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EEUU-Massachusetts: Native Language Schools Are Taking Back Education

Por:  intercontinentalcry.org/ Abaki Beck/ 02-05-2018
MORE THAN A CENTURY AGO, THE LAST FLUENT SPEAKERS OF WÔPANÂAK PASSED AWAY. NOW THIS SCHOOL IS WORKING TO REVIVE THE LANGUAGE.
For more than 150 years, the Wôpanâak language was silent. With no fluent speakers alive, the language of the Mashpee Wampanoag people existed only in historical documents. It was by all measures extinct. But a recently established language school on the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe’s reservation in Massachusetts is working to bring back the language.

The threat of extinction that faces the Wôpanâak language is not uncommon for indigenous languages in the United States. Calculated federal policy, not happenstance, led to the destruction of Native American languages such as Wôpanâak.

But today, Native language schools are working to change that by revitalizing languages that have been threatened with extinction.

In the 19th century, federal policy shifted from a policy of extermination and displacement to assimilation. The passage of the Civilization Fund Act in 1819 allocated federal funds directly to education for the purpose of assimilation, and that led to the formation of many government-run boarding schools. Boarding schools were not meant to educate, but to assimilate.

Tribal communities continue to be haunted by this history. As of April, UNESCO’s Atlas of the World’s Endangered Languages listed 191 Native American languages as “in danger” in the United States. Of these, some languages are vulnerable—meaning that children speak the language, but only in certain contexts—to critically endangered—meaning the youngest generation of speakers are elderly.

Today, the education system in the United States fails Native American students. Native students have the lowest high school graduation rate of any racial group nationally, according to the 2017 Condition of Education Report. And a 2010 report shows that in the 12 states with the highest Native American population, less than 50 percent of Native students graduate from high school per year.

By founding schools that teach in Native languages and center tribal history and beliefs, tribal language schools are taking education back into their own hands.

Mukayuhsak Weekuw: Reviving a silent language

On the Massachusetts coast just two hours south of Boston is Mukayuhsak Weekuw, a Wôpanâak language preschool and kindergarten founded in 2015. The school is working to revitalize the Wôpanâak language. As one of the first tribes to encounter colonists, the Mashpee Wampanoag faced nearly four centuries of violence and assimilation attempts; by the mid 19th century, the last fluent speakers of Wôpanâak had died.

In the 1990s, Wampanoag social worker Jessie Little Doe Baird began to work to bring the language back to her people. It began like this: More than 20 years ago, Baird had a series of dreams in which her ancestors spoke to her in Wôpanâak. She says they instructed her to ask her community whether they were ready to welcome the language home.

She listened, and in 1993 she sought the help of linguists and community elders to begin to revitalize the language—elders like Helen Manning from the Aquinnah Wampanoag Tribe, with whom she would later co-found the Wôpanâak Language Reclamation Project.

Baird found a lot of resources. To translate the Bible, colonists had transcribed Wôpanâak to the Roman alphabet in the 1600s, which the Wampanoag used to write letters, wills, deeds, and petitions to the colonial government. With these texts, Baird and MIT linguist Kenneth Hale established rules for Wôpanâak orthography and grammar, and created a dictionary of 11,000 words.

In 2015, the Wôpanâak Language Reclamation Project was ready to open the Mukayuhsak Weekuw preschool. According to the school’s Project Director Jennifer Weston, 10 students attended in the first year it opened, growing to 20 in the current school year. As part of the language program, parents or grandparents of students at the school are required to attend a weekly language class to ensure that the youth can continue speaking the language at home.

The curriculum is taught entirely in the Wôpanâak language, and it is also grounded in tribal history and connection to the land. “Our languages embody our ancestors’ relationships to our homelands and to one another across millennia,” Weston says. “They explain to us to the significance of all the places for our most important ceremonies and medicines. They tell us who we are and how to be good relatives.”

In addition to language learning, the children also learn about gardening, hunting, and fishing. They practice tribal ceremonies, traditional food preservation, and traditional hunting and fishing practices. At Native American language schools like Mukayuhsak Weekuw, students experience their culture in the curriculum in a deeply personal and empowering way.

