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México: Los beneficiados por la educación superior

México/ www.animalpolitico.com / 23 de Agosto de 2017

La educación superior en México está marcada por la falta sistemática de información. La ausencia de monitoreo y regulación son factores por los que su crecimiento se ha dado en una dinámica más cercana a la inercia que a la planeación. El éxito de la gran expansión del acceso educativo, que de 1996 a 2015 incrementó la matrícula universitaria de 1.3 a 3.9 millones de alumnos 1, no logró que la ampliación de la oferta se diera con atención a la calidad y diversidad de los programas.

¿Por qué hay pocas fuentes de información sobre la educación superior? En buena parte porque los incipientes sistemas de acreditación y evaluación actuales están enfocados en medir la calidad del diseño de los planes de estudio, pero no los resultados de los egresados de esos programas.

Aunque los datos existentes son limitados, dejan en claro que hay grandes diferencias en el futuro laboral de quien elige una carrera u otra: salario promedio, tasa de informalidad o retorno sobre la inversión, información que puedes consultar en ComparaCarreras.org. Sin embargo, falta conocer aspectos más específicos sobre las carreras y sobre las diferencias entre universidades, pues los que ahora conocemos de estas últimas está entre poco y nada.

Fuente: http://www.animalpolitico.com/blogueros-neoliberal-nel-liberal/2017/08/22/los-beneficiados-la-educacion-superior/

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Uruguay: Docentes de Secundaria anuncian paro de 24 horas para la segunda semana de setiembre

Uruguay/Agosto de 2017/Fuente: La Red 21

Este sábado 19 de agosto se reunió la asamblea general de delegados de FENAPES.

Luego del encuentro, el sindicato de docentes aprobó una declaración a través de la cual reitera “la importancia de asumir la defensa de la educación pública ante el avance sistemático del proceso de privatización de y en la educación pública”.

Expresan que tal proceso, “más allá de aparentes diferencias o matices, reúne un amplio consenso político-partidario dentro del gobierno y la mayoría de la oposición”.

Aseguran que “la mercantilización de la educación, y su transformación en una mercancía y no en un derecho, ha habilitado mediante decisiones políticas el avance del lucro en favor del capital privado, así como la imposición de criterios y métodos propios del mundo empresarial al sistema educativo mediante el establecimiento de metas y objetivos en los cuales sólo importa los datos estadísticos y no el estudiante, su aprendizaje y su formación”.

Despilfarro de recursos

FENAPES asegura que dicho proceso “avanza en un marco de restricciones presupuestales donde no sólo se le niega a la educación pública los recursos que esta necesita en función de desafíos a asumir, sino que la misma sufre constantes recortes”.

En ese marco “se asume una lógica de priorizar las políticas focalizadas funcionales a las metas planteadas desde el gobierno nacional, en desmedro de atender los problemas estructurales de la educación pública, despilfarrando recursos que son escasos en el aumento del aparato burocrático de control que en nada benefician a estudiantes y trabajadores”.

El sindicato de docentes públicos expresa que “el proceso restaurador de las políticas iniciadas en los años 90, que hoy se profundiza, apela, por un lado, a la cooptación; y por otro a la imposición, lo cual conlleva la limitación sistemática de la libertad sindical, para lo cual se recurre fácilmente a los decretos de esencialidad y al no cumplimiento de lo que mandata la Ley de Negociación colectiva”.

Un ejemplo de ello lo constituye “la actitud del Poder Ejecutivo en los ámbitos de negociación colectiva ante el tratamiento de la Rendición de Cuentas de 2016 y su negativa a acompañar lo solicitado al Parlamento por parte de los organismos de la educación”.

También rechazan la forma como el Parlamento avaló acuerdos del presidente de la República, Tabaré Vázquez, con actores de la oposición que “incluyen aumentos para un sector de trabajadores, directores, por fuera de los ámbitos de negociación colectiva que genera nuevas inequidades e impone la lógica gerencial empresarial a un cargo que forma parte de la carrera docente; así como nuevos recortes en la creación de cargos, inversiones y gastos de funcionamiento dentro de ANEP”.

“Rechazamos enfáticamente todo este proceso que implica en los hechos la restauración y profundización de las políticas aplicadas desde los años 90”, manifiesta FENAPES.

En dicho marco, aseguran que “la flexibilización y desregulación de las condiciones de trabajo dentro del sistema educativo forman parte de las políticas que se impulsan desde las autoridades de la educación”.

Afirman asimismo, que “la estabilidad laboral es un derecho del trabajador dentro del sistema educativo, garantizado por la propia Constitución de la República, y es una responsabilidad de la administración asegurar y desarrollar políticas de concurso que la habiliten”.

