Page 2919 of 6792
1 2.917 2.918 2.919 2.920 2.921 6.792

7 Crucial education technology trends for the last 5 years.

By Richard D. Eddington/irishtechnews.ie/06-05-2018

The world is changing, and education must change with it. Many schools are aware of this fact and are trying to rebuild their activities in accordance with the opportunities offered by new technologies. Some universities borrow ideas from the business world, referring to the experience of successful start-ups in order to launch some new processes for themselves. Gradually, a paper routine leaves the schools, giving way to electronic means of working with data.

  1. School as a Service

School as a service begins with the commitment of the state to each student as a digital student. When states reduce historical barriers, the transition to personal digital learning will mean a school service: access to quality courses and teachers from several providers.

Education SaaS changes the basic assumptions – it does not need to associate time and place. This does not mean that everything will become virtual – in the foreseeable future, at least 90 percent of families will benefit from local schools, but this requires new thinking, new staffing models, new budgeting strategies and new ways of communicating with students and families.

  1. Mobile Learning

Mobile learning, also known as m-learning, is an educational system. Using portable computing devices (such as iPads, laptops, tablets, PDAs, and smartphones), wireless networks provide mobility and mobile training, which allows to teach and learn to expand beyond the traditional audience. Within the class, mobile training provides instructors and students with increased flexibility and new possibilities for interaction.

  1. Gamification in Education

Gemification in education is sometimes described using other terms: game thinking, the principles of the game for learning, the design of motivation, the design of interaction, etc. This differs from game-based learning in that it doesn`t imply that students themselves play commercial video games. It works on the assumption that the kind of interaction that players encounter with games can be transformed into an educational context in order to facilitate learning and influence on students’ behavior. Because gamers voluntarily spend a lot of time for gaming, researchers and teachers are exploring ways to use the power of video games to motivate and apply it in the classroom.

  1. Big Data

“Big Data” is a term that we are used to hearing in business, but it is also an important tool for education. Learning World explores this technological fashion word and talks with an expert on this topic: Kenneth Cuciere, co-author of “Learning with Big Data.”

Cukier sees “Big Data” as an opportunity to adapt learning to the individual needs of students and the learning process. Instead of avoiding this, teachers must accept changes that bring in large data, and use them to their advantage.

One example of the large data that occurs in education is the “Course Signals”, which allow professors to give feedback if there are early signs that students do not exercise or do not use class time.

  1. Blended and Flipped Learning

Blended learning is a pedagogical method in which the learner learns, at least in part, by providing content and training through digital and online media using the student controls in time or place. This allows the student to create an individual and integrated approach to learning. Blended training is combined with a flipped class approach to learning.

The Flipped class is a pedagogical model in which the typical elements of the lecture and the homework of the course change to the opposite. Students watch short video lectures or other multimedia materials asynchronously before a class session. Then, class time is devoted to active learning, such as discussions, design or problem assignments, or laboratory exercises. This learning model allows teachers to guide the teaching of students by answering students’ questions and helping them apply the concepts of the course during classes.

  1. Massive Online Open Courses

Nowadays MOOCs may not be so widespread as when they first attracted attention, and people no longer think that this is the answer to the problems of educational inequality. Nevertheless, MOOCs still deserve close attention, as it develops as an important part of education, and it offers its students many advantages if used well. Moreover, The New York Times called 2013 the “Year of the MOOC” because it attracted a lot of attention and money.

  1. Personalized Learning

Personalized learning is a sort of adaptive learning that considers working with computers to make decisions, based on previous levels of learner understanding when interacting with a computer program. Learning analytics and artificial intelligence are the essence of individual learning because without them it would be impossible to easily adapt the instruction on the basis of immediate answers.

Personalized learning can seem like a dream in many schools, but it’s already happening more than we can imagine – and often behind the back of the teacher.

The universities realized that technology can be a catalyst for improving the learning process. If many people enjoy using gadgets, why not to make them an education tool?

*Fuente: https://irishtechnews.ie/7-crucial-education-technology-trends-for-the-last-5-years/

Comparte este contenido:

The Difference Between Roads And Education: The Human Mind

By: forbes.com/Neal McCluskey / 06-06-2018

Should people be able to take government funding for their own private parks, roads or police? It’s a rhetorical question frequently used against policies such as vouchers that enable people to choose private schools rather than have their tax dollars go only to public institutions. The answer opponents are typically looking for is, “No, they should not. Like all those things, public education is a public good.”

