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We can replicate Shakespeare’s educational utopia

Oceanía/Australia/Abril 2016/Autor: PETER HOLBROOK/ Fuente: theaustralian.com.au

Resumen: Tal vez la mayor suerte de Shakespeare fue haber nacido en un mundo que, al menos para la élite social, profundamente valora la educación y las artes del lenguaje. La alfabetización en general mejoró enormemente durante el siglo 16 y la alfabetización avanzada prosperó en las escuelas secundarias y universidades. Todo ello cuando pensamos en la muerte de Shakespeare hace 400 años ya que en el año 1616 se puso fin a la obra de su vida.

«Thou met’st with things dying,
I with things newborn»

So says a character in Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale. A similar awareness of the way endings also can be beginnings is borne in upon us when we think about Shakespeare’s death 400 years ago tomorrow. The year 1616 brought an end to his life’s work.

But it was also the beginning of Shakespeare’s extraordinary influence on readers, writers, thinkers, performers, and artists of all kinds ever since.

As 19th-century American philosopher Ralph Waldo Emerson said, Shakespeare “wrote the text of modern life”. It is hard to imagine our world without him.

Nevertheless, Shakespeare might not have survived — and the world would be have been less interesting, varied and living as a result. Plague struck Stratford-upon-Avon a few months after his birth, which is believed to be around April 23, 1564. (Fortuitously for those enthused by commemoration, April 23 is also the day he died.) The pestilence knocked off about a seventh of the town’s population. Shakespeare dodged that bullet (or arrow, the usual Elizabethan metaphor for plague), and actors, directors, composers of operas and lovers of poetry can be thankful he did.

In another sense, Shakespeare would not have existed for us if his devoted colleagues, actors John Heminge and Henry Condell, had not preserved 18 of his plays, hitherto unprinted, in the so-called First Folio of 1623, the first collected edition of Shakespeare’s drama published by printer William Jaggard and his son Isaac. (Folio was a printer’s term for a large-sized book — a copy of this cultural treasure is held in the Mitchell Library in Sydney.)

Heminge and Condell are not widely known, but without their labours we would not possess masterpieces such as Antony and Cleopatra, As You Like It, Julius Caesar, Macbeth and The Tempest.

Even imaginative geniuses such as Shakespeare depend on many contingent, rather humdrum, factors if they are to flourish. Things could have been different. If all Shakespeare’s plays had somehow perished, as many old books did, it would be as if he never lived.

But Shakespeare was lucky. His friends recognised his genius, and saw to it that the 18 unprinted plays were gathered up and handed down to us. The plague didn’t get him, and the syphilis that he very plausibly suffered from (as sonnets 153 and 154 strongly suggest) didn’t hold back his creative powers either.

Indeed, perhaps his experience of venereal disease fired his imagination: plays such as Hamlet, Measure for Measure and Timon of Athens are obsessively preoccupied with corruption, disease and morbidity.

And he was extraordinarily fortunate to be born into an already vibrant theatrical culture: purpose-built theatres opened their doors in London from 1576. (City authorities detested theatres as sources of disorder; they gladly would have closed them down if Queen Elizabeth and King James had permitted it.)

Perhaps Shakespeare’s greatest luck was to be born into a world that, at least for the social elite, profoundly valued education and the arts of language. Literacy in general improved tremendously during the 16th century and advanced literacy thrived in the grammar schools and universities. Without the vigorous educational culture Shakespeare was exposed to in his local grammar school, he would never have become Shakespeare — “For a good poet’s made, as well as born”, as Ben Jonson, Shakespeare’s friend and literary rival, knew.

Stratford’s Grammar School (almost certainly Shakespeare’s school, and still educating young people today), was an excellent one, with well-trained university graduates teaching there.

Shakespeare’s main teacher was probably a man called Thomas Jenkins. He was an Oxford MA and had been a fellow of St John’s, Oxford. The school’s curriculum would have been demanding: intensive, rigorous study of Latin grammar and classic Roman ­authors, Virgil, Cicero, Ovid among them.

Students would translate Latin authors into English, and, some time later, back into Latin. They were expected to develop good English style as well as sound Latinity. Classic and modern authors were studied as models of expression. Learning poetry (and prose — the English Bible) by heart was standard practice. So was acting in plays, always an excellent way to commit good writing to memory. There was much emphasis on reading good-quality poetry and prose out loud, and on participating in debates.

