Page 47 of 144
1 45 46 47 48 49 144

Palestinian children’s education deeply impacted by ‘interference’ around West Bank schools, UN warns

Asia/ Palestina/ 21.5.2019/ Source: news.un.org.

 

Alarmed by a high number of reported incidents of interference in or near Palestinian schools in the West Bank since the beginning of the school year in September, the UN called on Wednesday for them to be better-protected from the effects of Israeli occupation.

“Classrooms should be a sanctuary from conflict, where children can learn and develop into active citizens”, said Jamie McGoldrick, UN Humanitarian Coordinator for the region in the joint statement with UNICEF Special Representative, Genevieve Boutin, and UN educational, scientific and cultural body UNESCO.

Highlighting the impact of the incidents on safe access to education, the statement noted “threats of demolition, clashes on the way to school between students and security forces, teachers stopped at checkpoints, and violent actions of Israeli forces and settlers on some occasions”.

In 2018 alone, the UN documented 111 different cases of interference to education in the West Bank affecting more than 19,000 children.

“Children should never be the target of violence and must not be exposed to any form of violence”, said the two senior UN officials in the region, appealing for a safe learning environment and the right to quality education for thousands of Palestinian children.

Settlement activity ‘clear rebuff’ to two-State solution says UN rights expert

The Special Rapporteur for human rights in the occupied Palestinian territory also issued a statement on Wednesday, calling on the international community to “take decisive action in response to Israel’s recent intensification of settlement activities in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, which amounts to a clear rebuff of a two-State solution”.

“If the settlements steps by Israel are left unanswered by the international community, we will be driving past the last exit on the road to annexation”, Michael Lynk added, stressing that the settlements “are the source of a range of persistent human rights violations”.

He said the last year has seen “a marked rise in incidents of violence by Israeli settlers against Palestinians in the West Bank” whereby “in many cases, Israeli forces, obligated to protect the Palestinian population under international humanitarian law, stand idly by while olive trees are destroyed, livelihoods are damaged, and even while people are injured or, at worst, killed.”

He said the events in the West Bank village of Al Mughayyir on 26 January were a “sobering example of this extremely troubling phenomenon, where a Palestinian villager was shot dead in the presence of Israeli settlers and soldiers. These incidents not only violate numerous human rights such as the rights to life, security of the person, and freedom of movement of Palestinians, but also serve to expand the area of land over which Israeli settlers have control,” Mr. Lynk stated.

Source of the notice: https://news.un.org/en/story/2019/01/1031682

Comparte este contenido:

Nationwide student strike begins in Brazil over education budget cuts

South America/ Brasil/ 21.5.201/ Source: www.japantimes.co.jp.

Students and teachers from hundreds of universities and colleges across Brazil began a nationwide demonstration on Wednesday in “defense of education” following a raft of budget cuts announced by President Jair Bolsonaro’s government.

Classes were suspended in numerous establishments as demonstrations took place in 17 of Brazil’s 27 states, local media said, with particularly large ones in major cities like Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Brasilia and Belo Horizonte.

The biggest demonstrations are planned for the end of the day, though.

In the capital Brasilia, federal troops were deployed in front of the ministry of education in case of trouble.

The protest movement was sparked by Education Minister Abraham Weintraub recently slashing federal university subsidies by 30 percent.

Several chief education officers claimed the budget cuts would compromise the ability of federal universities to function, and threatened to paralyze them.

Then the sudden suspension of the payment of masters and doctorate scholarships in the sciences and human sciences last week threw oil on the fire.

“Secondary school pupils, university students, researchers, teachers and other education employees will take to the streets in every state” to protest against the budget cuts, the National Student Union (UNE) had announced on Tuesday.

Despite the cuts affecting only federal institutions, the protest movement has been joined by many private universities such as Rio’s Pontifical University, which voted last week to join the nationwide demonstration

 

Source of the notice:https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2019/05/16/world/social-issues-world/nationwide-student-strike-begins-brazil-education-budget-cuts/#.XOMZSNThDwc

Comparte este contenido:

Five things parents can do to support the teachers

By:  . 