En este sentido FENAPES exige al Consejo de Educación Secundaria (CES) el desarrollo de una “política general y sistemática de concursos con independencia de agendas o compromisos asumidos por parte de las autoridades de la educación con otros actores”.

Las autoridades del CES insisten con su planteo de “elección de docentes por más de un año, como la gran solución a todos los problemas que hoy tiene enseñanza Secundaria”.

“Saben las autoridades, porque se los han dicho sus organismos asesores, que este no es un problema estructural a resolver así como tampoco están las condiciones dadas para llevarlo a cabo”, expresan.

Al tiempo aseguran que “no es desde el desconocimiento de la realidad ni desde argumentos que la tergiversen o queriendo imponer que van a poder concretar este objetivo”.

Inmediata convocatoria a concursos

En tal sentido, FENAPES resolvió “exigir al CES la inmediata convocatoria a concursos en los diferentes cargos sobre bases acordadas en el marco de lo que establece la Ley 18508, con total independencia de otros temas”.

Afirman que de no haber respuestas o avances sustantivos en un plazo de siete días, solicitarán un ámbito de negociación colectiva ante la  Dirección Nacional del Trabajo (DINATRA).

En virtud de que la estabilidad laboral conlleva “resolver problemas estructurales tales como el salario, la estabilidad de planes y grupos, la creación de cargo, así como políticas sistemáticas de concursos”, el gremio de docentes de Secundaria entiende que “no existen condiciones para desarrollar ninguna experiencia de elección por más de un año en ningún punto del territorio nacional”.

Dado el conflicto existente y de lo que acontezca en los ámbitos de negociación colectiva, “se aprueba, por unanimidad, la realización de un paro nacional de 24 horas con movilización, cuya fecha será resuelta por el comité ejecutivo y el cual debiera desarrollarse dentro de la primera semana de setiembre”.

Fuente: http://www.lr21.com.uy/comunidad/1342026-docentes-secundaria-fenapes-paro-24-horas

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Panamá: Docentes esperan reunirse con alta comisión de gobierno

Panamá/Agosto de 2017/Fuente: Panamá América

Los docentes que decidieron levantar la medida de huelga y volver a las aulas de clases, tras la firma de un acuerdo  el pasado 11 de agosto, esperan reunirse hoy con la comisión de gobierno​ para recibir una respuesta en cuanto a las peticiones de mejores vías de acceso.

Se tiene previsto que la reunión se de en el colegio Félix Olivares Contreras en el distrito de David donde los dirigentes que firmaron el acuerdo estarán presente mientras que por parte del gobierno se tienen previsto la mesa este conformada bueno por los ministros de educación y trabajo y otras autoridades.
Mientras que los docentes que se mantiene en huelga, aseguraron que permanecerán en el distrito de San Félix y que hasta el momento no han sido invitados a la mesa de diálogo.

Los dirigentes que se mantienen en huelga esperan que la ministra venga con respuestas el día de hoy de lo contrario se avocaran a un paro a nivel nacional.
Cabe resaltar que al menos unos 40 plantas educativos de aproximadamente 120 retomaron las clases este martes.
Fuente:  http://www.panamaamerica.com.pa/provincias/docentes-esperan-reunirse-con-alta-comision-de-gobierno-1080541

 

 

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Cuba: Definen estrategias para el próximo curso escolar en provincia cubana de Matanzas

Cuba/Agosto de 2017/Fuente: Radio Habana Cuba

El completamiento de la cobertura docente y el mejoramiento de la situación higiénico-sanitaria en centros estudiantiles de la provincia cubana de Matanzas, destacan entre las principales tareas a solucionar con vistas al venidero curso escolar que iniciará en septiembre próximo.

En un encuentro que contó con la presencia de la ministra cubana de Educación Ena Elsa Velázquez, trascendió que el territorio deberá asegurar la base material de estudio y el equipamiento técnico en todos los niveles de enseñanza.

A su vez, Raúl Hernández, director provincial de la esfera educativa en la provincia, precisó que el déficit de maestros deberá suplirse con la llegada de profesionales desde las provincias orientales y Pinar del Río.

