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Kenia: New system of education to be rolled out after training tutors

Kenia / 13 de diciembre de 2017 / Por: KENNEDY KIMANTHI / Fuente: http://www.nation.co.ke/

All is set for the implementation of the 2-6-3-3 education system in January after the final induction of teachers.

It will be rolled out in the country’s 28,000 primary schools, according to Kenya Institute of Curriculum Development director Julius Jwan.

More than 160,000 teachers handling early years education — pre-primary 1 to 2 and grade 1 to 3 — in public and private schools will undergo the training.

In a statement to newsrooms on Sunday, Dr Jwan said the training would  focus on the competency-based curriculum, interpretation of the curriculum designs, special needs education and integration of ICT in teaching and learning.

IMPLEMENTATION

“We will induct teachers up to the closest time it can be to the implementation of the curriculum. If we decide to wait for another year, we shall just be going round in circles,” he said.

Piloting of the system started in 470 schools in May. The piloting took place in nursery, Standard One, Two and Three following the training of more than 1,888 teachers.

Five pre-primary and five primary schools from every county participated in the piloting, which took between eight and 10 weeks.

The first lot of 2,374 curriculum support officers, headteachers and teachers from the piloting schools were trained in two phases.

The officers were trained to interpret curriculum designs and how to develop schemes of work and lesson plans.

“They were taken through the basic education curriculum framework, which outlines the rationale for the reforms and the envisaged changes,” Dr Jwan added.

In the new education system, which stresses continuous assessment tests over summative evaluation, the number of subjects will be reduced to create room for identification and nurturing of talents, besides academic capabilities.

KEY SKILLS

It also seeks to equip learners with seven key skills: Communication and collaboration; self-efficacy; critical thinking and problem solving; creativity and imagination; citizenship; digital literacy; and learning to learn.

Kenya Primary Schools Heads Association chairman Shem Ndolo yesterday said the programme should be rolled out in stages.

“We do not want it to be like 8-4-4 system, which was started in totality only to turn up to be a fiasco, not because it was a bad thing, but because of the manner it was started,” he said.

KICD is also working with county governments to facilitate the training of Early Childhood Development Education teachers.

County directors of education in charge of ECDE met KICD representatives to strategise on how best the teachers who handle learners at formative age could be trained.

“We recognise ECDE is a devolved function. We have a duty to reach out to national and devolved governments and seal any loopholes that might derail this important exercise,” Dr Jwan said.

Fuente noticia: http://www.nation.co.ke/news/education/New-system-of-education-ready-to-be-rolled-out/2643604-4213404-6iuh43z/index.html

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Estados Unidos: Virginia’s governor takes emergency steps to curtail teacher shortage

Virginia / 13 de diciembre de 2017 / Por: Debbie Truong / Fuente: http://www.fredericksburg.com

In a bid to curtail Virginia’s teacher shortage, Gov. Terry McAuliffe took emergency action Monday to get aspiring instructors into classrooms faster by streamlining education requirements.

McAuliffe ordered the Virginia Board of Education to implement an emergency regulation that would allow the state’s public colleges and universities to start offering undergraduate students a major in education by March 1.

«The teacher shortage is a growing crisis that we have to stop and reverse if we are serious about the commonwealth’s economic future,» McAuliffe said in an emailed statement. «High quality teachers are the key to unlocking the potential in our children.»

Most public colleges and universities in Virginia require that teaching candidates first complete a bachelor’s degree in a subject area such as math, science or social studies, said Jim Livingston, president of the Virginia Education Association, one of the state’s confederation of educators. Then, aspiring educators must enter a teacher preparation program, which often requires a fifth year of school, Livingston said.

Livingston said McAuliffe’s order would reduce the cost of pursuing a career in education. Some students, he said, opt not to enter teaching programs because of the cost.

«We think this is a bold move on the part of the governor. We anticipate the State Board of Education will take the charge seriously,» Livingston said. «This is not going to solve the problem. This is the first step.»

Robert Pianta, dean of the Curry School of Education at the University of Virginia, said the change would streamline a process that can require two degrees and five or more years into requirements that take just four years.

That change will mean student-teachers will get more exposure to the classroom sooner, he said.

That experience, Pianta said, is «essential to their success.»