 

The biggest education strike in New Zealand history, including primary and secondary school teachers, and principals, will take place on May 29. But what can parents do to help? Emily Writes has some advice.

On Sunday it was announced that teachers in primary and secondary schools would strike for more funding, lower class ratios, support for children with additional needs and a pay jolt to address the teacher shortage. I have long supported the teachers in their efforts and I’ll continue to do so.

One of the reasons why I voted for, and encouraged others to vote for the Labour Party or the Green Party was because they both campaigned on a promise to support New Zealand’s children – this includes education.

I’ve watched in horror over the last few weeks as Education Minister Chris Hipkins has made juvenile, pouty comments about teachers not respecting him enough (and therefore I suppose making them unworthy of a fair deal?). I’ve been amazed by the lack of action by the government and the vulgar spin painting teachers as greedy or laughably “the top income earners in the country”. It’s like they think we’re idiots. Chris honey, our kids were born yesterday – we weren’t!

Parents around New Zealand contacted me after the strike announcement to ask how we can support teachers. Everywhere I look, parents want to mobilise and they want to make sure the government knows that they back the teachers.

So I decided to make a list of five easy things we can do to encourage the government to address New Zealand’s education crisis and show solidarity for our wonderful teachers.

Talk to a teacher

Ask your child’s teacher how you can support them with their strike action. Thank them for their work and let them know that you appreciate that this was a really hard decision for them to make. Teachers are exhausted. They’re being beaten up by the government after being beaten up by the previous government and they’re demoralised. They need our support.

Go to a rally

Grab the fam and get to a local rally on 29 May. The rallies will hopefully be huge. They need to be big enough to show the government how important our children are to us. I took my kids to the last strike back in August and they had a great time – they’re always lovely events and they give us a chance to teach our children how democracy works.

Join a group and organise!

Almost immediately after the strike announcement parents started setting up Facebook groups to talk about supporting the teachers. This is an excellent thing to do. Start a local group or join a bigger group. Make signs together, write to MPs together, write thank you letters to your teachers or make posters. Involve the kids! Your kids are never too young to make themselves heard and to see their parents and loved ones fighting for their future.

Strike back at the BS

The government seems to be on a misinformation campaign – correct the BS wherever you see it. Teachers are not being offered a 10k pay raise in a year. Though let’s be clear they should be – teaching is an incredibly difficult role which requires a lot of emotional maturity as well as skill and expertise. I have all of the side-eyes in the world for people, mostly men, who think teaching isn’t a skilled profession given it’s mostly women who are in this profession. Talk to a teacher before you swallow comments by Chris Hipkins that teachers are rolling in cash like Scrooge McDuck. Tell your friends, tell your whānau, tell everyone you know that the truth is that what teachers are asking for isn’t unreasonable. We really do need smaller classrooms, we need more support for children with additional needs, and teachers need more time to plan their lessons. That isn’t a crazed and wild request! It makes perfect sense.

Talk! Talk! Talk!

Contact your board of trustees and ask them if they support the strike action. Before you vote in board elections, ask the candidates what they’re doing to help with teacher and principal workloads. What are they publicly doing to support striking teachers? Email your local MP. Contact Chris Hipkins and tell him to listen to the people who voted for his party and stop being a damn walnut (kids might be reading so I can’t say what I’d like to say to him). If you’re a Labour or Greens voter, remind Labour and the Greens they made election promises and if we wanted National in government we would have voted for National. If for some unknown reason you voted for Winston Peters – I don’t know. Put down your sherry and think about your great grandchildren and their future.

Getting political isn’t a natural state for a lot of us. I get that. But this issue is beyond politics. Yes, National did this. They fucked our education system. But what’s done is done and we have to fix it – there’s no other option. We just HAVE to fix it. Yes, seeing National MPs putting out press releases saying they’re astonished Labour MPs won’t fix the problems they made is pretty excruciating (a bit like when a child shits in the bath then gets angry that there’s shit in the bath) but we can’t get drawn into all that muck. It’s a diversion. This is beyond political allegiances – this is about our kids and their right to an education. It’s about our wonderful teachers who have been dumped on for so long it’s no wonder so many have given up on the profession.

