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Japan: Explore more efforts to stop school bullying

Asia/ Japan/ 23.07.2019/ Source: www.japantimes.co.jp.

Six years after a law on measures to stop bullying in schools was introduced, school officials and boards of education continue to come under criticism for inappropriate responses to bullying cases that have prompted the victims to take their own lives. We still see cases in which the lessons from the 2011 suicide of a junior high school boy in Otsu, Shiga Prefecture, as a result of bullying by his classmates — which led to enactment of the legislation — do not appear to have been learned. Attempts by lawmakers to give more teeth to the efforts to stop bullying have stalled. It’s time to review if the anti-bullying measures under the law are serving their intended purpose.

In early June, a 14-year-old student at a junior high school in the city of Gifu fell to his death from a condominium after leaving a note hinting that he had been bullied by others at school. About a month earlier, a classmate handed a memo to their teacher charging that the victim was being bullied by other students. The teacher cautioned the students identified as bullies, but he did not share the information with senior officials at the school.

Concluding that the problem was resolved, the teacher then “lost” the memo — it was likely shredded. After the boy’s death, the school’s principal said the tragedy could have been prevented if the information about his bullying had been shared so the school could take organized action, and accused the teacher of not properly addressing the accusation made by the classmate.

The mother of a 13-year-old girl at a city-run junior high school in Amagasaki, Hyogo Prefecture, who committed suicide in December 2017 filed a damages suit against the municipal government last month, charging that the school neglected to take adequate steps against bullying of her daughter by fellow students. A third-party probe launched by the city’s board of education concluded in March that bullying by her classmates led to the girl’s suicide — and that a teacher in charge of her class had failed to take action when she complained of the bullying in a school survey.

On the other hand, many families of bullying victims who killed themselves are left dissatisfied with such probes by boards of education and file for re-investigation of their cases. In some of the cases, the conclusion of the initial investigation that there was no causal link between bullying and the victim’s suicide has been overturned, with school officials accused of covering up evidence of bullying.

The 2013 law to promote measures against bullying was enacted based on lessons from the 2011 suicide of the Otsu schoolboy, in which his school came under fire for not intervening to stop the boy’s torment even though its officials were aware of the problem, and for refusing to accept that the bullying cornered the victim into taking his own life.

The law requires teachers and officials to detect and stop bullying in its early stages. When bullying has resulted in “grave situations” in which the victim has suffered severe physical or psychological damage and has been forced into an extended absence from school, the school and local board of education are mandated to launch an independent probe and report relevant facts to the victims and their family.

As the education ministry urged schools nationwide to take steps against even minor cases of bullying, to prevent them from developing into serious situations, the number of bullying cases reported by schools has significantly increased. However, there remains a large number of cases in which the system to combat bullying under the law does not appear to be functioning as intended — as illustrated by the criticism often hurled against schools and boards of education by victims’ families.

To beef up the effectiveness of the anti-bullying measures, a group of lawmakers across party lines last year drafted an amendment to the 2013 law with an added provision that teachers and officials who learn of bullying at their schools but fail to take action would be subject to disciplinary punishment. In another draft released in April, however, that provision had been dropped out of concern that such requirements would place too heavy a burden on teachers and officials. When that angered families of bullying victims who had committed suicide, discussions on possible revisions to the law ground to a halt.

Whether or not the disciplinary measures are appropriate, it seems clear that serious cases of bullying continue to plague our schools, leading many victims into taking their own lives, despite the legislation that sought to prevent tragedies like the Otsu case. All parties involved need to think about what is lacking in the current efforts to stop bullying and help the victims, and explore what more can be done.

Source of the notice: https://www.japantimes.co.jp/opinion/2019/07/19/editorials/explore-efforts-stop-school-bullying/#.XTdugOgzbIU

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Nativos de Brasil crean protocolo de consulta sobre la Amazonia

América del Sur/ Brasil/ 23.07.2019/ Fuente: www.telesurtv.net.

«El Estado tiene el deber de consultar a los pueblos indígenas antes de que entre en sus territorios», indicó el vicepresidente de la Asociación Hutukara Yanomami, Dário Yanomami.