Fuente: http://www.radiohc.cu/noticias/nacionales/138514-definen-estrategias-para-el-proximo-curso-escolar-en-provincia-cubana-de-matanzas

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Students outed by teachers, however well-intentioned, feel at risk in Japan

Japón/Agosto de 2017/Autor: Tomomi Miura/Fuente: The Japan Times

Resumen:  La salida de los estudiantes lesbianas, gays, bisexuales y transexuales por parte de los profesores está en auge en Japón, que todavía carece de un marco para entender las ramificaciones de la cuestión en términos del sistema educativo. Los profesores que simplemente piensan que están mostrando consideración a los estudiantes LGBT al informar a los padres y compañeros de clase de su orientación sexual o identidad de género puede estar causando un daño irrevocable, dicen los expertos. Divulgar públicamente tal información confidencial sin consentimiento desalienta a otros estudiantes LGBT de venir hacia adelante debido a los temores de discriminación y falta de confianza.

The outing of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender students by teachers is on the rise in Japan, which still lacks a framework for understanding the ramifications of the issue in terms of the educational system.

Teachers who may simply think they are showing consideration to LGBT students by informing parents and classmates of their sexual orientation or gender identity may in fact be causing irrevocable harm, experts say.

Publicly disclosing such confidential information without consent discourages other LGBT students from coming forward due to fears of discrimination and lack of trust.

While this has been a hot topic in the United States, Japan is in uncharted waters.

Minako “Minata” Hara, representative director of Kyosei Net, a Tokyo-based nonprofit organization also known as the All Japan Sexual Minorities Support Network, says the number of LGBT students seeking consultations for being outed at school is rising.

Hara recently consulted a student who had just been outed.

“Although the LGBT student only consulted with the teacher in charge, the parents found out immediately,” said Hara, adding that some parents have difficulty accepting their children’s changes and scold or rebuke them.

Some parents often blame themselves, thinking the issue stems from “a problem with the child’s upbringing,” she said.

In one case, a student with gender identity issues who was registered as male at birth told a supervising teacher she wanted to be included in the female group for a school trip. But before the student realized it, the teacher told her classmates about the situation, and some of their parents later complained to the school.

Kyosei Net has seen a rise in consultations related to outing and more incidents are reported each year.

“Most of the teachers are just acting because they want people around them to be aware. But since they lack a common understanding, they are often just playing it by ear,” said Hara.

A 2013 survey by the Education, Culture, Sports Science and Technology Ministry found that 606 students had consulted their school administrators because they felt uncomfortable with their sex registry at birth. But it is believed there are a considerable number who simply do not wish to come forward, meaning those who do represent only the tip of the iceberg.

In recent years, the government has started working to provide schools with proper knowledge about the LGBT community to prevent more incidents of outing.

Last year for the first time, the education ministry compiled and distributed a pamphlet nationwide on how teachers can support students who are sexual minorities.

Given the lack of an LGBT-inclusive curriculum, teacher training has started in Tokyo’s Bunkyo Ward, Kashiwa in Chiba Prefecture, and other places around the country.

“First of all, we have to make sure teachers aren’t the ones who are harming the students,” said the person in charge of training in Kashiwa.

But according to one elementary school teacher from the Tohoku region with experience teaching a pupil with LGBT issues, there is still a long way to go.

“There is still a huge awareness gap among teachers. The issue of how to deal with this is close at hand. We have to firmly grasp the knowledge and have support measures in place.”

There is also a fear that a delay in action is causing harm from a medical perspective.

The Japanese Society of Gender Identity Disorder and the Japanese Society of Psychiatry and Neurology both made requests in July to the education ministry to warn teachers that outing LGBT students could lead to depression and in some cases suicide.

Junichiro Ota, who heads JSPN’s panel on gender identity disorder, said the wishes of LGBT students should always be respected first and foremost. Students should also be taught about understanding sexual diversity, he said.

“The wishes of the persons involved must be respected and teachers must proceed cautiously in explaining this to others around them,” he said. “Regardless of whether there are LGBT students involved, we have to have education that deepens understanding of sexual diversity.”

Fuente: https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2017/08/17/national/social-issues/students-outed-teachers-however-well-intentioned-feel-risk-japan/#.WZX7YNLyi00

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India: Our best investment

India/Agosto de 2017/Autor: Vikram Patel /Fuente: The Indian Express

Resumen: El gobierno revisó recientemente la sección de la Ley de Derechos de los Niños a la Educación Gratuita y Obligatoria (RTE) que estipula que «ningún niño admitido en una escuela será retenido en ninguna clase o expulsado de la escuela hasta la finalización de la educación primaria» Abarca las clases 1 a 8. Esta decisión, que ahora permite a los estados imponer exámenes que pueden detener y, presumiblemente, expulsar a los niños durante la educación primaria, ha sido bien recibida por muchos maestros porque la promoción automática de los estudiantes conducía a que un gran número de estudiantes En la Clase 9 sin habilidades básicas de aprendizaje. Esto, a su vez, los condenó a fallar los exámenes de Clase 9 y en última instancia desencadenar la deserción.