It is a weak analogy, but much worse, it dangerously downplays what education is: nothing less than the shaping of human minds.

On a technical note, as my colleague Corey DeAngelis recently explained, education does not meet the economic definition of a public good; something “nonexcludable” and “nonrivalrous in consumption.” Basically, a good that non-payers cannot be prevented from using, and that one person using does not prevent others from enjoying it equally. An example is a radio broadcast; anyone with a receiver can listen, and one person listening doesn’t prevent others from doing the same.

That said, what wielders of this rhetorical club are probably trying to hammer home is not that education is a public good as economists see it, but that to work it needs to be provided and controlled by government.

If the intent of establishing parks is to ensure that natural space is preserved for all to use, regardless of ability to pay, it seems reasonable that government must control park lands. To build an interstate, there will be lots of privately-held property on the best potential routes. Lest road creators be gouged, or highways forced to slalom along inefficiently circuitous paths, the power of eminent domain seems important. And the job of government is to keep people from forcibly imposing on each other—e.g., assault, theft—so giving government the power to stop the use of force and punish transgressors appears logical.

But education is fundamentally different from these things. For starters, there is no logical or demonstrated need for government to provide schools. Schools do not require great geographic space, education has been provided privately at significant scale, and there arenumerous private schools operating today despite users having to pay once for public schools, and a second time for private. And as Nobel laureate Milton Friedman observed, government can ensure people can access education without providing the schools.

Far more important, education is inherently about the shaping of minds, and that puts people’s intimately held values and identities—things that make them who they are—in the balance. Requiring all, diverse people to fund a single system of government schools thus forces conflict and, even worse, threatens to implant standardized thoughts in all people. Parks and roads aren’t close to comparable threats to basic freedom and diversity.

The reality of treating education like interstates has often been painful. In the beginning of the “common schooling” era, many Protestants objected to public schooling “father” Horace Mann’s essentially Unitarian vision of what religion the schools should inculcate. The arrival of millions of Roman Catholics led to decades of conflict—including the 1844 Philadelphia Bible Riots that killed and injured scores of people—over the Protestant character of many public schools. Numerous Catholics ultimately felt they had no choice but to forsake their tax dollars and start their own schools, which by their peak in 1965 enrolled roughly 5.5 million children. Many African-Americans, after finally being allowed into the public schools, have had to fight to have meaningful power in the schools to which their children are assigned. And they are not alone.

Today, battles over people’s cultures, ethnic identities, and values are widespread and perpetual. The Cato Institute’s Public Schooling Battle Map, which I maintain, includes nearly 2,000 such conflicts, and with its content drawn mainly from major media reports, there are likely many conflicts missing.

Parks, roads, even policing, don’t come close to the intensely and fundamentally personal—fundamentallyhuman—purpose of education. To assert that letting taxpaying families choose their schools is akin to letting them build private thoroughfares or parks with public dollars at best trivializes education, at worst threatens basic freedom. Indeed, far from calling for government control, the nature of education cries out for letting all people choose.

*Fuente: https://www.forbes.com/sites/nealmccluskey/2018/06/05/the-difference-between-roads-and-education-the-human-mind/2/#3a478ef55fab

Comparte este contenido:

España: ¿Sabías que la mitad de los niños afganos no van a la escuela por los combates y la discriminación?

Europa/España/05.06.18/Fuente: www.periodistadigital.com.

Unos 3,7 millones de niños de entre 7 y 17 años están privados de su derecho a la educación en Afganistán

Afganistán cuenta con una compleja historia, que ha quedado reflejada en su actual civilización, lenguajes y monumentos. Los afganos se muestran orgullosos de su país, su linaje y soberanía. Al estar en un cruce de caminos de múltiples rutas comerciales e imperios, la cultura afgana es rica y multilingüe, con herencias de todas las etnias y pueblos que arribaron a su territorio, donde el Islam tiene una importancia predominante, pero hay profundas influencias budistas y nómadas. La literatura afgana la componen básicamente poemas en lengua persa y pashto, según wp. Su música la componen instrumentos de cuerda tradicionales como el laúd dotar o el laúd tanbur, por influencias árabes y persas y el tambor tabla, influencia india.