If we thank Heminge and Condell for saving about half of Shakespeare’s work from oblivion, we also should thank the school system of Tudor England that en­abled Shakespeare to develop his peculiar and unruly gift for language and thought. Teachers such as Jenkins and his colleagues deserve their plaudits, too.

Perhaps there is a lesson for us in all this. Advanced literacy does not just happen. It requires wise nurturing by well-run institutions. If we want a sophisticated literary culture — or even just citizens, people capable of fully and meaningfully participating in political deliberation — we need to value our schools and universities, and to ensure that they are operating at the highest standard.

One of the most exciting aspects of my professional life as an academic has been running numerous workshops aimed at bringing together high school teachers with some of the best scholars of the humanities.

Experience running these workshops tells me that schoolteachers want to be able to stay in touch with the latest and deepest scholarship in literature, history, art history, drama and the like. Teachers want, and rightly expect, expert training in the disciplines they profess.

But if such expert training of teachers is to take place, we had better ensure that our university faculties of humanities and social and natural sciences are well-stocked with high-quality academics. There is no other route to a first-class education system.

And if we want young people able to use language with precision, grace, and clarity we must ensure they are effectively and creatively taught those writers pre-eminent in eloquence and imaginative and intellectual power — of whom Shakespeare (and happy birthday to him) is one.

Fuente de la noticia: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/opinion/we-can-replicate-shakespeares-educational-utopia/news-story/484c00573b3e3c6a04b2ab60eadd6172

Fuente de la imagen: http://cdn.newsapi.com.au/image/v1/c06f14132c190210cf22ba0a51a028f9?width=650

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Malawi: Govt Summons Teachers Union of Malawi for Crisis Meeting

Resumen: El Ministerio de Educación ha convocado al Sindicato de Maestros de Malawi (TUM) para una reunión después de la  amenaza de una huelga nacional en mayo, como forma de forzar acuerdo con el gobierno sobre los reclamos pendientes,

Ministry of Education officials have summoned Teachers Union of Malawi (TUM) for a crisis meeting following a threat for a nationwide strike in May as way of forcing government deal with outstanding grievances.

Ministry of Education spokesperson Manfred Ndovie said the government want to resolve the grievances, 24 in number amicably without TUM withdrawing labour of its teachers.

«We will meet TUM soon. We were supposed to meet them sometime back but we indeed failed to turn up, not because out of disrespect but because we needed to thoroughly consult on some of the issues, as you might be aware that there is an issue of K160 million arrears, we needed to consult treasury on the issue,» he said.

TUM president Chauluka Muwake said it was a joke for the government to tell those who successfully passed interviews and were promoted to Grade K or PT3 that they would get to their new position after someone on the same grade dies so the government would just make a replacement.

Most teachers in Lilongwe confirmed this an interview and Nyasa Times has copies of one of the teachers who successfully passed the interviews and the government wrote her a promotion letter only to hold the promotion later until someone dies so that she could be replaced.

Muwake also said most secondary school teachers were not paid in March and the government has not yet paid them until now.

TUM also accuses the government of threatening to withdraw promotions of some primary school teachers who were promoted on understanding that they would take up rural school positions.

«The ministry says it wants to withdraw the promotions because they had not gone to the schools where they were posted yet the government has not given them transport. Let the government provide transport,» he said.

He also claimed some secondary school teachers have not yet received leave grants for the last school calendar.

Fuente de la noticia:  Malawi: Govt Summons Teachers Union of Malawi for Crisis Meeting

Fuente de la imagen: http://www.operationworld.org/files/ow/maps/lgmap/mala-MMAP-md.png

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Bolivia: Ministro de Economía afirma que el país crecerá un 5%, pese a difícil coyuntura mundial

NODAL/22 de abril de 2016

A pesar de la caída de los precios de las materias primas, Bolivia mantiene hoy su previsión de crecimiento del cinco por ciento del Producto Interno Bruto (PIB) para este año, gracias a la inversión pública.

En una conferencia de prensa en la ONU, donde se encuentra de visita, el presidente Evo Morales destacó que el alza del PIB será posible por la gran cantidad de proyectos en infraestructuras, sobre todo en carreteras, aeropuertos, industrias y otras obras.