The government recently reviewed the section of the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education (RTE) Act which stipulated that “no child admitted in a school shall be held back in any class or expelled from school till the completion of elementary education”, which covers Classes 1 to 8. This decision, which now permits states to impose examinations which can detain, and presumably expel, children during elementary education, has been welcomed by many teachers because the automatic promotion of students was leading to large numbers of students landing up in Class 9 without basic learning abilities. This, in turn, doomed them to failing the Class 9 examinations and ultimately triggering drop-out.

It is presumed that detection of learning under-achievement during elementary education will trigger efforts by students, and, one would hope, their teachers, ultimately improving educational outcomes. But besides the obvious pedagogical reasons such as large class sizes and the focus on rote learning, there is one major reason why this sudden change of policy is unlikely to reap the dividends the government and educational community hopes for: It is happening far too late in the life of the child.

The latest report of the Annual Survey of Education, published last year, and based on assessments of basic abilities of reading, writing and arithmetic of over five lakh rural children, offered a glimpse into the scale of the challenge confronting India. While 95 per cent of children aged 6 to 11 years were enrolled in schools, a large proportion of children were simply not learning. Nationally, less than half the children in Class 3 were able to read a Class I level text, a figure which had shown virtually no improvement since 2011. One of every four children enrolled in Class 8 could not read at Class 2 levels. Just over a quarter of Class 3 children could do a two-digit subtraction and a similar proportion of Class 5 children could do simple division.

Will the new detention policy lead to these staggering numbers of India’s children being held back? And, if so, are schools adequately resourced to support these students’ learning needs to help them clear the
examinations?

What is also clear from these grim figures is that a huge proportion of India’s children, exceeding 50 million in a recent estimate, experiences fundamental limitations of learning abilities which have their roots well before they even enter primary school. In short, their intellectual capabilities, a direct outcome of the level of cognitive development of the brain, have been blighted by enormous deprivations in the early years of their lives. These deprivations are mostly the direct result of poverty, from the lack of adequate nutrition which leads to bodies, and minds, being stunted, to the lack of a responsive parenting environment due to the enormous economic and social barriers experienced by their parents, in particular their mothers.

We now know that the brain is exquisitely sensitive to the environment, and toxic influences ranging from the lack of essential nutrients to the lack of essential stimulation, adversely impact the architecture and function of the developing brain. A vast proportion of India’s children who are failing to learn in school were already condemned to this fate before they entered school.

This loss of human potential threatens a perfect storm for a country with the largest number of children in the world and a global economic environment in which entire segments of employment — in particular in the service sector, which is often the only opportunity to those who do not complete school — are being replaced by digital technologies. The future looks truly bleak for tens of millions of our children who are, in effect, doomed to a life of servitude or unemployment even before they have stepped into school, perpetuating the transmission of poverty from their parent’s generation to their own.

The good news is that, just as the brain is damaged by harmful environments, the “plastic” nature of this most precious organ of our body can overcome these challenges when provided with a nurturing alternative, one where both the primary emotional and physical needs are met. Some of these are finally being addressed on a war-footing, for example through improvements in sanitation and hygiene by the eradication of open defecation.

But beyond the attention to physical health, we must act on the need that young children have for intellectually and emotionally nurturing environments, through providing adequate support and information to the care-givers of young children to stimulate them through play, building parent skills to be responsive and non-punitive, and providing affordable and appropriate pre-school child education and high quality engaging primary education.
A few years ago, the World Bank referred to the development of young children as “one of the best investments that countries can make” because a child’s earliest years presented “a unique window of opportunity to address inequality, break the cycle of poverty, and improve a wide range of outcomes later in life”.

A key philosophy was that children should be intellectually “ready” for primary school. While India was amongst the earliest countries to acknowledge the importance of this investment through the Integrated Child Development Scheme launched in 1975, the observations on learning abilities are testimony to the limited success of this scheme. Further, the scheme is almost entirely facility based, missing the enormous opportunity to provide nurturing environments in the homes of young children.

As we celebrate the fact that India’s children now survive in unprecedented numbers, we must turn our attention to giving every child the opportunity to thrive so that they ultimately become capable adults who not only attain their own dreams, but also contribute to the development agenda of the nation. For this to happen, we will need a massive and renewed national commitment to investing in the earliest years of a child’s life.
The writer is the Pershing Square Professor of Global Health at Harvard Medical School and affiliated with Sangath and the Public Health Foundation of India.