Comunidades indígenas de los estados de Roraima y Amazonas (Brasil) elaboraron un documento que establece cómo desean ser consultados sobre los proyectos en la Amazonia.

El vicepresidente de la Asociación Hutukara Yanomami, Dário Yanomami, indicó que elprotocolo es una forma de recordar a la sociedad no solo la necesidad de consultar a los pueblos, sino también los procedimientos a seguir en cada situación.

“Esto significa que el Gobierno brasileño debe reconocer el protocolo de consulta, (entender) lo que piensan los yanomami y cómo funcionan. Si algún proyecto quiere explotar en nuestro territorio, por ejemplo, el protocolo se asemeja al derecho de consulta», dijo.

«El Estado tiene el deber de consultar a los pueblos indígenas antes de que (nadie) entre en sus territorios», agregó Yanomami.

La deforestación en el Amazonia brasileño ha aumentado durante el Gobierno de Bolsonaro. | Foto: TRT

La elaboración de este documento tiene en cuenta el avance de grupos económicos en tierras  indígenas, como empresas minera, madereras y de agronegocios por lo que la comunidad nativa insta con este texto a respetar sus decisiones y pensamientos a través de este protocolo.

El documento llamado protocolo de consulta fue elaborado durante cuatro años entre agencias públicas y se archivó en instituciones como la Fiscalía Federal, la Secretaría Especial de Salud Indígena y los ministerios de Medio Ambiente y de Educación, la Fundación Nacional del Indio y en la presidencia de la República.

Desde que llegó Jair Bolsonaro, el pasado 1 de enero de 2019, a la Presidencia los yanomami así como otros grupos étnicos, temen el riesgo de las normas de protección para los pueblos tradicionales.

En el mes de marzo, el Gobierno de Bolsonaro manifestó la posibilidad que Brasilse retire del acuerdo de la Organización Internacional del Trabajo (OIT), lo que pondría a las comunidades en un área más insegura con respecto a la garantía de los derechos de los indígenas.

Fuente de la noticia: https://www.telesurtv.net/news/brasil-indigenas-protocolo-consulta-amazonia-20190723-0010.html

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Australia: Print Email Facebook Twitter More ANALYSIS The reason NSW has more selective schools than other states combined

Oceania/ Australia/ 23.07.2019/By: Craig Campbell/ Source: www.abc.net.au.

New South Wales Premier Gladys Berejiklian made a «captain’s call» in recent months that raised the ire of many parents, teachers and education groups. She announced NSW would build a 49th selective school. It will be the first new fully selective school in the state in 25 years.

Selective schools are public schools that take high-achieving students. They are meant to offer opportunities for any higher achiever, regardless of social class, but research has consistently shown a high proportion of students in selective schools are from more advantaged households.

Despite this, NSW has 48 fully or partially selective schools, which is more than all other states combined. Victoria, for instance, has only four. This is because, over the past 150 years, NSW has responded to the demand for public secondary schooling differently from the rest of Australia.

A history of Australia’s public schools

Australian states have distinct histories when it comes to public secondary education. NSW began such schooling in the 1880s and Victoria not until just before World War I. Queensland also held back founding public high schools, due to the earlier foundation of state grammar schools.

In Victoria there was some successful early opposition to government secondary schooling. The private, then church, colleges were the only available schools for most of the wealthy and professional middle class. Victoria developed a pattern of non-government school loyalty.

By contrast, the middle class in NSW used public secondary education from the late 19th century. Schools such as Fort Street (1849), Sydney Girls and Sydney Boys High School (1883), North Sydney Girls (1914) and North Sydney Boys High School (1915), and later Hurlstone Agricultural and James Ruse Agricultural School (1959), were academically selective from the beginning. They were meritocratic and hardly accessible to everyone.PHOTO: Schools like Sydney Girls High School, established in 1883, were selective from the beginning. (NSW State Archives)

In the 1890s, state Labor parties campaigned for greater educational opportunity for working-class youth and higher, and technical education for youth generally. As demand rose for universal secondary schooling, a parallel system was established from the 1920s for the «less clever» and the «less likely to succeed» with academic subjects.