‘Aha Pūnana Leo: Overcoming policy barriers

Considering the violent history of America’s education system towards Native Americans, it is perhaps unsurprising that policy barriers continue to hinder contemporary language revitalization schools.

Federal policies are often misaligned with the reality of tribal communities and language revitalization schools. Leslie Harper, president of the advocacy group National Coalition of Native American Language Schools and Programs, says schools often risk losing funding because they lack qualified teachers who meet federal standards. But these standards are paternalistic, notes Harper, who says that fluent language teachers at Native schools are often trained outside of accredited teaching colleges, which don’t offer relevant Native language teaching programs. These teaching colleges don’t “respond to our needs for teachers in Indian communities,” she says.

In Hawai’i, ‘Aha Pūnana Leo schools have had some success in overcoming policy barriers like these. The schools have led the way for statewide and national policy change in Native language education.

When the first preschool was founded in 1984, activists estimated that fewer than 50 children spoke Hawaiian statewide. Today, ‘Aha Pūnana Leo runs 21 language medium schools serving thousands of students throughout the state, from preschool through high school. Because of this success, emerging revitalization schools and researchers alike look to ‘Aha Pūnana Leo as a model.

Nāmaka Rawlins is the director of strategic collaborations at ‘Aha Pūnana Leo. Like Harper, she says that required academic credentialing burdened the language preschools, which relied on fluent elders. This became an issue in 2012 when kindergarten was made compulsory in Hawai’i, and teachers and directors of preschools were required to be accredited. But she, along with other Hawaiian language advocates, advocated for changes to these state regulations to exclude Hawaiian preschools from the requirement and instead accredit their own teachers as local, indigenous experts. And they succeeded. “We got a lot of flack from the preschool community,” she says. “Today, we provide our own training and professional development.”

One of the early successes of ‘Aha Pūnana Leo was removing the ban on the use of Hawaiian language in schools, which had been illegal for nearly a century. Four years later, in 1990, the passage of the Native American Language Act affirmed that Native American children across the nation have the right to be educated, express themselves, and be assessed in their tribal language.

But according to Harper, progress still needs to be made before NALA is fully implemented by the Education Department. Since 2016, Native American language medium schools have been able to assess students in their language. This took years of advocacy by people like Harper, who served on the U.S. Department of Education’s Every Student Succeeds Act Implementation Committee and pushed for the change.

While this is an important first step, Harper is concerned that because language medium school assessments must be peer reviewed, low capacity schools—or those that lack the technical expertise of developing assessments that align with federal standards—will be burdened. And the exemption doesn’t apply to high schools.

Studies from multiple language revitalization schools have found that students who attend these schools have greater academic achievement than those who attend English-speaking schools, including scoring significantly higher on standardized tests. “We are beginning to see the long-term benefits of language revitalization and language-medium education in our kids,” Harper says. “But the public education system and laws are still reticent about us developing programs of instruction for our students.”

Looking back, looking forward

A movement to revitalize tribal languages is underway. The success of ‘Aha Pūnana Leo and promise of Mukayuhsak Weekuw are examples of communities taking education into their own hands. When Native American students are taught in their own language and culture, they succeed.

Weston says parents are eager for Mukayuhsak Weekuw to expand into an elementary school, and in fall 2018, the school will include first grade in addition to pre-school and kindergarten. It is a testament to the work and vision of the Wampanoag that just two decades ago, their language was silent, and today, they have a school that expands in size each year. “All of our tribal communities have the capacity to maintain and revitalize our mother tongues,” Weston says—no matter how daunting it may seem.

This article was originally published by Yes! Magazine. It has been re-published at IC under a Creative Commons License.

*Fuente: https://intercontinentalcry.org/native-language-schools-are-taking-back-education/

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Kenya Public Universities Crack Whip on Striking Lecturers

Kenya/May 01, 2018/By Ouma Wanzala/ Source: http://allafrica.com

The University of Nairobi has taken the lead by suspending 35 lecturers after they declined to return to work following the Labour Court’s ruling that declared the pay strike illegal and unprotected in March. The industrial action enters its third month on May 1.