Casi cuatro millones de escolares en Afganistán no pueden asistir a clase debido a problemas de seguridad y pobreza, así como por la discriminación contra las niñas existente en el país, ha revelado un nuevo informe de la Iniciativa Global para Niños No Escolarizados del Fondo de las Naciones Unidas para la Infancia (Unicef, por sus siglas en inglés), según rt.

El 60 % de los 3,7 millones de menores de entre 7 y 17 años privados de su derecho a la educación en el país son niñas que tienen «una desventaja particular» debida a la discriminación de género. La peor situación se registra actualmente en las provincias de Kandahar, Helmand, Wardak, Paktika, Zabul y Uruzgan, donde hasta el 85 % de las niñas no asisten a la escuela.

La falta de seguridad en las zonas de conflicto y el desplazamiento de familias debido a los combates se mencionaron como los principales motivos que contribuyeron al primer aumento en la tasa de desescolarización en Afganistán desde 2002, ha explicado Unicef. Las malas instalaciones educativas y la falta de maestras también generan preocupación. Los autores del informe han instado a las autoridades afganas a garantizar entornos de aprendizaje seguros, capacitar a más profesorado y mejorar la pedagogía, así como alentar la educación temprana y el aprendizaje a distancia.

Fuente de la noticia: http://www.periodistadigital.com/ciencia/educacion/2018/06/04/sabias-que-la-mitad-de-los-ninos-afganos-no-van-a-la-escuela-por-los-combates-y-la-discriminacion.shtml

Comparte este contenido:

Chile: Rasgos de la interculturalidad: El nuevo escenario de la sociedad chilena

América del Sur/Chile/05.06.18/Fuente: www.biobiochile.cl.

Un estudio reciente de la Pontificia Universidad Católica titulado “Migrantes latinoamericanos en Chile” (2016), muestra categóricamente que la realidad migratoria en Chile ha cambiado en las últimas dos décadas.

Números oficiales del departamento de Extranjería y Migración, señalan que desde 1996 la población migrante se ha duplicado en su relación con el total de la población chilena y que este crecimiento será progresivo en los años venideros.

Tal investigación, además, sostiene que los inmigrantes que tienen mayor presencia en Chile son en orden porcentual; peruanos (47,8%), argentinos (26%) colombianos (20,3%), haitianos (7,9%), dominicanos (5,7%), ecuatorianos (4,5%), venezolanos (4,3%), bolivianos (3,3%) y otros (1,9%). Estas cifras, sin duda, son indicativas de un escenario sociocultural que ha complejizado las relaciones interculturales y convertirán a Chile en un país cosmopolita.

A pesar de que históricamente nuestro país ha sido un lugar predilecto para varias corrientes migratorias (chinos, italianos, alemanes, españoles, palestinos, croatas, entre otros), la magnitud de la presencia actual de extranjeros residentes no tiene precedente alguno. Con todo y considerando que las relaciones interculturales son conflictivas en sí mismas, nos preguntamos ¿Cuán integrados están los extranjeros en la sociedad chilena? ¿Cómo deberemos habituarnos a convivir en un contexto intercultural, atendiendo a la necesidad de superar ciertos nacionalismos, estereotipos y clasificaciones arbitrarias que generalizan a partir de hechos puntuales? Estas preguntas, que para cualquier lector enterado no constituyen novedad, se tornan gravitantes en función de una convivencia plural y democrática, en el contexto latinoamericano.

…La interculturalidad intenta romper con la historia hegemónica de una cultura dominante y otras subordinadas…
– Germán Morong Reyes

Si asumimos el sentido último de la noción de interculturalidad, podemos sostener que las prácticas que impone esta definición son coherentes con el complejo escenario sociológico que debiera asumir la sociedad chilena en su conjunto. Esto es; entender la interculturalidad como un proceso permanente de relación, comunicación y aprendizaje entre personas, grupos, conocimientos, valores y tradiciones distintas, orientada a generar, construir y propiciar un respeto mutuo y a un desarrollo pleno de las capacidades de los individuos, por encima de sus diferencias culturales y sociales.