So central, home-science and junior technical schools were established. These attempted to meet the assumed vocational aspirations of working-class youth (home-making and domestic service for girls, of course). This was the beginning of the great age of vocational guidance, usually based on intelligence tests.

Schools were differentiated, based on high or low IQs. This system gained criticism in the late 20th century for trapping children in educational streams that determined narrow futures. With the economy expanding after World War II, pressure built for more schools and secondary schooling that opened, rather than closed, opportunities.

This led to the introduction of comprehensive secondary schools. These would take in all young people from a defined geographical area (usually zoned) regardless of students’ prior accomplishments at primary school.

In NSW, the director of education, Harold Wyndham, released a 1957 report that recommended comprehensive secondary schools replace the previous differentiated system. All high schools were to be turned into comprehensives.

Through the Wyndham Scheme in the early 1960s, NSW was an early adopter of the comprehensive ideal. The technical schools were subsequently closed. There was also the possibility NSW would no longer have any selective high schools (public) at all, unlike Victoria with its continuing dual system of academically oriented high schools, and technical schools.

But the Wyndham Plan didn’t suit everyone. Old scholar and parent communities associated with the inner-city selective high schools, such as Fort Street, fought hard against their schools turning into comprehensives. Such schools had educated a large proportion of the professional middle class— proportionately more than similar schools in Victoria.

As the Wyndham Plan was progressively implemented in the 1960s, many of the high schools that had selective entrance, including Newcastle High for example, were converted into comprehensive schools. But not all. A rump of selectives survived, usually close to inner Sydney.

Fort Street High, the four single-sex Sydney and North Sydney high schools and the agricultural high schools, James Ruse and Hurlstone, formed an institutional base from which new selective establishments could be justified in the 1990s.

Why the small group of selective schools survived

In the 1970s and 1980s, two arguments shored up the acceptability of the surviving selectives. First, there were too few selective schools to affect the effectiveness of the comprehensive schools. The latter could attract, keep and promote opportunity for the academically able.

Second, the examination results of the selective schools brought distinction to the public education system. It was in the interest of public education that the «best» schools in NSW were public.

In 1988 the NSW Greiner Liberal-National government’s education minister, Terry Metherell, saw an injustice. Why should the mainly middle-class and professional families of the gentrifying inner city and suburbs have access to selective high schools that others in the outer suburbs did not?

He decided that NSW needed more selective schools, at least across the outer suburbs of Sydney and in Newcastle and Wollongong. So, the Wyndham comprehensive project came to a halt. New selective schools were founded, usually through converting former comprehensive schools.

When the Carr Labor government came to power in 1995, it was too late for the democratic vision of the comprehensive high school. The Carr government’s contribution to selection in public education was to stream several comprehensive high schools as partially selective.

Not only would there be selective schools, but separated, selective streams would be created in new dual-purpose schools. For example, Newtown Performing Arts High School had a selective entrance stream, but also enrolled local students in its comprehensive stream.

Historically, the professional and aspiring middle classes have been the most successful in managing their children in ways that ensured their access to and success in academically selective schools.

With the rise in youth unemployment since the late 1970s, the anxieties associated with finding a school that may advantage a child have heightened, initially for the middle classes but increasingly for all.

More recently, traditional Anglo-Australian users of NSW selective schools have been losing the competition to migrant families, many of these from south and east Asia, who have been even more determined for their children to gain selective places.

Whether the young people come from migrant families or other groups, the students in such schools and streams usually come to expect they will enter the more prestigious universities.

A market of schools has been fostered since the 1980s, as federal governments have deliberately increased the number of non-government schools and made access financially easier for parents. State governments have re-introduced differentiation in the public school sector (sports, language, performing arts and visual arts high schools, for instance.)

The ideal of the comprehensive school — a common school with a common curriculum for all youth in a community — has not been sustained. Many so-called comprehensive public high schools in high-unemployment areas have neither sustained enrolments nor a broad or comprehensive curriculum.

The survival of a small group of selective schools in NSW, with strategic and loyal support from left and right in politics and society, enabled the selective system’s rapid expansion from the 1980s, especially as public policy responded to new enthusiasm for markets — not only in schools.

