedó en la ciudad incluso durante el auge de los combates. Me habló del miedo que tenía. Ha perdido tres años de colegio y ahora está trabajando duro para recuperarlos. Está aprendiendo inglés», ha relatado.

El caso de Noor no es único, ha recalcado. «El conflicto y la pobreza han interrumpido la educación de tres millones de niños en todo Irak. Algunos nunca han estado en un aula», ha denunciado y ha considerado que, justo ahora cuando Irak se prepara para la reconstrucción, «no hay mejor momento para priorizar el interés de los niños».

Cappelaere se ha mostrado optimista porque, a pesar de que «la acción del hombre ha probado una y otra vez en Mosul y en otras partes de Irak su masivo poder de destrucción, pero un poder mucho mayor ha dejado una impresión más profunda: la determinación a reconstruir y seguir con la vida».
UNICEF pide invertir en los tres millones de niños a los que la guerra en Irak ha dejado sin educación

«También me reuní con Samir, un profesor jubilado y desplazado que sobrevivió a los fuertes combates. Lleno de esperanza y vida, habló de la capacidad de los niños para reponerse y superar la devastación de la guerra a través del colegio y el juego. Samir es un testimonio de que no debería haber una generación perdida en Irak», ha señalado.

Cappelaere ha considerado que la conferencia de donantes «es otra oportunidad única para que el Gobierno de Irak y la comunidad internacional fortalezcan su compromiso con los niños en Irak» con «medidas concretas». «Invertir en ellos ahora es invertir en Irak», ha afirmado.

Fuente: http://www.europapress.es/internacional/noticia-unicef-pide-invertir-tres-millones-ninos-guerra-irak-dejado-educacion-20180119155458.html

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Encuesta muestra que actividades extraescolares representan un tercio de gastos educativos de una familia china

China/22 de Enero de 2018/Xinhua

 En las familias chinas con estudiantes de escuelas primarias y secundarias un tercio de los gastos educativos se destinó en 2017 a las actividades educativas extraescolares, de acuerdo con una encuesta publicada hoy lunes por el periódico China Youth Daily.

Esta educación incluye los productos o servicios educativos adquiridos a instituciones o individuos que no son escuelas con el propósito de desarrollar los intereses de los estudiantes o mejorar su rendimiento académico.

En las familias urbanas, las actividades extraescolares representaron un 42,2 por ciento del gasto educativo total de una familia en 2017, mientras que la cifra fue del 16,6 por ciento en las áreas rurales.

De acuerdo con el estudio, un 47,2 por ciento de todos los estudiantes de escuelas primarias y secundarias tenían actividades extraescolares el año pasado, con unos costos promedios de alrededor de 5.616 yuanes (870 dólares) por alumno.

Se estima que este sector superó los 458.000 millones de yuanes en 2017.

La encuesta fue llevada a cabo entre 40.011 hogares de 29 regiones de nivel provincial de China.

Fuente: http://spanish.xinhuanet.com/2018-01/15/c_136897446.htm

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ProFuturo lleva educación digital de calidad a 5,6 millones de niños de 23 países

Asia-África-Latinoamérica / 21 de enero de 2018 / Autor: Redacción / Fuente: El Economista

El objetivo para 2018 es que 7,7 millones de niños se hayan beneficiado.

«Si se aprovecha de la manera correcta y es accesible a escala universal, la tecnología digital puede cambiar la situación de los niños que han quedado atrás –ya sea debido a la pobreza, el origen étnico, el género, la discapacidad, el desplazamiento o el aislamiento geográfico– al conectarlos a numerosas oportunidades y dotarles de las aptitudes que necesitan para tener éxito en un mundo digital. Pero a menos que ampliemos el acceso, la tecnología digital puede crear nuevas brechas que impidan que los niños alcancen todo su potencial». Así arranca el último informe de Unicef sobre el «Estado Mundial de la Infancia 2017» publicado hace pocas semanas.

Contra estas brechas educativa y digital enfoca sus esfuerzos ProFuturo en 23 países de África, Asia y Latinoamérica desde julio de 2016. A cierre de 2017 son ya 5,6 millones los niños que están teniendo la oportunidad de usar herramientas y contenidos digitales para enriquecer su aprendizaje.

ProFuturo es uno de los proyectos de educación digital más grandes del mundo, que nace de un deseo compartido por Fundación Telefónica y Fundación Bancaria «la Caixa» de que todos los niños y niñas del mundo tengan las mismas oportunidades, y cuyo reto es reducir la brecha educativa proporcionando una enseñanza digital de calidad en entornos vulnerables. Con su labor, ProFuturo aspira a convertirse en un referente de la transformación e innovación educativa mejorando la enseñanza de millones de niños a través de la tecnología.

Tal y como recoge el último informe de UNICEF «Estado Mundial de la infancia 2017», el 29% de los jóvenes entre 15 y 24 años (346 millones de personas) no tienen acceso a Internet. Este dato se acentúa en el continente africano, donde un 60% de los jóvenes no puede conectarse a la Red, un porcentaje que en Europa se reduce hasta el 4%. Además, el 56% de los sitios web del mundo están en inglés, lo que provoca que los niños que solo hablen lenguas minoritarias, o sin recursos para aprender este segundo idioma, no puedan encontrar contenidos relevantes para su educación.

La propuesta educativa de ProFuturo tiene como sellos de identidad la calidad, la sostenibilidad a lo largo del tiempo y el acceso desde todos los rincones, ya sean zonas vulnerables, rurales, remotas o en situación de conflicto o crisis humanitaria. Para lograrlo, su solución educativa se modula y se adapta a cualquier entorno y contexto, disponga o no de conectividad, y está disponible en español, francés, inglés y portugués, las lenguas oficiales donde está presente el proyecto. Todo ello con el objetivo de proporcionar la mejor educación a 10 millones de niños, que actualmente están en riesgo de exclusión social, en 2020.

Según datos ofrecidos por Unicef y Unesco, el 12% de las personas más pobres (más de 170 millones) saldrían de su situación si todos los estudiantes de sus países tuvieran la escolarización básica. Además, un niño nacido de una madre que sabe leer, tiene un 50% más de posibilidades de sobrevivir pasados los 5 años.

El 4º de los Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible propone al mundo trabajar para garantizar una educación inclusiva, equitativa y de calidad y promover oportunidades de aprendizaje durante toda la vida para todos. En esta tarea César Alierta, presidente de ProFuturo y presidente de Fundación Telefónica, lidera este área de trabajo como Asesor Global del Fondo ODS para la Educación Digital y Desarrollo Sostenible de Naciones Unidas.

Es evidente que un cambio en la educación es hoy más que nunca una necesidad y, por este motivo, con su labor a través del ambicioso proyecto ProFuturo, Fundación Telefónica y Fundación Bancaria «la Caixa» ponen al servicio de esta causa su experiencia para transformar la educación en los entornos más vulnerables. Eligen hacerlo a través de la educación digital, por su experiencia con las nuevas tecnologías, y porque la tecnología permite llegar a más personas en menor tiempo adaptando y personalizando la enseñanza a cada entorno de aprendizaje.

Desde su nacimiento en 2016, casi 6 millones de niños de 23 países han podido acceder a un sistema educativo de calidad y adaptado a sus necesidades gracias a ProFuturo. El objetivo para 2018, es que 7,7 millones de niños se beneficien de esta iniciativa.

Fuente de la Noticia:

http://www.eleconomista.es/ecoaula/noticias/8872507/01/18/ProFuturo-lleva-educacion-digital-de-calidad-a-56-millones-de-ninos-de-23-paises.html

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