«Allowing teacher preparation programs to develop four-year models, in my view, has the potential to create stronger preparation and more effective teachers in a shorter time frame than the current master’s focused approach,» Pianta wrote in an email.

State Board of Education regulations do not currently permit undergraduate majors in teaching, said Heather Fluit, McAuliffe’s deputy communications director. The Board of Education will eventually have to replace the emergency regulations with long-term policies, she said.

Teacher shortages have afflicted much of the nation. A 2016 report by the nonprofit Learning Policy Institute found that teacher education enrollment dropped from 691,000 to 451,000 nationally, a 35 percent reduction, between 2009 and 2014.

In Virginia, teacher vacancies increased by 40 percent in the last decade, according to McAuliffe’s executive directive. In 2016, more than 1,000 teaching positions remained unfilled two months into the academic year, according to Virginia Department of Education data.

Last year, McAuliffe took the extraordinary step of sending letters to more than 500 retired teachers around the city of Petersburg, asking them to consider returning to work in the city’s schools. A state law passed in 2001 permits retired teachers to return to areas of need and still draw their pensions while being paid.

Del. Steven Landes, chairman of the state’s House Education Committee, issued a statement saying the teacher shortage has affected rural and urban areas.

«Virginia’s teaching shortage is one of the most pressing challenges we face in public education,» he said, adding that he’s confident legislation in the 2018 General Assembly session will work to address the issue.

In addition to his executive directive, McAuliffe announced funding initiatives on Monday intended to further alleviate teacher shortages.

A proposed budget scheduled to be unveiled next week is expected to set aside $1.1 million to automate the teacher licensure process, according to a news release. And $1 million would go toward recruiting and retaining principals in school districts with significant needs.

The proposed budget would also set aside money to offer incentives for teachers who are in struggling school districts.

Fuente noticia: http://www.fredericksburg.com/news/education/virginia-s-governor-takes-emergency-steps-to-curtail-teacher-shortage/article_b5411396-df5a-11e7-9791-3bf2f9d2636b.html

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EEUU: We’ve failed our children by neglecting sex education. Here’s what we must do

EEUU/December 12, 2017/ By: The Editorial Board/Source: http://www.fresnobee.com

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Kenya: Why we must urgently address this ugly face of inequality in education

Kenya/December 12, 2017/By Duncan Omanga/Source: ttps://www.standardmedia.co.ke

Once upon a time, parents encouraged their children to work hard in school to secure a better future. As a young boy, life was a simple reductive. Good grades begat a good life and more options. This remains partly true, but in modern Kenya making the grade is not just about career and choices. Getting the right grades has become symbolic of social status and a tool for both maintenance and negotiation of one’s position within complex social class categories.

There was a time when a poor boy or girl from Nyamakoroto could top the exams amid a punishing routine of tea picking, rearing goats and being a pupil. Those days are gone. As the recently released Kenya Certificate of Primary Education (KCPE) results indicate, the new heroes of our examination system are the urbane, privately schooled children of middle and upper-middle class families.

A similar trend is likely to be repeated when the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) results are released. Of the primary schools that featured in the top 100, I could barely identify a single public school. Being poor and possessing a lower social-economic status is now officially the greatest hurdle to academic success in Kenya.

Kenya’s poor are having a raw deal right through to universities. Scholars define education inequality as the extent to which supply of education as a good, and the benefits that accrue from it favour certain individual(s), group, generation, race or region.

I shall restrict my focus to the social class divide and how it impacts higher education in Kenya.

Kenya is a most unequal society. This inequality partly draws from a colonial project that rewarded and privileged specific ‘railway line’ administrative outposts over outlying areas. The colonial regime later bequeathed newly independent Kenya with an education system that was set up to offer unequal treatment based on racial or ethnic criteria.

Over time, the exaltation of a capitalistic dispensation in successive post-colonial regimes only made worse the inequality. With the entrenchment of political tribalism and moral ethnicity, access to political power further accentuated this divide along ethnic fault lines. While counties in the former Central Province have 100 per cent access to primary education, in the former North Eastern Province the figure stands at around 34 per cent, despite primary school education being free. In the ‘80s, counties in the former Rift Valley Province had low literacy rates. This radically changed under former President Daniel Moi’s reign. The link between political power (whether real or imagined) and quality education is significant.

Poor quality

Experts also cite the advent of free primary education as a contributor of poor quality, and the reason for the flight from public to private schools by parents who value quality over massification of learning.