Source of the notice: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-07-22/why-nsw-has-the-most-selective-schools/11330424

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Maestros chilenos en consulta nacional sobre continuación de huelga

América del Sur/ Chile/ 22.07.2019/ Fuente: www.prensa-latina.cu.

 

El Colegio de Profesores de Chile realizará hoy una consulta con sus más de 50 mil afiliados para decidir si continúan un paro nacional que este lunes cumple 49 días.
Esta votación fue el principal acuerdo de una asamblea realizada el miércoles último con más de 200 delegados de todo el país, la cual fue convocada para definir nuevas estrategias para mantener la huelga iniciada el 3 de junio.

Los participantes deberán votar por una de dos opciones: deponer el paro y delegar en la directiva del gremio la continuidad de las conversaciones con el Ministerio de Educación para conseguir una solución positiva a todas sus demandas, o continuar la paralización de actividades.

Analistas han especulado sobre la existencia de contradicciones y pugnas al interior de la directiva del gremio, lo que ha sido desmentido por sus máximos dirigentes y por los propios educadores, que en conjunto se plegaron a la decisión de la mayoría y continuaron la huelga.

Sin embargo, la situación se hace difícil porque la paralización de las clases en el país por las vacaciones de invierno invisibiliza la huelga y reduce la presión que esta puede ejercer sobre el gobierno, que parece apostar al desgaste lógico de tantos días de movilizaciones.

Con respecto a la votación de hoy, Mario Aguilar, presidente del Colegio de Profesores, explicó que los colegas podrán expresar su opinión respecto a deponer el paro indefinido y mandatar al directorio a elaborar un nuevo plan de acción para seguir luchando por los temas que no están resueltos.

Advirtió que pudieran llevarse a cabo distintos tipos de acciones judiciales, administrativas y legislativas para obtener respuestas a sus demandas.

‘Si la mayoría decidiera que siga el paro, eso significa hacer todas las acciones para que esto se reimpulse y superar el agotamiento que es normal en siete semanas’, puntualizó en declaraciones a Radio Cooperativa.

Uno de los puntos más importantes que aun no tiene respuesta es el pago por su preparación profesional a las educadoras de la enseñanza especial y de párvulos, lo cual es considerado como una discriminación porque al resto de los docentes sí se les reconoce.

Tampoco las autoridades educacionales han transigido en el reclamo de los maestros para que no se excluya del currículo obligatorio del nivel medio las asignaturas de Historia, Educación Física y Artes, medida muy criticada por pedagogos, intelectuales, políticos de oposición, padres y alumnos.

Fuente de la noticia: https://www.prensa-latina.cu/index.php?o=rn&id=292433&SEO=maestros-chilenos-en-consulta-nacional-sobre-continuacion-de-huelga
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Australia: Online programs changing literacy education

Oceania/ Australia/ 22.07.2019/ Source: au.educationhq.com.

Technology is playing a significant role in teaching literacy, with online education programs gaining increasing recognition and presence in schools

LiteracyPlanet, a comprehensive program which works alongside traditional teaching methods, is seeing encouraging results from school users. Students are seen to build confidence in their literacy skills after using the program, particularly when they’ve started below their grade standard.

The Queensland-based company will demonstrate the program within The Education Show at the National Education Summit, from Friday 30 August and Saturday 31 August 2019.

Educators will have a chance to try Word Mania at the Melbourne event, based on one of LiteracyPlanet’s most popular exercises.

Education events are welcome opportunities for Literacy Planet to meet with educators in the field and discuss ways they can further support the development of English literacy in Australia. LiteracyPlanet CEO Adam McArthur says they are looking forward to sharing some of the program’s latest updates which highlight the benefits of using technology in education at the National Education Summit.

“Technology can play a significant role in teaching literacy. The ability to save time and differentiate between students of different abilities easily is a huge benefit of using programs such as ours. LiteracyPlanet gives teachers the power to create elegant lesson plans and intervention programs, so they can spend less time planning and more time teaching,” LiteracyPlanet CEO Adam McArthur said.