Public universities have started cracking the whip on striking lecturers and other staff as the industrial action enters its third month on Tuesday.

The University of Nairobi (UoN) has suspended 35 lecturers after they declined to return to work following Labour Court’s ruling that declared the strike illegal and unprotected last month.

Technical University of Kenya (TUK) on Friday started a head count of lecturers who are teaching, and has threatened to sack those who will not report to work.

At UoN, acting Deputy Vice Chancellor Finance and Administration Isaac Mbeche said the suspension is a warning to those who are still on strike.

«We are now dealing with individuals since they have different contracts with the university. If you do not come to work without permission, there are consequences,» Prof Mbeche warned.

SALARIES

He said the institution wrote to staff asking them to resume work, and that those who abided have not been punished.

«Some wrote back agreeing to resume work while others insisted they were still on strike,» Prof Mbeche said, adding that learning had resumed at the institution.

Last month, the university denied more than 1,200 staff their salaries for boycotting work.

At TUK, all staff are now required to sign commitment forms as the institution moves to ensure that operations are normalised.

«The directors of schools and heads of administrative units are hereby requested to ensure compliance with this directive by submitting completed commitment forms to the management,» a circular by Deputy Vice-Chancellor in charge of Administration and Planning, Joseph Kiplangat, reads.

Staff at the university who are still on strike are set to start receiving their suspension letters today.

ACADEMIC CALENDAR

At Moi University, Vice-Chancellor Isaac Kosgey has warned that the striking staff will not get their salaries.

«Other disciplinary measures will be taken as the university council advises.

«Staff who are ready to resume work can do so by registering with the respective heads of departments on a daily basis with immediate effect,» Prof Kosgey said.

At Kenyatta University, lecturers are now required to sign forms indicating their willingness to teach, and which must be submitted to deputy VC in charge of administration and planning.

Jaramogi Oginga Odinga University has since adjusted its academic calendar for all students due to the strike.

STUDENTS

Students in most universities have gone home as they wait for a solution to the crisis that has affected learning for the last one year.

The strike, which started on March 1, has paralysed learning in all 31 public universities. Lecturers are demanding Sh38 billion for the 2017-2021 CBA.

Education Cabinet Secretary Amina Mohamed last week set up a team to table a counter-offer.

«The impact of these perennial strikes has, to say the least, been disastrous.

«The image of our university education worldwide is taking a severe beating.

«Our students are taking more than double the period required to complete academic programmes and employers are losing faith in the capacity of our graduates,» Ms Mohamed said.

SRC

Ms Mohamed said with the enactment of the Constitution and the subsequent creation of the Salaries and Remuneration Commission, all salaries in the public sector must now be based on advice from the commission.

However, Universities Academic Staff Union Secretary General Constantine Wasonga said lecturers will only call off their strike after receiving an offer.

«We are used to threats, and we will now be forced back to work,» Dr Wasonga said.

 
 Source:
http://allafrica.com/stories/201804300034.html
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«La lección más grande del mundo»: el proyecto educativo de la ONU

ONU/01 de mayo de 2018/Fuente: http://noticias.universia.es

La erradicación de la pobreza y el cuidado del planeta es cosa de todos y es un proyecto de educación mundial.

  • “La Lección más Grande del Mundo” es el proyecto lanzado por las Naciones Unidas que recoge los 17 Objetivos Mundiales para el Desarrollo Sostenible.
  • Te damos a conocer estos objetivos y las metas que persigue, porque es responsabilidad de todos colaborar para conseguirlos.
  • Este proyecto educativo conlleva que docentes y alumnos sean conscientes del valor de la educación social y que todos tenemos mucho que aportar.

«La lección más grande del mundo” es el proyecto de educación social y mundial creado por la ONU y en el que se ha dado forma a diversos objetivos para el alcance de unas metas que terminen con la pobreza extrema, apoyen la igualdad social y luchen contra el cambio climático.