Morales recordó que la situación del país cambió desde que su Gobierno decidió nacionalizar los hidrocarburos y recuperar las empresas públicas.

Antes la poca plata que se recaudaba se exportaba, ahora se queda con el pueblo, dijo.

La recuperación de los recursos permitió redistribuir las riquezas a los sectores más vulnerables mediante bonos y transferencias a las administraciones departamentales y municipales.

Ello trajo como consecuencia la reducción de la pobreza extrema de 38 por ciento al 18 por ciento, un indicador que el Estado Plurinacional prevé bajar a cero en 2025.

Bolivia pasó de uno de los países más atrasados del continente a uno de los de mayor crecimiento anual del Producto Interno Bruto, con un promedio de cinco por ciento en la última década.

Esa situación se mantiene y va a seguir, declaró recientemente el ministro de Economía, Luis Alberto Arce, en respuesta a una previsión del Fondo Monetario Internacional de sólo 3,8 por ciento.

De acuerdo con Arce, el país tomó las medidas oportunas y cuenta con un modelo económico sólido que está dando resultados en materia del alza del PIB, reducción de la pobreza y mayor igualdad social a través de la redistribución del ingreso.

Tanto el presidente, como el ministro de Economía, coinciden en la incidencia de la baja del precio del petróleo y de los recursos naturales, sin embargo, argumentan que la situación será sorteada por la estabilidad económica y el incremento de las inversiones.

El plan de desarrollo hasta 2020 prevé una inversión de más de 48 mil millones de dólares en infraestructura, producción y generación de empleo.

El mandatario afirmó que Bolivia seguirá siendo un modelo en incremento del PIB, con justicia social, redistribución de las riquezas y la ampliación del aparato productivo.

Fuente: http://www.nodal.am/2016/04/bolivia-ministro-de-economia-afirma-que-el-pais-crecera-un-5-pese-a-dificil-coyuntura-mundial/

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Namibia: Unesco Reviews Vocational and Technical Training Education

Namibia/abril de 2016/All Africa

Resumen: El Ministerio de Educación Superior, Capacitación e Innovación acoge la primera misión exploratoria de las Naciones Unidas para la Educación, la Ciencia y (UNESCO) de la Organización de la Cultura de Namibia, que comenzó el 18 de abril y finalizará el 28. La misión tiene como objetivo evaluar las actuaciones prácticas y las cuestiones de educación, formación e innovación instituciones superiores tales como Tecnología Ciencia Técnica y formación profesional (FTP) y educación Superior y e Innovación (CTI) Sistemas de Namibia.

The Ministry of Higher Education, Training and Innovation is hosting the first United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation’s (UNESCO) scoping mission to Namibia, which started on 18 April and will end on 28. The mission aims at evaluating the practical performances and issues of higher education, training and innovation institutions such Technical and Vocational Training (TVET) and Higher Education and Science Technology and Innovation (STI) Systems in Namibia.

The UNESCO scoping mission to Namibia is an initiative of the Ministry which, together with UNESCO, strongly supports the review of Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET), Higher Education and Science, Technology and Innovation System in Namibia. During the mission, UNESCO technical experts and a complementary team from Namibia, will hold discussions with the relevant government Ministries, institutions and stakeholders. The aim of the mission is to assist the newly established Ministry in defining policies and programmes related to the three pillars of the Ministry (Higher education, Training and Innovation) by assessing the current status of TVET, higher education and innovation in Namibia, identify strategic priorities and proposing alternative interventions responding to those priorities. Furthermore, it aims to consider the contribution of Technical and Vocational Training, higher education and innovation to overall development goals such as poverty eradication as highlighted in the Harambee Prosperity Plan.

Speaking at the press conference held this week the Minister of Higher Education, Training and Innovation, Hon. Dr Itah Kandjii-Murangi said, «At the onset, the Ministry aims to take stock to establish – what do we have, where is it, does it yield intend results, how do we improve having efficiency and effectiveness in mind? Thus, the assessment of the situation by the UNESCO and ILO (International Labour Organisation) is paramount». The minister explained that UNESCO’s mandate also covers aspects of natural sciences including science, technology and innovation policies as well as sectoral programmatic areas such as ICT, climate change and many others. «As the technical agency of the UN, the organisation prides itself with excellent technical capacity argumented by appropriate exposure and experience,» said the minister.