Fuente: http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/our-best-investment-right-of-children-to-free-and-compulsory-education-in-india/

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Disaster’ as Vietnam sets the bar low for future teachers

Vietnan/Agosto de 2017/Fuente: VN Express

Resumen:  Las instituciones de formación de profesores están listos para aceptar a estudiantes de primer año que no lograron entender los conceptos básicos en la escuela secundaria.  Ahora resulta ser mucho más fácil si quieres convertirte en un educador. Los colegios de enseñanza han anunciado sus calificaciones mínimas de entrada, y los futuros profesores necesitan sólo un sorprendentemente bajo nueve de cada 30 en algunas partes del país. Los estudiantes vietnamitas del 12º grado tomaron el examen nacional en junio con pruebas separadas en matemáticas, literatura, inglés y ciencias. Su puntuación total en tres de estas pruebas se utilizan para determinar qué escuela, si la hay, será aceptada por. Mientras que los resultados promedio de los estudiantes aumentaron desde el año pasado y la mayoría de las escuelas están exigiendo puntuaciones más altas, que los expertos atribuyen a pruebas más fáciles, las instituciones de formación de los profesores están pidiendo lo mismo que el año pasado o menos.

Teacher training institutions are poised to accept freshmen who failed to grasp the basics in high school.

Remember our story from last week about how a high school graduate needs a perfect score to enroll in military or police schools in Vietnam? Now it turns out to be much easier if you want to become an educator.

Teaching colleges have announced their minimum entrance scores, and prospective teachers need just a shockingly low nine out of 30 in some parts of the country.

Vietnamese 12th graders took the national exam in June with separate tests in math, literature, English and sciences. Their total scores in three of these tests are used to determine what school, if any, they will be accepted by.

While the average results from students rose from last year and most schools are demanding higher scores, which experts attribute to easier tests, teachers’ training institutions are asking for the same as last year or less.

There are basically two levels of teacher training in Vietnam: colleges and universities. While someone who graduates from a university is eligible to teach at a university, those with a college degree are only qualified to teach students up to ninth grade.

Leading teaching universities in Vietnam such as those in Da Nang, Hanoi and Saigon have maintained their entrance scores at between 16 and 26.

But Hue’s University of Education has lowered the bar for future math teachers by 5.5 points to 16. The entrance score for chemistry majors has also been cut by three points to less than 13.

Its counterparts in Nghe An, Thai Nguyen and Dong Nai are asking for 17, which means future teachers only need to be average high school graduates.

The standard is much lower at college level.

Colleges from Lao Cai in the northern highlands to Ba Ria-Vung Tau on the southern coast are asking for a combined score of nine or 10, and the National College for Education in Hanoi has set the standard at 13 points.

Vu Thu Huong, a lecturer at the Hanoi University of Education, said she is “concerned” with this year’s enrollment.

Huong, a seasoned educator who is very vocal in the media about educational reform, said she had met graduates who could not understand chemical symbols; who believed that the normal speed of a car was five meters an hour; and who explained to students that islands were the reason there are waves in the sea.

“There is no silver bullet that can save those who have a serious lack of basic knowledge,” she said.

Dinh Quang Bao, the former president of the Hanoi University of Education, also called the low benchmark “a disaster” for Vietnamese education.

“If we set the bar too low, we won’t be able to provide quality teachers,” he told Infonet, the information ministry’s news website, in an interview on Tuesday.

Bao said that if a school cannot attract good students, it shouldn’t run courses because there is already a high unemployment rate among teachers.

Every year, around 4,000 students who graduate from teaching schools are unable to find a job in Vietnam, and the surplus is expected to reach 70,000 by 2020, according to official figures.

That’s possibly the main reason why teacher training schools are being shunned in Vietnam, while their free tuition is supposed to be a major draw compared to the thousands of dollars it costs for a four-year course at any other public university.

Bao said that while educational universities in countries with successful systems such as Japan or Finland attract the best students each year, the good students in Vietnam are turning their backs on education.

He said the system needs to guarantee jobs for graduates in the same way military and police schools do, and the salaries should be enough to give teachers a comfortable life.

Public preschools in Vietnam pay fresh graduates around VND2 million (less than $100) per month for them to take care of 15-20 toddlers. The average annual income in Vietnam was $2,200 last year.

In Saigon, the country’s most affluent city, many public teachers are paid less than VND10 million ($440) a month after spending decades in the job, a salary many describe as “just enough for a couple of trips to the grocery store.”

In remote mountainous provinces, many young teachers climb mountains and cross rivers every day for a much lower income.

Fuente: http://e.vnexpress.net/news/news/disaster-as-vietnam-sets-the-bar-low-for-future-teachers-3624305.html

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