The popularity and spread of private schools and ‘academies’ deep in the rural areas is an indictment of the publicly offered free education, and evidence of a hunger for quality even among less endowed households. But how does such inequality affect the texture of higher education in Kenya?

Private primary schools constitute about 10 per cent of all primary schools, but about 60 per cent of pupils from these schools are admitted to national secondary schools and over 75 per cent of access university education. However, in the ‘90s universities admitted students from more socially diverse backgrounds than they are today.

Programmes like Medicine, Engineering and Law comprised a mix of individuals from diverse social-economic backgrounds.

Today, owing to the nature of pupils in primary schools securing places in elite secondary schools, these programmes are socially homogeneous. The students who attend private primary schools eventually end up dominating the more competitive programmes in universities. As such, growing up in a poor home in a rural area is a handicap.

When relatively economically disadvantaged students end up in university, there is a greater chance of them getting admitted in those programmes perceived to be unpopular. Most of these programmes are often those that comprise huge classes, are superficially taught and are usually the easiest for universities to mount as they require little physical or financial resources. And because of the limited agency that socially disadvantaged students have in making a choice of both the university programme and campus of choice, it is mostly this category of students that often act as sites of experiment for far-flung university campus or newly established ‘political’ university campuses that need students to start off.

The situation is even more complicated for graduate studies. It is no longer possible for ‘sons and daughters of peasants’ to access graduate studies. For the past 10 years, graduate studies in local universities have more than tripled.

Meanwhile, most universities no longer offer scholarships to bright but needy students. A graduate study has become an elitist preoccupation. The higher education system now rewards more the paying rather than the capable student.

To address the inequality in education, the government must stop politicising education, and move from articulating provision of education as a political freebie, to provision of free education as a basic right. This means heavy investment in public education.

Public education should not be allowed to suffer the same fate as the public health sector. Further, there is need for proper resource based devolution of the education function to counties. In Germany, where education is completely devolved to the states, healthy competition has improved quality.

Source:
Read more at: https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/article/2001262669/why-ugly-face-of-inequality-in-education-will-cost-us

 

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Benefit dinner to focus on education amongst youth in Liberia

Liberia/December 11, 2017/By: Claire Silcox/Source: http://gnnliberia.com

“YesLiberia is an organization that focuses on the education of young men and women in the country of Liberia.,” said Jide Oyedeii, the president of ASU. “The organization is known for sending young children to school to further their education and empower them.”

Oyedeji pointed out that the purpose of the benefit dinner is to raise money for the charity.

YesLiberia is currently focusing on giving young Liberian women an education. They are taking into consideration that men in Liberia already have an advantage over the women.

The dinner will begin at 6 p.m. on Dec. 9 with a goal of raising $5,000. Departments can buy tables for $300, and all are welcome to donate.

“Our mission is to empower young people through meaningful service learning opportunities in education, healthcare, and technology,” said the YesLiberia mission statement webpage. “We do this through strategic partnerships and learning models to utilize existing youth habits and uphold societal values in the communities we work.”

Source:

http://gnnliberia.com/2017/12/10/benefit-dinner-focus-education-amongst-youth-liberia/

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Smoking contributes to less increase in life expectancy among women with only primary education

EEUU/December 11, 2017/Source: https://www.news-medical.net

Life expectancy in Sweden has risen steadily during the last few decades for most groups. One exception is women whose highest educational level is compulsory school. This is mostly because of smoking, says a new dissertation in sociology.

«Life expectancy has stayed level in the last 20-30 years for women with only a compulsory schooling in Sweden, but it’s increased for other social groups. A big piece of this puzzle is smoking,» say Olof östergren, sociology researcher at Stockholm University.

The study is based on data from the registries of causes of death and education for all Swedes who were 30-74 years old between 1991 and 2008. The research shows that inequality in longevity between different groups have increased among women during this period.

The statistics show that anticipated life expectancy among women with only a primary education increased a little over a month between 1991 and 2008, while the comparable number for university educated women were five months. Not counting deaths attributable to smoking, the former group’s life expectancy increased to four months and the latter’s to just over five months.

«The differences may seem small, but when it’s about anticipated life expectancy these numbers are dramatic. Deaths from smoking are three times more common among women with a compulsory education versus university educated ones,» says Olof östergren.