Asimismo, la interculturalidad intenta romper con la historia hegemónica de una cultura dominante y otras subordinadas y, de esa manera, reforzar las identidades tradicionalmente excluidas para construir en la vida cotidiana una convivencia de respeto y de legitimidad entre todos los grupos de la sociedad.

En Chile aún falta por avanzar más trascendiendo las buenas intenciones de las políticas públicas y migratorias, si queremos practicar y promover lo que sería verdaderamente una convivencia intercultural.

Esta convivencia, con los marcos señalados anteriormente, impone gestos y actitudes hacia la diferencia cultural desmarcada de percepciones indolentes, ultranacionalistas o derechamente xenófobas. En este sentido, sabemos relativamente poco acerca de los inmigrantes, más allá de los estereotipos generalizados, por lo que aún nos es complicado interactuar en igualdad de condiciones con los extranjeros residentes y, sobre todo, no visibilizamos las capacidades y el aporte eventual que podrían ser al desarrollo del país.

El mismo estudio, antes citado, confirma que la mayor parte de los extranjeros llegados en la última década constituyen un capital humano competente, dispuestos a promover y ser parte del desarrollo económico del país en distintas áreas profesionales. A contrapelo, una opinión común en el imaginario nacional ha sido signar a los extranjeros como un peligro, traduciendo su presencia en una competencia desleal al chileno.

…Su incorporación profesional permitirá nivelar la desigualdad que existe hoy en la entrega de servicios a la comunidad…
– Germán Morong Reyes

No obstante, su incorporación profesional permitirá nivelar la desigualdad que existe hoy en la entrega de servicios a la comunidad, por ejemplo, en el área de la salud. Qué decir de las competencias técnicas que muchos extranjeros podrían aportar si fuesen incorporados a empleos regulares, sin diferencias con los connacionales.

Aún más, todos aquellos que cuentan con documentación regularizada contribuyen con un porcentaje de su sueldo al sistema de previsión social y de salud, en el contexto nacional de una tasa de dependencia alta por parte de la población económicamente no activa que se sostiene de la activa, a sabiendas que esta última ha decrecido por las consecuencias lógicas de nuestro comportamiento demográfico desde los años noventa.

Otro elemento que el estudio citado aportó, es la capacidad de muchos inmigrantes de adaptarse a la diversa cultura nacional; aprendiendo los modismos chilenos conociendo de cerca ciertas tradiciones e incorporándose al ethos de barrio de cada lugar del país. En este sentido, diversifican y enriquecen la posibilidad de otorgar a las nuevas generaciones un panorama social diverso y rico, ya no desde una perspectiva estrictamente nacional, sino desde una mirada latinoamericana, de la que Chile es parte.

Sin lugar a dudas, la progresiva convivencia intercultural y el interés por conocer toda forma de alteridad terminará legitimando el sentido de la presencia de aquellos en Chile, más allá de las diferencias y las miradas desconfiadas.

Fuente de la noticia: https://www.biobiochile.cl/noticias/blogs/blog-ubo/2018/06/04/rasgos-de-la-interculturalidad-el-nuevo-escenario-de-la-sociedad-chilena.shtml

Comparte este contenido:

India: Indian govt may soon turn to private sector to boost higher education system

Asia/India/5.06.2018/By: Elton Gomes/ Fuente: qrius.com.

Higher education in India might receive a significant monetary boost as the government is planning to rope in private companies and high-net individuals (HNIs) to finance and promote higher education across the country. The ministry of human resource development has prepared a draft of the plan and will present it before the Union cabinet for consideration.

Two government officials have stated the plan will be implemented through the higher education funding agency (HEFA), a non-banking financial company, under the human resource ministry, as reported by Live Mint. According to Swarajya Mag, the plan is to raise Rs 1 lakh crore from the market, and spend it on funds for ‘infrastructure requirements of educational institutions.’

Roping in HNIs and private companies might lead to improvements in higher education in India, and government officials seemed optimistic. “Bringing in industries or industrialists or high net-worth individuals for HEFA equity will have three benefits. One, structured and clean private funding. Two, outside experience of managing higher education funding. And three, curb chances of manipulation at the institutional level,” a government official told Live Mint.

In February 2018, Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley said that the education sector was a priority for the Indian government.