Este proyecto de educación mundial necesita de una importante difusión, de manera que todos los ciudadanos conozcamos esos objetivos y trabajemos para llevarlos a cabo, tanto en nuestra faceta personal como profesional.

Objetivos Mundiales difundidos por la ONU

Es importante que conozcamos los objetivos, trabajemos en ello y los compartamos en nuestro entorno y comunidad para que más gente se una a este proyecto mundial.

1. Erradicar la pobreza en todas sus formas y en todos los lugares del mundo.

2. Luchar contra el hambre, logrando la seguridad alimentaria, una buena nutrición y promoviendo la agricultura sostenible.

3. Buena salud y un nivel de bienestar aceptable para todos los habitantes del planeta.

4. Educación de calidad, inclusiva y equitativa.

5. Igualdad de género y empoderamiento de mujeres y niñas.

6. Agua potable y saneamiento.

7. Uso de energías renovables, sostenibles y accesibles para todos.

8. Empleo digno y crecimiento económico.

9. Innovación e infraestructuras para una industria sostenible e inclusiva.

10. Reducir la desigualdad social y favorecer la inclusión de todo tipo de nacionalidades, etnias o creencias.

11. Ciudades y comunidades sostenibles.

12. Consumo responsable, siendo conscientes de las repercusiones de lo que producimos y gastamos.

13. Erradicar el cambio climático de forma urgente con medidas que frenen su impacto.

14. Cuidado de la flora y fauna acuática. Reestablecer la salud de los océanos y de la vida marina.

15. Cuidado de la flora y fauna terrestres. Promover ecosistemas que favorezcan la biodiversidad y combatan la degradación del suelo.

16. Paz y justicia, trabajando en la creación de sociedades pacíficas y dialogantes.

17. Alianzas para conseguir los Objetivos Mundiales con el compromiso de todos los países.

«La lección más grande del mundo» es un proyecto de educación social que estará vigente hasta 2030, con la esperanza de haber resuelto gran parte de estas problemáticas mundiales y que suponga la solidez de unas medidas y alianzas que favorezcan un desarrollo próspero y sostenible.

¡Es hora de ponerse manos a la obra y aportar nuestro grano de arena!

Fuente de la Noticia:

http://noticias.universia.es/educacion/noticia/2018/04/30/1159291/leccion-grande-mundo-proyecto-educativo-onu.html

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Francia rediseña su sistema de enseñanza para buscar la inclusión y revalorizar al docente

Francia/01 de mayo de 2018/Por: Fernando J. de Aróstegui /Fuente: https://www.lanacion.com.ar

El ministro de Educación, Jean-Michel Blanquer, se reunió con su par nacional.

a escolarización obligatoria desde los tres años, un mayor énfasis en la enseñanza del lenguaje, la organización de clases de 12 alumnos en los barrios más pobres y el perfeccionamiento de la formación docente son algunas de las reformas con que Francia está reformulando su sistema educativo, con el fin de encarar los desafíos que plantea un mundo cada vez más atravesado por la tecnología y que demanda nuevas habilidades.

Jean-Michel Blanquer, el ministro de Educación de Francia, dio detalles de estas reformas, ayer, durante una conferencia de prensa en el CCK, donde fue presentado por Alejandro Finocchiaro, su par argentino, y con quien comparte mesas de trabajo previas a la Cumbre del G-20, que se celebrará en noviembre en la Argentina.

Blanquer destacó la importancia creciente de la educación como medio de incorporación a un nuevo mercado de trabajo, y aplaudió que el gobierno argentino centrara en ese tema la agenda que desarrollará el G-20.»La educación representará un porcentaje cada vez mayor en el PBI de los países», dijo el ministro francés, y agregó que es necesario invertir en ella cada vez más.

Finocchiaro expresó: «Con el fin de desarrollar una política educativa efectiva de habilidades para el futuro, resulta fundamental promover una inversión eficiente para una educación inclusiva y de calidad».