«Despite ambitious welfare policies, the social health disparities are not smaller in Sweden than in other countries, and these disparities are increasing more rapidly in Sweden than internationally. Alcohol consumption and smoking have been highlighted as contributing factors to these issues. My research backs up this picture,» says Olof östergren. «Deaths from smoking in Sweden has decreased among men and increased among women, particularly those with compulsory schooling. One possible explanation as to why men are less harmed by tobacco is snus. Snus isn’t as dangerous as smoking, and it’s much more common among men than women.»

«Earlier research has shown that people in stressful life situations have a harder time stopping health endangering habits like smoking. This is partly because fewer of them try to quit and partly because people with fewer economic and social resources have a smaller chance of breaking the habit,» says Olof östergren.

A stressful life situation can also make the body more susceptible to the damaging effects of tobacco and alcohol. This means that differences in mortality depend both on behavioral differences and social and economic differences. On the other side, education provides access to a better work environment, higher status in the job market, more control over the work situation and higher income. The dissertation also shows that education is particularly important for health of those with low incomes.

«The theory behind this is that the fewer economic resources a person has, the more important the way that they spend the resources becomes. Education promotes effectiveness and the proper handling of resources, and that means that highly education groups can use all of their means to improve health. That’s why education is particularly important for those with low incomes. Education is always good for health,» says Olof östergren.

Source:

https://www.news-medical.net/news/20171211/Smoking-contributes-to-less-increase-in-life-expectancy-among-women-with-only-primary-education.aspx

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EEUU: ATI Nursing Education Launches NursingCE.com, a Continuing Education Website

EEUU/December 12, 2017/by Benzinga Full Feed in Press Releases/ Source: http://www.ssuchronicle.com

Leadership is an overused word, and is often misused. We like this definition.

New online resource streamlines the CE process to help nurses meet licensing requirements

New York, New York (PRWEB) December 11, 2017

NursingCE.com has announced the launch of its new mobile-friendly website, http://www.nursingce.com, designed to offer nurses a comprehensive source for continuing education (CE) activities to help meet state and licensing requirements. NursingCE.com is a brand of ATI Nursing Education, a leading provider of assessments and other digital solutions to nursing schools, and will offer continuing education to nurses in all 50 states as well as Washington D.C. and Puerto Rico. Nurses who complete courses on NursingCE.com will earn credits that are ANCC-accredited.

Nurses are required to continually seek continuing education credits to maintain their license to practice. NursingCE.com helps nurses avoid the time-intensive delays and high costs that are usually associated with continuing education. Courses can be completed from any device with an Internet connection. A variety of courses are available, some of which include Domestic and Community Violence, Child Maltreatment, Medical Errors, Pain Management and more.

NursingCE.com has streamlined the traditional continuing education process by providing the ability to take courses, pay for credits, and generate certificates of completion instantly upon successful course completion. Access to courses and assessments are available for free to anyone with a free NursingCE.com account. Nurses only have to pay a fee of $39 to get all of their credits and downloadable certificates once courses are successfully completed. This is a striking departure from the usual practice of charging nurses up front for each course prior to taking and completing the course and pricing that can vary according to the number of credits offered.

NursingCE.com supports its nurses with dedicated customer support via phone and email. The website’s blog offers additional resources and helpful information to nurses that are written by prominent nurse bloggers and educators. Blog content includes articles in a variety of categories including career advice, continuing education news, tips and advice for licensing and certification, and company updates.

At launch, NursingCE.com has courses available to help meet the licensing requirements for nurses in 43 states plus Washington, D.C. Courses will be available to meet the requirements for California, Florida, Iowa, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Washington state and Puerto Rico in early 2018. To learn more about all the available courses and content visit http://www.nursingce.com.

About NursingCE.com

NursingCE.com is a comprehensive online source to help nurses meet continuing education (CE) and licensing requirements for all 50 states as well as Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico. NursingCE.com is a brand of Assessment Technologies Institute, LLC (ATI Nursing Education), a leading provider of assessments and other digital solutions to nursing schools that is an accredited provider for continuing education by the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC). For more information, visit http://www.nursingce.com.

Source:

http://www.ssuchronicle.com/2017/12/11/ati-nursing-education-launches-nursingce-com-a-continuing-education-website/

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