Why does this matter

In 2014, the Times of India reported that a mere 10% of students have access to higher education in the country. The article cited a report by a development economist Abusaleh Shariff, and mentioned that residents of Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, and West Bengal have the worst access to higher education.

A report in Live Mint details that lax quality and a lack of accountability and widespread innovation is what ails higher education in India. Indian higher education seems to be suffering from a two-fold problem of quality and quantity. The Indian government seems to think that privatising education is the only solution. However, along with private investment, the government also should look to invest more in education.

In 2016, China spent roughly $565 billion on education – more than 60% of which came from the government. In the same year, India spent approximately $4.5 billion on higher education, as per the Quint. India’s spending on education is much lower than that of other countries.

Mumbai’s apex varsity – the University of Mumbai – has been in shambles despite having a highly conducive environment for studies. Further weakening the reputation of the university is the incessant delays in results.

Perhaps some degree of privatisation is the only way out for better higher education in India. However, along with adequate funds, the government must ensure the funds are being allocated to improve the quality of teaching offered to Indian students, thereby, improving accountability of the system.

Fuente de la noticia: https://qrius.com/higher-education-in-india-to-get-boost-as-government-mulls-huge-investment-private-funding/

Comparte este contenido:

República Dominicana: Navarro pone en marcha campaña integral para prevenir el bullying o acoso escolar

Centro América/República Dominicana/05.06.18/Fuente: elnuevodiario.com.do.

EL NUEVO DIARIO, SANTO DOMINGO.- El ministro de Educación, Andrés Navarro, puso en marcha la campaña integral de orientación-formación “Yo te hago el coro contra el bullying”, una iniciativa que auspicia la reflexión, sensibilización y el compromiso por una cultura de paz en los centros educativos y en las familias, en procura de garantizar una mejor salud emocional y el rendimiento escolar de los estudiantes.

La iniciativa, que busca convertirse en una valiosa herramienta para el fortalecimiento de la Estrategia General por una Cultura de Paz en las Escuelas, teniendo a las familias como el principal eje de soporte, igualmente cumple con los acuerdos arribados por el Ministerio de Educación en el Foro Nacional Estudiantil por una Cultura de Paz celebrado en junio del año pasado, con la participación de 360 estudiantes de las diferentes regionales del país.

“Estudiantes, como manifesté en el Foro, ustedes merecen ser escuchados como protagonistas en este proceso de reformas y cambios que se llevan a cabo en el marco de la Revolución Educativa que impulsa nuestro presidente Danilo Medina. Ustedes deben ser vistos como sujetos que tributan a la mejora de la calidad educativa. Por eso, sus inquietudes fueron escuchadas para la elaboración de las agendas del sistema”, manifestó el ministro de Educación.

Navarro enfatizó que “otra vez apelo a las familias para que junto a nuestros estudiantes podamos hacer posible esta necesaria campaña contra la violencia emocional en las escuelas, un paso que hemos asumido con carácter de prioridad en el marco de la agenda del Ministerio, diciéndole no a la burla, al irrespeto y a la desconsideración en esos espacios de desarrollo personal que son los centros educativos”, dijo Navarro durante un acto celebrado en el salón La Mancha del Hotel Barceló, antiguo Lina.

“Estudiantes, ustedes representan el pilar de la Revolución Educativa de nuestro presidente Danilo Medina. Con ustedes estamos construyendo una nueva República Dominicana al interior de nuestras aulas.  Por eso les pido que sigamos generando, juntos, estrategias capaces de desarrollar una cultura armoniosa, una transformación positiva de los conflictos y un mejor ambiente en el escolar. La escuela es un territorio de paz que todos debemos proteger.  No permitamos que una etiqueta defina el valor que tenemos. Eres más que una etiqueta”, añadió Navarro.

Visión integral

La campaña contra el acoso escolar o bullying, por una convivencia armoniosa y de respeto en las aulas, bajo la coordinación de la Dirección de Orientación y Psicología del Ministerio de Educación, incluye recursos audiovisuales que apelan a la oportuna sensibilización entre los estudiantes y los demás actores que inciden en las comunidades educativas.