Dada la importancia que los primeros años de vida tienen en la formación de las personas, a partir de 2019 la escolarización en Francia será obligatoria desde los tres años. En la misma línea, la Argentina tomó una medida idéntica en 2016.

«Las diferencias en el manejo del lenguaje constituyen la primera de las desigualdades observadas entre los alumnos del nivel inicial», dijo Blanquer, y agregó que desde el ingreso de los chicos al sistema educativo se buscará fortalecer su vocabulario y comprensión del lenguaje a través de medios como los juegos o la música.

Junto con la escritura y la lectura, el sistema educativo francés le asignará una especial atención a la oralidad: ahora los alumnos del bachillerato deberán rendir un nuevo examen oral ante un jurado.

Personalizar la enseñanza

Además, desde el año pasado, los alumnos de seis y siete años que asisten a escuelas de los barrios más pobres fueron distribuidos en clases de 12 alumnos, con el fin de personalizar la enseñanza. En julio se hará la primera evaluación de esta nueva organización.

Tal como sucedió en la Argentina, Blanquer explicó que también en su país la educación jugó un papel fundamental en la integración de la sociedad. Sin embargo, destacó que es imperativo devolverles el prestigio perdido a los docentes. «Pero ese prestigio no se devuelve por el decreto de un ministro: hay que generar confianza», precisó, y admitió que los sueldos de los maestros deberían ser mejores. «Queremos pagar más, pero no es fácil».

Además, consideró que en un mundo donde se registra una «creciente irracionalidad», la escuela debe ser el «refugio de la racionalidad», y subrayó la importancia de cultivar el espíritu científico.

También dijo que el éxito del sistema educativo se asienta en dos pilares: la calidad de la formación docente y la confianza. Detalló que desde ahora se pondrá más énfasis en cómo enseñar matemática y ciencias a los maestros de la escuela primaria. Y destacó el rol decisivo que desempeña la confianza en cada una de las distintas relaciones: entre los padres y la institución; entre esta, los docentes y los alumnos; y la confianza en sí mismo que desarrolla cada alumno.

En Francia también introducirán reformas en el bachillerato: «Habrá más libertad de los alumnos para escoger las disciplinas que cursarán», dijo Blanquer, en referencia a aquellos que están a punto de incorporarse al mercado de trabajo.

Fuente de la Noticia:

https://www.lanacion.com.ar/2125536-francia-redisena-su-sistema-de-ensenanza-para-buscar-la-inclusion-y-revalorizar-al-docente

 

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United Arab Emirates: Students throng education expo in search of sponsors

United Arab Emirates/May 01, 2018/Source: https://gulfnews.com

Government entities, education institutions guide students in choosing courses and careers.

Hundreds of students from different educational institutions of the country flocked to the education interface exhibition on Yas Island on Tuesday and explored future academic opportunities, sponsorships and programmes.

A number of government entities including the Ministry of Interior, public and private educational institutions also offered students guidelines and avenues to join them through qualifying their tests after Grade 12.

The two-day 5th Education Interface Exhibition and the Middle East Youth Expo, which opened at Du Forum on Yas Island of the capital, will conclude on Wednesday. The event is being held under the patronage of Lt-General Shaikh Saif Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior.

The exhibition aims to offer future opportunities and guidelines to youth.

Speaking to Gulf News at the Adnoc stand, Fatima Al Za’abi, team leader of admissions and registrations at Adnoc Technical Academy [ATA], said, “We are here to encourage students to register with us and join us; we will sponsor their higher academic qualification and provide them stipend too.”

The starting monthly stipend will be Dh5,000 at Adnoc, while studying, she said. All students who have passed Grade 10th and 12th are able to register under the ATA.

“A lot of students registered with Adnoc on the first day,” she said adding, there are currently 777 students at the ATA. “We want to tell the people about our educational programmes where they will be fully supported and recruited upon completion of their studies.”

The Ministry of Interior’s stand also encouraged students to join the ministry after their Grade 12 and the ministry will sponsor them for their future higher education inside or outside the country.

An official at the stand said, “We will provide them guaranteed jobs, with a fixed monthly salary until they finish their studies and we will finance their studies as well.”