Meanwhile, UNESCO’s Director General Dr Irina Bokova alongside a team of 8 international experts have drafted a proposal for the review of Technical and Vocational Education and Training. The end of the review will yield a diagnosis of the current strengths and weaknesses of Namibia system. Dr Itah Kandjii-Murangi in her closing remarks noted that the findings of the assessments will be validated by all stakeholders and the recommendations will be benchmarked with international best policies, before being adopted for implementations.

Fuente de la noticia:  Namibia: Unesco Reviews Vocational and Technical Training Education

Fuente de la imagen: https://economist.com.na/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/UNESCO-scoping-mission.jpg

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Not All Money Troubles Are Equal, Why Blacks and Hispanics Have It Much Worse

América del Norte/EEUU/Abril 2016/Autor: Gillian B. White/ Fuente: The Atlantic

Resumen: En los Estados Unidos de América a pesar de que todos los grupos pueden sufrir de inseguridad financiera; sin embargo para los negros y los hispanos en ese país las consecuencias pueden ser mucho peor. Concretamente en lo referente a las diferencias en las estructuras educativas y familiares que representan algunas de las diferenciaciones de los salarios.

Stories like the one told in this month’s cover story—of a well-off white professional whose finances are a wreck—seem to suggest that financial calamity can strike anyone, of any race or income level, via a series of unfortunate events or financial missteps. “Financial impotence is an equal-opportunity malady, striking across every demographic divide,” writes Neal Gabler, the story’s author.

It might be true that this can happen to anyone, but for minorities, it’s far, far more likely. It’s also true that in the event of a downturn—personal or market-wide—they fall harder, faster. They have fewer resources for digging themselves out of a hole, and they are unlikely to know anyone who is much better off who could spot them the needed cash. Financial insecurity is in no way an equal-opportunity offender.

When it comes to measuring this problem, the ability to dig into one’s emergency fund to cover it is a popular heuristic. According to Pew, common emergency expenses—such as a car repair, hospital bill, or a sudden job loss—can eat up as much as $2,000. Most American households—regardless of income —don’t have that much set aside to cover such shocks. Many white families could instead turn to liquid assets, such as stocks or bonds or other savings to bridge the gap. But that’s just not possible for the majority of minorities. “Households of color are particularly fragile: A quarter of black households would have less than $5 if they liquidated all of their financial assets,” the study’s author Erin Currier, the director of financial security and mobility project at Pew Charitable Trust writes.

Such numbers are distressing but not surprising: Blacks and Hispanics continue to struggle economically. In 2013, the median white family had wealth that totaled more than $140,000, Hispanics had only $14,000. And black Americans had $11,000. People of color are less likely to belong to the seemingly safe middle class —about 45 percent and 48 percent respectively. For whites, more than half of the population, around 52 percent, is middle class. Those numbers might not seem all that far apart, but when you take a look at the median incomes within racial groups (for a family of three) the disparities become clearer: Based on 2012 data, children of white families that fall into the middle quintile of earners made around $55,000 each year. Black children whose families were also middle quintile wind up earning around $13,000 less. The median income of whites was higher than that of blacks for at each quintile. That means that even when they fall into the same economic class, these groups are still pretty far apart in terms of actual earnings, says Richard Fry, a senior researcher at the Pew Research Center.

And once in the middle class, it’s harder for black Americans to stay there. (Most mobility data is restricted to comparisons between blacks and whites and does not include Hispanics or Asian Americans.) “When comparing intergenerational economic mobility by race, the data show that more than half of African Americans raised in the middle quintile fall out of the middle as adults, compared to about a third of whites,” Currier said. “Unfortunately, there were so few black parents in the top two income quintiles that examining the economic mobility of their children is not possible,” she added.

What is driving these disparities? Part of the problem is that the ways that families accumulate wealth are stacked against blacks and Hispanics. Housing—equity in which makes up more than 60 percent of the average American household’s wealth—is a major factor. Even decades after the formal cessation of redlining, blacks and Hispanics are significantly less likely to be homeowners than their white counterparts. At the start of 2016, the homeownership for white Americans was 72 percent. For Hispanics it was 47 percent. For blacks it was 41 percent. Even for those minorities who are able to buy homes, the benefits are more muted than they are for white Americans. Why? Blacks and Hispanics are more likely to live in low-income neighborhoods, which means that their homes don’t appreciate as much as they would if they were somewhere else. But more than that, when these families do move to mostly white neighborhoods, they nevertheless tend to also suffer. In fact, studies have shown that once more than 10 percent of a neighborhood becomes populated by black households, property values begin to decline simply because of their presence.