Se trata de un manual basado en una guía para acompañar su implementación en los centros educativos, así como varios spots promocionales por radio, televisión y las redes sociales, entre otros medios comunicacionales. Asimismo, la campaña estará seguida de un proceso de talleres y acompañamiento dirigido a estudiantes, docentes y al resto del personal envuelto en el proceso educativo, “en un esfuerzo por detener la dañina práctica del acoso en perjuicio de la salud física y emocional y del rendimiento escolar de los niños, adolescentes y jóvenes en los centros educativos”.

El Ministerio de Educación subraya el valioso aporte de esta campaña con la participación de estudiantes de distintos centros educativos como protagonistas reales para llevar el mensaje directo a sus compañeros y a los demás componentes del sistema educativo, con el objetivo de continuar el cambio profundo de la escuela dominicana, a partir del impactante desarrollo de la Revolución Educativa que impulsa el presidente Danilo Medina.

El reputado sicólogo sueco Dan Olweus, con un master en Resolución de Conflictos en el Aula, define el acoso escolar o bullying como “la conducta de persecución física o psicológica que realiza el alumno o alumna contra otro compañero, al que elige como víctima en repetidos ataques. La continuidad de esas relaciones provoca en las víctimas efectos claramente negativos como la disminución de la autoestima, estados de ansiedad, e incluso, cuadros depresivos, lo que hace difícil su integración en el medio escolar y en el desarrollo normal de los aprendizajes”.

Incidencia del Bullying

El acoso escolar es de alta prevalencia en el ambiente de los centros educativos, con una incidencia de un 33.6 por ciento en las escuelas, según indica el reciente estudio “Prevalencia, Tipología y Causas de la Violencia en los Centros Educativos de Básica y Media de la República Dominicana”, el cual abarcó a estudiantes, docentes, directores de gestión y a los tutores de familias.

“Los estudiantes reportan que el acoso verbal es más común, y ocurre con mayor frecuencia durante los momentos de ocio, con un 51.6%, mientras que en el salón de clases con el docente presente se da en un 41.2%, una mala práctica de especial relevancia, ya que revela falta de la debida atención por parte de los maestros”, refiere el estudio.

Los investigadores hallaron que en Básica hay más reportes de acoso escolar que en Media, aunque en ese último nivel se registra mayor frecuencia de violencia.

Un indicador que llama la atención en el estudio realizado por el Instituto Dominicano de Evaluación e Investigación de la Calidad Educativa (IDEICE), es que las mayores acosadoras son las niñas en grupos de dos y tres en los niveles de Básica y de Media, pese a que los estudios internacionales señalan a los varones.

Las formas de acoso que reportaron los estudiantes como más comunes son: poner apodos desagradables, ridiculizar o fastidiar de forma hiriente a otro compañero de la escuela, en un porcentaje que alcanza el 50%.

Fuente de la noticia: https://elnuevodiario.com.do/navarro-pone-en-marcha-campana-integral-para-prevenir-el-bullying-o-acoso-escolar/

Comparte este contenido:

Jamaica: Education the missing ball in the competition for growth

Central America/Jamaica/05.06.2018/Source: www.jamaicaobserver.com

Jamaica’s education system has followed a rocky road from as far back as we can check our history. This is not to say that the road does not have its smooth spots, but it is only in minor sections that we can feel the satisfaction of a system at work which is successfully producing good results on a sustainable basis.

It may seem that this is an exaggeration. It is not. How else is it possible to describe an education system that produces some 75 per cent failures in its graduating class year after year? Worse than that, 38 per cent of the age cohort are not even allowed to sit the exams for graduation, being considered too weak academically to achieve even the most minimal results.

From another point of view, the education system is an enigma. Many of those who qualify from the secondary school system and go on to tertiary education have turned out to be outstanding scholars who have consistently contributed much to national development. Some have even achieved international acclaim, and the best of our education system can stand up to international ratings.

But judgement of society is not concerned about safe landings. It’s about crashes. The education system speaks volumes to the frustrations and failures which make it dysfunctional. Yet, despite these obstacles, the system is too crucial to be allowed to exist in a state of bewilderment.

Generally, I approach problems logically and there is much to be gained by viewing education in this way. Reading through the insightful analysis of the brain in the Pulitzer Prize-winning work Inside the Brain, by Ron Kotulak, nearly 15 years ago, gave me a whole new perception of the earliest years of life and the impact of early childhood education.