“They need to just register and quality our examinations,” he said.

Students streamed in to the venue in groups to explore the different higher education programmes on offer at different stands.

Fatima Khadar, 17-year-old, from Syria, said, “I visited stands of different universities and found out different specialisation programmes they offer.

“I am happy to find that a lot of universities have been brought under one roof,” the Grade 11th student from Al Israa’ Private School in Al Ain who wants to become a pharmacist in future, said. Another Syrian student from the same grade and school, Shaima Al Amri, 17, said, “I navigated lots of stands along with my classmates. I was looking for some sponsorship for my future studies. I want to pursue my studies in law.”

Amnah Salem, Grade 12 student from Omamah Bint Al Harith Secondary School, said, “I want to enrol in Khalifa University or UAE University for my higher studies but looking for some sponsors to finance my education.”

Salem, an Emirati from Abu Dhabi, wants to pursue bio-medical engineering.

Her classmate, Sara Khalid Al Nabhani, was also looking for sponsors to study engineering at Khalifa University in Abu Dhabi.

“We were looking for sponsorship and exploring study programmes of different universities,” Al Nabhani said.

Cultural education

At a stand in a corner at the venue, three women could be seen weaving different kinds of bags from sheep wool, showcasing hand paintings on wooden boxes called mandoos and preparing big umbrella-shaped lid [makabba], which is used to cover food, giving youth a taste of the local culture.

Ahmad Al Rumaithi, director of Abu Dhabi Centre of Emirates Heritage Club, said, “We intend to highlight the local culture and traditions which our forefathers used to practise in the past.

“We need to preserve them, spread them among youth. If you don’t have a past preserved, you can’t have a future,” he said.

Handicrafts on show also included small woollen carpets, pillow covers and woollen strings for decorations.

Source:

https://gulfnews.com/news/uae/education/students-throng-education-expo-in-search-of-sponsors-1.2214949

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Argentina: Repite uno de cada 10 chicos por año en la secundaria y hay desigualdad entre provincias

Argentina/01 de mayo de 2018/Por: Ricardo Braginski/Fuente: https://www.clarin.com

Son nuevos datos oficiales. Preocupan porque la prueba Aprender 2017 mostró que los alumnos que vuelven a cursar el año aprenden menos que los demás.

Unos 400 mil alumnos que en marzo empezaron las clases en la secundaria, el año que viene deberán cambiar de división, cursar con compañeros de menos edad y volver a estudiar exactamente las mismas materias y contenidos. Las últimas cifras oficiales indican que repite uno de cada 10 estudiantes por año en las escuelas medias argentinas y que hay mucha desigualdad entre las distintas provincias. El dato preocupa a expertos y autoridades porque las últimas pruebas Aprender de 2017 demostraron –como estudios anteriores- que los alumnos que repiten, además de sufrir en su autoestima, aprenden menos que los demás.

De acuerdo a los últimos datos oficiales, que corresponden al año 2016, el porcentaje de repitentes en la secundaria argentina es del10,1%. Si bien la cifra se mantiene estable en los últimos 5 años, había crecido en la década pasada, cuando más alumnos se incorporaron a la escuela media en nuestro país. Por entonces estaba en el orden del 8%.

La repitencia es muy desigual entre las provincias. Mientras que en Santa Cruz repite el 18,9% de los alumnos, en Río Negro el 14,3% y en Neuquén el 13,3%, en la otra punta hay distritos que tienen mucho menos repitencia, como La Rioja con solo el 3,3%, San Luis (7,2%), Misiones (7,9%) y Capital (8%). Los datos surgen del informe “La repitencia: ¿aliada o enemiga del aprendizaje?”, que presentó este jueves el Observatorio Argentinos por la Educación.

Las autoridades -de todo el país- avanzan en una reforma de la escuela media que incluya nuevas estrategias de promoción que dejen a la repitencia como la última instancia a aplicar. / AFP

Las autoridades -de todo el país- avanzan en una reforma de la escuela media que incluya nuevas estrategias de promoción que dejen a la repitencia como la última instancia a aplicar. / AFP

Los alumnos argentinos están entre los que más repiten en la secundaria en la región, según un estudio de Cippec que comparó la educación en América Latina entre 2000 y 2015.