A prime example of this inequality is the aftermath of the housing crisis. While whites are more likely to own homes, they are also more likely to own other assets. For black homeowners, however, houses account for just about all of their wealth. That means that the recession gutted nearly all of the black wealth that there was. A report from the ACLU estimates that by 2031, white families’ wealth will be about 31 percent lower because of the recession. Black families will have given up around 40 percent of their wealth.

Taxes can play a role too. According to Dorothy Brown, a professor of tax law at Emory University, some of the credits, deductions, and rules that provide windfalls for families at tax time give white families more of a boost than black or Hispanic ones. “Tax law is a political, a social, and an economic document. So of course there are going to be racial disparities.” Brown says. “To say, ‘the tax law is neutral’ is just nonsense.”

The mortgage interest deduction, for instance, which allows filers to reduce their taxable income, accounted for nearly $70 billion worth of deductions in 2013, and disproportionately helps white households, who make up the bulk of homeowners. And one credit that many assume largely helps minorities—the Earned Income Tax Credit—goes half to white people, Brown says. There are other culprits too, like the way joint returns reward or penalize couples based on earnings. “When blacks marry, they actually have their taxes go up, when whites marry, their taxes go down,” Brown says. Why is this? When couples marry and file a joint return, they can receive either a marriage bonus, which could be as high as 20 percent of their income, or be charged a marriage penalty, which could cost them as much as 12 percent, according to the Tax Foundation. The deciding factor is how close the two individuals’ incomes are: The bigger the gap the bigger the bonus. Brown says that this winds up penalizing black joint filers at a disproportionately high rate, since married black couples are more likely to have similar incomes, while households where one spouse works and the other stays home—the households that receive the biggest bonus—tend to be white. And the same goes for tax-advantaged savings accounts, like pensions and other retirement plans, which Brown says whites are more likely to have access to and to make use of, giving them a huge boost when it comes to building tax-free wealth for later in life.

In Gabler’s piece for instance, he notes that his financial predicament left him unable to pay for his children’s college education. So he turned to his own parents, who were able to provide the money for elite educations (at the cost of his own inheritance). It’s pretty unlikely than blacks or Hispanics would have access to these financial resources at all, from parents or grandparents. What’s more, windfalls like an inheritance come with tax advantages that a bonus from work or sudden jump in income don’t. It’s not just that white Americans tend to earn more, it’s that they hold more wealth: Less debt, more home equity, more stocks and bonds, more flush retirement accounts. These economic advantages accrue over time and then get passed down to the next generation, who in turn, are able to start their adult lives with a financial cushion, which can help them weather schools debt, unemployment, high rental prices, down payments, and emergencies of all varieties without doing the financially ruinous things that their peers without that backing may have to do. The lucky few who are able to do this, are, by and large, white.

The idea that parents or grandparents can swoop in to help their children buy a home, pay off a credit card, or cover the cost of college is mostly a reality for white America. That might be part of the reason that black young adults are more likely to owe on student loans (44 percent) compared to white young adults (35 percent). And sadly, a lot of the debt owed by young black and Hispanic adults is for degrees that they didn’t manage to complete, Currier says. These educational rifts, along with differences in family income and structure certainly play a part in the cyclical financial problems of minorities. But there’s more to it.

The persistent lag in wealth have been attributed to some of the same inconsistencies that account for income gaps, but they don’t explain the entire, vast discord. A 2015 report from the St. Louis Fed states, “Other factors must be in play, including early childhood experiences, parental influences and, of course, deep and historical discrimination against blacks and other minorities.”

Fry says that differences in education and family structures account for some of the differentiation in wages, but certainly not all of it. “Even when you look for equally well-educated blacks and whites there’s still a significant gap, which may point to overt discrimination,” he says. And that is especially troubling since income is the starting point for financial security in the first place. Most households get their money from working and wages—areas where minorities are historically and persistently disadvantaged.

That helps explain why blacks and Hispanics have such a hard time building wealth. “When you have low income you spend most of your money. You use it on your basic expenses, there isn’t much to save,” Fry says.