A recent poll surveyed a bunch of New Zealanders and found 89% wanted money to be spent on fixing problems in education, rather than in other areas.

The survey found 83% agreed that primary and secondary teachers needed a pay rise, about 80% agreed teachers were bogged down in administration that was getting in the way of teaching, and more than 70% said class sizes should be reduced.

There’s massive support for fixing this problem. And what teachers have asked for is fair and reasonable. We just need the government to listen. This is our chance to really make our education system world-class.

We can do it. We just need to do it together. Everyone together.

 

 

Source of the article: https://thespinoff.co.nz/society/17-05-2019/five-things-parents-can-do-to-support-the-teachers/

Comparte este contenido:

Students going without the basics: ‘I was heartbroken when I missed school’

 

By: 

Bec* loves school and wants to go to university so she can become a social worker, and help children who grew up in similar situations to her own.

The Aboriginal teenager missed a lot of classes when she was younger – from grades five to seven. Her mum was in an abusive relationship, and money was so tight affording petrol just to get to and from school was difficult. Her Naplan test results nosedived in that period, her principal says.

“I was heartbroken when I missed school from years 5-7,” she wrote in her application to the Public Education Foundation, a not-for-profit organisation that provides financial aid to students in public schools.

“Not only did I have to face what was happening at home, I was missing out on learning, new friends, and skills.”

By the time she was in year 10 though, Bec was living in a more stable situation with her brother and his partner, and her attendance was back at almost 100%.

“If I was granted $5,000 it would improve my learning and my knowledge,” she said.

“It would help me access internet at home, hire a tutor to help fill gaps in my learning, and cut my hours at work so I can focus on my studies.

“I would like to attend university and become an Aboriginal caseworker to help young children that were like me to know that there is a good ending to it all.”

Bec’s story is far from unique. Guardian Australia was provided with a range of anonymised applications for these scholarships; all were from ambitious students swimming against a current of financial hardship to try to get the best education possible, and to one day make a generational break with poverty. They needed the money not for expensive school fees, but for everyday basics – uniforms and well-fitting school shoes, laptops, internet access and excursion fees.

One student hoped to study nursing at university after spending so much time with her single mum in hospital, two years after her dad died. She said the scholarship could help her get there by covering the cost of tutoring, uniforms and stationery. Another Year 12 student wrote her application while living in refuge accommodation. She was already financially independent and working two casual jobs, and said the scholarship money would make a huge difference in alleviating her financial strain and allowing her to complete school and attend university without going into major debt.

A Torres Strait Islander boy wrote that his mother left home when he was little, then his father committed suicide after a car accident left him with chronic pain and depression. He and his two siblings moved in with their grandma.

“We live in a housing commission and my grandma has low income and struggles to pay for education, resources, excursions, and uniform. My grandma never went to Tafe or University however she has always encouraged me to do my best, my attendance at school is very good, I try my best at school but with all the things that have happened in my life, it’s very hard.”

David Hetherington, who oversees the disbursements as executive director of the foundation, says: “The promise of public education is that any student can attend a public school at no cost to themselves and can get a proper education.

“But we know that there are students who are going without these educational basics.”

Though the scholarships aim to address these immediate financial needs, their aim is something bigger – to disrupt, if only for a select few, the ongoing link that exists in Australia between poverty and poorer educational outcomes.

Despite decades of school funding wars, the landmark Gonski report and major increases in commonwealth funding to schools, children from socio-economically disadvantaged backgrounds in Australia are still falling well behind their wealthier peers at school.

By Year 9, Australian teenagers from the most disadvantaged quartile are still, on average, around three years behind their peers from the most advantaged group in science, reading and maths.

More than a third of students from this most disadvantaged group still do not finish high school, and only a quarter go on to university.