Las mayores dificultades están en el primer y segundo año de ese nivel. A nivel nacional, el año que más se repitió en 2016 es el segundo (que equivale a primero en los distritos que tienen 7 años de primaria). En este año, el porcentaje de repitentes fue del 14,2%. A medida que avanzan en la escolaridad, la cantidad de chicos que repiten desciende. En el último año de la secundaria fue el 5,9%.

Los expertos cuestionan a la repitencia como estrategia pedagógica y afirman que, lejos de mejorarles los aprendizajes a los chicos que tienen dificultades, les complica más su trayectoria escolar.

Los datos son contundentes. En las últimas pruebas Aprender 2017 de los alumnos del último año de la secundaria que no repitieron nunca, el 34,2% logró niveles satisfactorios en Matemática. Ahora, entre los que repitieron una vez obtuvieron buenos resultados la mitad: el 18,6%.

Diferencias similares se verifican en Lengua. Hay 18,4 puntos porcentuales de diferencia entre los alumnos a los que les fue bien en esta materia y nunca repitieron con respecto a los que rindieron satisfactoriamente y repitieron dos o más veces.

“Los datos sugieren la necesidad de revisar el mecanismo de repitencia como herramienta pedagógica y de crear alternativas que favorezcan que los estudiantes aprendan mientras avanzan en sus trayectorias escolares”, dijo Ignacio Ibarzábal, director del Observatorio Argentinos por la Educación.

Mientras, las autoridades -de todo el país- avanzan en una reforma de la escuela media que incluya nuevas estrategias de promoción que dejen a la repitencia como la última instancia a aplicar. Río Negro es la provincia más avanzada con esta reforma.

Los expertos no creen que anular la repitencia sea la solución. Para Rebeca Anijovich, de la Universidad de San Andrés, la UBA y Flacso, la clave es el acompañamiento de la trayectoria escolarde cada alumno -por ejemplo, con tutorías integrales-, así como estrategias preventivas que pueden aplicar las escuelas para ayudar a cada chico.

https://www.clarin.com/sociedad/repite-10-chicos-ano-secundaria-desigualdad-provincias_0_SJkzaCk6f.html
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Piden a las escuelas y padres chinos que tomen medidas para evitar que los niños y jóvenes se hagan adictos a internet

China/01 de mayo de 2018/Fuente: http://spanish.people.com.cn

Las autoridades han pedido a las escuelas primarias y secundarias de China que tomen medidas para evitar que los estudiantes se hagan adictos a internet, informó este martes el Ministerio de Educación de China.

También se les señaló a las escuelas que mejoren la consciencia de los estudiantes sobre los violentos y vulgares contenidos que se distribuyen en ciertas plataformas de internet y acerca de los impactos negativos de los juegos en línea, además de proporcionar asistencia y orientación a los estudiantes que muestran signos de adicción a dichos contenidos o juegos, detalló el Ministerio de Educación de China en un comunicado de prensa.

También hay que fortalecer la gestión del acceso a internet en las escuelas y regular el uso de teléfonos móviles dentro de las instituciones escolares.

Asimismo, el Ministerio de Educación de China publicó una carta abierta a los padres, exhortándolos a ser más conscientes sobre este nuevo problema para que puedan combatirlo mejor.

Li Mingxin, director de una escuela primaria de Beijing, precisó a Xinhua que las nuevas orientaciones son muy necesarias e importantes.

“Hay que admitir que el uso de teléfonos móviles y el fácil acceso a internet han causado problemas entre algunos estudiantes y en la gestión de la escuela”, afirmó Li, y añadió que la política del Ministerio de Educación de China apoya a las escuelas para que disciplinen a los alumnos en el uso racional de sus teléfonos móviles.

Fuente de la Noticia:

http://spanish.people.com.cn/n3/2018/0425/c31614-9453537.html

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