Through their work with schools around Australia, LiteracyPlanet has seen firsthand the emerging challenges in teaching spelling and literacy.

“Many schools are facing challenges in teaching students who have a diverse range of literacy skills, which can be a difficult, time-consuming task for teachers when using traditional methods.

“At LiteracyPlanet, we’re seeing results from our schools that are very encouraging. Our program gives teachers the ability to easily differentiate between students, see their results and put in place remediation or intervention programs. This approach greatly benefits the student and saves teachers a lot of time,” McArthur said.

LiteracyPlanet will participate within The Education Show, a free expo and key event at the National Education Summit, an innovative professional development event for principals, school leaders and educators from K-12.

Held at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre, the Show features 100+ exhibitors showcasing the latest cutting-edge learning and teaching resources along with programs, support services and technology to educators from across Australia. Visitors can also attend the Free Education Program, as well as the Free Spotlight Stage where exhibitors will provide in depth information about their service, program or resource.

To register for the free expo at The Education Show, visittheeducationshow.com.au

The Education Show

When: Friday 30 August – Saturday 31 August 2019

Where: Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre

More Info: http://www.theeducationshow.com.au

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/theeducationshowau

Source of the article: https://au.educationhq.com/news/61666/online-programs-changing-literacy-education/

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Programas de la 71 Asamblea y Conferencia Mundial de la OMEP

Centro América/ Panamá/ 22.07.2019/ Fuente: www.facebook.com.

@omeppty acogiéndose a la Ley 10 del 24 de junio de 1992, Gaceta Oficial No22,068 de 1 de julio de 1992 “por la cual se adopta la educación ambiental como una estrategia nacional para conservar y desarrollar los recursos naturales y preservar el ambiente”. Y con base en La serie de normas ISO 14000 es un conjunto de normas que cubre aspectos del ambiente, de productos y organizaciones, destacando la Norma ISO 14001, un estándar internacional de gestión ambiental publicado en 1996, tras el éxito de la serie de normas ISO 9000 para sistemas de gestión de la calidad. Por la cual se les informa a todos los participantes del#omepworldcongress2019#omepworldconference2019 que los programas del congreso se encuentran en formato digital, por lo que los invitamos a descargar los mismos en sus dispositivos electrónicos o móviles. De igual manera en el congreso contaremos con pantallas informativas acerca de la distribución de las conferencias e información de los lideres #OMEP

Descargar programa: www.omeppanama.com

Fuente de la noticia: https://www.facebook.com/omepty/photos/a.2130073617285841/2134182733541596/?type=3&theater

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OMEP América Latina: realizó su primer encuentro en el marco de la Asamblea Mundial 2019 en Panamá

Centro América/ Panamá/ 22.07.2019/ Fuente: www.facebook.com.

La  Reunión América Latina: se inició con unas palabras de apertura de  Ulina Mapp, Presidenta de OMEP Panamá y
Mercedes Mayol Lassalle, Vicepresidenta de OMEP América Latina. Hubo 46 participantes, entre Presidentas, vicepresidentas y representantes de los Comités así como observadores de la región.  Se socializaron los informes anuales por cada comité presente, en el marco del plan de acción de Praga 2018-2019, dando paso a experiencias relevantes de Ecuador, Argentina, Perú, Bolivia, Colombia, Uruguay, Chile, Venezuela, Cuba y Panamá. Y se presentó Paraguay, quien este año se postula como comité preparatorio.

En la gestión de la Vicepresidenta regional, Mercedes Mayol Lassalle se han extendido el número de comités, en este sentido, presentó una síntesis de los informes presentados, reseñando los avances y el despliegue creativo de los planes, proyectos y programas  en América Latina, evidenciados en los informes, así como el compromiso de todes, un aspecto común en la diversidad de experiencias.

 

El lunes 22 y martes 23 de julio se realizará la Asamblea Mundial de OMEP y el 24, 25 y 26 será la Conferencia Internacional de OMEP. Estaremos compartiendo los avances día a día!

Fuente de la noticia: https://www.facebook.com/OMEPAmericaLatina/photos/pcb.2274340389546814/2274335069547346/?type=3&theater

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