Though the general public may have grown weary of discussions about inequality and education, experts stress there is still much unfinished business. Too many public schools in particular continue to be funded below government targets, while the problem of school segregation – particularly of disadvantaged kids being concentrated in disadvantaged schools, that are being abandoned by other families – is worsening.

It’s a much bigger problem than charities and not-for profits can fix alone.

“Educational investment can break the cycle of economic disadvantage – that’s the wonder of education,” says Hetherington. “But it’s got to be properly resourced and properly managed, and I think that’s still where we’re falling down in Australia.”

***

“Demography is not destiny” was a favourite mantra of former prime minister Julia Gillard, and one she said guided her government’s signature education reforms.

Addressing the inequity in Australia’s education system was a major focus of the landmark 2011 report by David Gonski and a committee of experts, which set the framework for reform for the decade that has followed.

At its core was a new “needs-based and sector-blind” funding model, to distribute higher levels of public funding to those schools educating students with the highest levels of disadvantage. The report established these schools were overwhelmingly, though not exclusively, public schools: almost 80% of students from low socio-economic status (SES) backgrounds attended a public school, along with 85% of Indigenous students and 83% of students from remote areas.

But eight years on, many schools, particularly public schools, are not meeting the government’s own funding benchmarks set in the wake of theGonski reforms.

Attempts to ensure “no school would lose a dollar”, a web of special deals in the years and shortfalls in funding, particularly from some state governments, have left the full vision unmet.

“Funding is not everything, I agree,” says Trevor Cobbold, the convener of the public school advocacy group Save Our Schools.

“But it’s pretty fundamental to being able to employ extra teachers, extra support staff, and so on … we have to direct much larger funding increases into disadvantaged public schools than we have been.

The Gonski model was built around a tool called the Schooling Resource Standard (SRS), the amount of money a school needs to properly educate each child, made up of a base amount of funding plus additional loadings for key areas of disadvantage.

In 2017, government schools were only reaching, on average, 90% of the SRS, while non-government schools were reaching 95%, according to the Grattan Institute.

Julie Sonnemann, a school education fellow at the Institute, points to the funding split between the commonwealth, which is the primary source of funding for non-government schools, and the states and territories, which are the main source of funding to government schools.

“There has been a lot of progress made in channelling more funding to disadvantaged schools, however still a long way to go,” she says.

“Because some state governments have been less effective in meeting the new school target set out under Gonski, government schools have got the short end of the stick.”

Under current Coalition policy, the amount the commonwealth will contribute to government systems will be at least 20% of SRS by 2023, and education minister Dan Tehan has touted the fact education spending has grown every year the Coalition government has been in power.

“We are providing a record $21.4bn for schools which is an extra 66% since we came to government and we can afford to pay for it without increasing taxes,” he told Guardian Australia.

Labor is pledging an additional $14bn for public schools over a decade, effectively lifting the commonwealth contribution to at least 22% of the SRS in the first term, as well as cracking down on some deals that allow states to deduct costs such as transport from their spending on public schools.

Those policies would, according to the Grattan Institute’s Peter Goss, “put government schools on track to reach 97.2% of SRS.”

“Not quite full funding, but within touching distance.”

***

While the wide gap in achievement between kids from the lowest SES group and their more advantaged peers may seem like an intractable problem, many experts don’t agree – for a simple reason. The size of gap varies significantly between different countries.

In Canada, a similar country to Australia in many ways, this gap between students is markedly less, at 2.4 years (compared to 3.1 in Australia) and Canadian students from the most disadvantaged quartile routinely outperform disadvantaged Australian students in international PISA tests.

Canada spends a higher proportion of GDP per capita on school education than Australia, but researchers point to another factor too.

“The thing that I keep coming back to is that schools are more socially mixed in Canada than they are in Australia,” says Laura Perry, an associate professor at Murdoch University .

“Canada has one of the highest proportions of kids in the OECD that go to a socially mixed or diverse school … Australia is the opposite.