These discrepancies, in wealth and income, don’t just matter for a household’s current financial success, they set a path for what will happen for a family’s children, and grandchildren, and whether or not, over time, a family will be able to increase, or at least maintain their economic standing. But that, too, is deeply colored by race.

Fuente de la noticia: http://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/36464-not-all-money-troubles-are-equal-why-blacks-and-hispanics-have-it-much-worse

Fuente de la imagen: http://readersupportednews.org/images/stories/article_imgs20/020753-poverty-042216.jpg

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Tonga: Fire destroys two rooms at Tonga Side School

Tonga: Fire destroys two rooms at Tonga Side School
Tonga/ abril de 2016/Matangi Tonga Online

Resumen: Dos aulas fueron arrasadas por un incendio la madrugada del  miércoles 20 de abril en el campus principal de Tonga Side School en Nuku’alofa. Una investigación realizada por la policía y los bomberos está en marcha para determinar la causa.

Two classrooms were razed by a fire early this morning, Wednesday 20 April at Tonga Side School main campus in Nuku’alofa. An investigation by police and fire services is underway to determine the cause.

The Acting Deputy Fire Commissioner Sinamoni Kauvaka said the fire was reported to them at around 1:45am by a phone call and a driver who stopped by the fire station.
He said there were no casualities but the esimated loss is more than $60,000 pa’anga.
When the firefighters arrived at the school a block of four classrooms was on fire. “Two classrooms were already engulfed and our firefighters could not save them but managed to save the remaining two and prevented the fire from further spreading to a neighbouring government flat, which was located just 5 metres away from this classroom block,” he said.
The Deputy Fire Commissioner said the origin of the fire seemed to have begun from the top or ceiling in one of the classrooms.
“At this stage we have nothing that would suggest anything suspicious but our investigation continues to determine the cause,” he said.
The two razed classrooms belonged to the students of Class 3-4.
Tonga Side School is a government school that teaches Class 1 to Form 2 levels.

T Fuente: http://matangitonga.to/2016/04/20/fire-destroys-two-rooms-tonga-side-school
Foto: http://matangitonga.to/sites/matangitonga.to/files/20160420-TSSfire-9181-650px.jpg

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Perú: Lanzan convocatoria para Campamento Científico de Escolares Mujeres

En el marco del Foro APEC

Perú/Lima/20 de Abril de 2016/Andina

Hasta el próximo 24 de abril estará abierta la convocatoria para participar en el Campamento WiSci 2016 para Mujeres Jóvenes, impulsada por una asociación entre Girl-Up y el Departamento de Estado de los Estados Unidos, con el apoyo del Concytec y otros socios internacionales.

Esta convocatoria está dirigida a escolares mujeres de entre 14 y 17 años y se realiza en el marco del Foro de Cooperación Económica Asia Pacífico 2016, informaron voceros del Consejo Nacional de Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación Tecnológica (Concytec).
El Campamento WiSci 2016 se desarrollará en el Perú durante dos semanas en el mes de julio. Se reunirá a más 100 alumnas de escuelas secundarias de Chile, México, Perú y los Estados Unidos, ofreciendo así una nueva oportunidad para demostrar el impacto verdadero de la educación en Ciencia, Tecnología, Ingeniería, Artes y Diseño, y Matemáticas (STEAM, por sus siglas en inglés.)
El plan de estudios incluirá la formación en ingeniería, química, robótica, codificación, y la posibilidad presentar formas en que dichas profesiones se puedan aplicar a las innovaciones en la agricultura, asuntos ambientales, transporte, salud y otros desafíos y oportunidades regionales.
Las escolares trabajarán en proyectos para aplicar las lecciones aprendidas a situaciones reales. También participarán en sesiones de diseño con visión y desarrollo de liderazgo.
El Campamento WiSci 2016 busca involucrar a los funcionarios del gobierno y líderes del sector privado de APEC sobre las mejores prácticas y recomendaciones de políticas para cerrar la brecha de género STEM.
El Concytec, en el marco de generar vocación científica en nuestros jóvenes e impulsar el empoderamiento de las mujeres en la Ciencia, acompaña esta iniciativa. Para mayor información ingresar a la página web: www.girlup.org/wisci/apec-2016
Fuente:http://www.andina.com.pe/agencia/noticia-lanzan-convocatoria-para-campamento-cientifico-escolares-mujeres-608878.aspx
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