The brain is examined as an organ which begins as a blank slate, gathering and processing an awesome collection of information by stages of complexity which allow children to grow in knowledge progressively. Scientific findings indicate that the growth period of the brain ceases at around seven years of age, leaving the child to work essentially with the size and capacity achieved at that time for the rest of his/her life.

This sounds frightening, but it does not mean that learning stops at that time; it only means that the ability of the brain will be limited in the future to the capacity it has acquired in the first seven years of life and the process of learning will only be more difficult, but certainly not impossible.

This puts the spotlight on those first seven early years as being of prime concern. Early Childhood Education (ECE) must then be the priority. In fact, it sets the stage for success thereafter as the support base for further education — just as the first layer of a three-layer cake is fully dependent on the ability of the bottom layer to support the top two. A weak first layer will expose the top two to weaknesses, failures and possibly some collapse, as is the case in the education system.

To reposition the early stage of education would logically require much more funding. Over the years, Jamaica has spent far less on education than is the case for many other English-speaking countries (Caricom) of the region. This led me to focus my own parliamentary efforts on a call for the reform of early childhood education, to strengthen it as the base — to the extent that, in 1997, I devoted my presentation in the budget session entirely to that subject.

Unfortunately, the budget was presented by the Opposition at the Jamaica Pegasus hotel that year because of a dispute with the then Government. As a result, in the budget session of the next year I presented the same speech again, giving the subject matter double exposure but also to get it in the official parliamentary record for future reference.

I continued what I considered a mission to promote early childhood education for the remainder of my parliamentary years until I retired in 2005. But to realistically do so, I also had to call for increased financing for the system. With Government under-financing the education system by providing only some 10 to 12 per cent of the national budget (this was the figure up to a few years ago), compared to 15 per cent and more in many other Caricom countries, I called for an increase of one per cent per annum for five years, starting November 2004.

My resolution to Parliament to this effect, together with a number of other educational reforms, was accepted by both sides of the House. I am not aware if its financial target has been met. To me, the most important objective in creating a rational, functional education system is to create a well-funded early childhood layer capable of giving a good start.

But another consideration has now been added by me which is even more important, particularly since it requires no additional funds, nor does it require any considerable period of time to accomplish.

Sometimes, the greatest benefits can come from the simplest changes in seeking solutions to problems. The most critical problem facing education is illiteracy. It holds the key. For decades the education system has recognised that illiteracy is a deep-rooted fundamental problem. Without literacy, learning is impossible. Yet, faced with this undeniable truth the system has been crawling for generations to adjust to meet this awesome challenge.

The readiness test administered to grade 1 entrants to primary schools has repeatedly shown that only 25-30 per cent of entrants are ready to receive formal education at the entrance levels. This was precisely the case half-a-century ago when the secondary school system was opened to secondary schools on a broad basis. Five years after that, Edwin Allen, minister of education, had to devise a unique way to give primary school graduates a secondary education by changing the admission policy.

It was decided that 70 per cent of all entrance places to secondary schools should be reserved for primary school students. This could have the most far-reaching effect on the future capacity of the country to grow and prosper. However, it was discovered that at 12 years old these new students, as in the case of entry to primary schools at six years, could not cope with the educational requirements. Indeed, many were barely literate.

That was decades ago yet the problem remains until today, with the majority of primary school graduates being low achievers. This should not be surprising as 60 per cent in the grade 4 National Literacy Test for 10-year-old students have repeatedly demonstrated various weaknesses in coping with reading and writing at this advanced stage, although this low figure is showing slight improvement now, thus leaving them unable to deal with secondary education. This would not have been the case had this percentage of students been literate.

This is a new road for education, one that challenges us to think outside of the box. For centuries we have travelled the same failed course; time now to travel a different path, to try something new.

The day has come at last. I was thinking that it may never happen after so many years of speaking and writing about the critical need for Government to take over the basic school system so that it could handle the transformation of these schools which have been neglected for so long. Recently, the Minister of Education Ruel Reid announced that Prime Minister Andrew Holness has agreed to that proposal. This is an excellent move.

Generally, many persons think of these schools for little children from three to five years old as “play-play” schools, where their little ones can be parked in the day under the care and protection of teachers.

But parents are not aware that this is a vital stage in the education system. Children who are not educated at this stage can fail miserably, in later years of schooling, to be sufficiently educated to get passing grades when they leave secondary school without graduating.

The reason for lack of appreciation is as a result of little understanding of the role of early childhood education and what it can achieve when it is taken seriously. The seriousness of this phase of ECE is that it is the foundation of all education, because it is the beginning of the education of the child. If you are building a house you have to start with the floor, not the rooms, nor the roof. ECE provides that foundation.

Failure to put this opportunity to use by enrolment and regular attendance is a trap many people fall into, out of ignorance or the lack of care. The result is, children who go to primary school eventually at six years old have to keep up with other children who received ECE for their first step in education and have become acquainted with the early stages of reading, writing, numeracy, social and cultural activities, among other areas of learning.

In the first grade of primary school, who do you think the teacher is going to focus on? The children who have participated in the ECE progamme who can follow what is being taught in grade 1 to prepare for grade 2, or the ones who lack the education which should have been received as the first step of the ECE? The teacher is naturally going to focus on the children who are better able to enter grade 2.

The children knowing too little about what is going on because of knowledge deficiency are naturally left behind. And so it continues in each grade thereafter as the gap widens, focusing on those who can learn while leaving those who cannot further behind. Each grade will suffer in the same way, producing students who have learned and those who have not.

This stream flows right through the system until at graduation the ratio is still, more or less, the same: 30 per cent who have benefited from early schooling and can graduate and the seventy per cent who have not and cannot [graduate]. That is what we have to build a nation — a minority who are skilled and find employment or become gainfully self-employed, and a sizeable majority who have no skills and who, even if they find some hustling or unskilled work, will not be able to even keep themselves. This will continue to be our future if significant improvements are not made.

There is still one more step in this critical pathway to failure when those who fail cannot, as adults, pay water rates, electricity rates, taxes and other such basics of life. The costs of these have to be carried by the minority who are skilled by training. Prosperity for the nation won’t come until far more students go through comprehensive schooling and training. The ratio then could be reversed to 30 per cent failure and 70 per cent passes. This would produce more of each category of skills. Then we can build a nation.

To this major undertaking must be added properly trained teachers of which the minister says there is now one per school. Completing this programme will provide the necessary opportunities for the development of real prosperity.

What are the steps to accomplish this?

• Special financing would be needed. I have already proposed that the National Housing Trust (NHT) needs more educated adults in the society to be able to deal with more mortgage financing, as it has admitted, to increase the housing stock and provide more homes. The NHT has a surplus of some $20 billion a year. It can spare $2-$3 billion per year and still increase its surplus annually.

• Increased teaching staff. This could be programmed by arranging facilities by training in teachers’ colleges and in the HEART Trust/NTA over a number of years.

• Increase the sources for equipment for ECE schools. I started a programme which I called Programme for the Advancement of Early Childhood Education (PACE), which I proposed to use to get the Jamaican Diaspora involved by asking groups with enough involvement in the community affairs of Jamaica to undertake to obtain equipment — new or used — overseas for the ECE schools. This is a project which would be able to fit in with their own interests since on a number of occasions the Diaspora has shipped to schools in Jamaica, furniture and equipment obtained from replacement in schools in their areas abroad.

In my visit to Toronto in 1988 to start the programme, I found a number of Jamaicans who were interested and were willing to serve in such an organisation I called PACE of Canada. This group has worked out very well for the past 30 years, with shipments arriving regularly. I had hoped to establish many more PACE units in the USA, Canada, and Britain but the Government was changed in 1989 and nothing further happened.

We are thankfully on the way now with one of the most important projects for building a prosperous nation in which all could learn to earn, and earn to learn.

With the changes in the early childhood education system, we are on the way to helping those who are caught in the deficiencies they now face to find a way out. As I have often said in a quote which I coined: “There is no country that is uneducated that is rich and no country that is educated that is poor.”

The time has come to take a giant step into the future. Time to move now.

Source of the news: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/education-the-missing-ball-in-the-competition-for-growth_134780?profile=1096

Comparte este contenido:
Page 2919 of 6792
1 2.917 2.918 2.919 2.920 2.921 6.792