“School choice”, the idea that parents should pick the “best” school for their child and not necessarily attend the local comprehensive high school, has long been a governing philosophy in Australia, and one encouraged by the generous public funding of non-government schools and supercharged by publicly available comparison data on the MySchool website.

One result is that disadvantage is increasingly concentrated in particular schools, and the social mix of students from a range of socio-economic backgrounds is often missing.

More than half of students (51.2%) classified as coming from a disadvantaged background in Australia attended disadvantaged school in 2015, according to a recent OECD analysis, while less than 5% attend a socio-economically advantaged school (the remainder attend schools classified as socio-economically average).

Those figures are more polarised than they were a decade earlier, when the proportion of disadvantaged students at disadvantaged schools was 46%.

The trend comes despite a growing proportion of parents choosing public over private schools, in a recent reversal of a decades-old trend.

Research conducted by Chris Bonnor, a former Sydney principal and fellow at the Centre for Policy Development, shows that more advantaged families are seeking out more advantaged public schools – such as selective schools, or ones that have a higher socio-economic profile. As a result, some public schools serving poorer populations are getting left behind.

When Bonnor taught in Mount Druitt in the 1970s, a working class suburb on Sydney’s western fringe, he says there was more socio-economic diversity in the local public high schools than today.

“Even in those very difficult schools – Mount Druitt High, Shalvey High, there was always a small but significant group of high achieving kids,” he says.

“But what MySchool data clearly shows is that sort of critical mass of aspirant kids are less likely to be found in those schools now.”

This trend matters because the concentration disadvantage is compounding the difficulties students face, and is believed to be leading to poorer educational outcomes.

The same OECD analysis found that, on average, students from disadvantaged backgrounds attending more advantaged schools scored markedly better results in standardised tests.

“If you have a school with a significant disadvantaged enrolment there are negative impacts that build on each other,” Bonnor says.

“It’s partly about teacher expectations of kids, partly about resources that the school has, it’s certainly about the intellectual capital that kids bring to school everyday … There’s a whole pile of things that interact with each other to further reduce opportunities for students in low SES schools. And that’s often despite the best intentions of teachers and reformers.”

Concentrating disadvantage in these smaller, public schools also compounds the need for more funding, Perry says.

“When you concentrate students with high needs – and poverty is a high-needs, high stress situation – it makes teaching and learning a lot more difficult, and it also makes it a lot more expensive,” she says.

“Low SES schools are small. Even though their per student allocation is quite generous compared to other schools, you don’t have the economies of scale you have at other schools.”

But while debates about funding have featured prominently in education policy-making for some time, tackling the issue of segregation and residualisation has proved far more taboo in Australia.

Policy solutions could take the form of mandating non-government schools take more students from low SES backgrounds in return for their public funding, removing fees at some non-government schools, as well as changes to entrance policies to make sure selective public schools and more advantaged government schools take a wider range of enrolments.

“There are some parts of the US that have tried to tackle this issue with admissions policies, to ensure there is a diversity of kids in every school, and perhaps Australia should consider policy settings like that,” says Sonneman.

But most experts know this is likely to face deep opposition.

“There is a really strong sense of entitlement among the Australian community that they have the right to choose the best school for their child, and as long as that cultural norm exists, it’s pretty difficult for governments to do much.”

 

 

Fuente del artículo: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2019/may/12/students-going-without-the-basics-i-was-heartbroken-when-i-missed-school

Comparte este contenido:

China to further promote AI in education

Asia/ China/ 20.05.2019/ Source: www.globaltimes.cn.

China will continue promoting the role of artificial intelligence (AI) in education to facilitate teaching and learning a variety of subjects, said Minister of Education Chen Baosheng at the ongoing International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Education.

China has issued several plans to promote the integrated development of AI and education and support the modernization of education with information technologies, Chen said at a ministerial forum held during the conference.

«We will work on fostering multi-layered talent for AI and smart education, provide more space for the application of AI in education, train high-caliber teachers for AI education, and provide scientific and research innovations on the topic,» he said.

China will also establish mechanisms for the linkage and dialogue between education and the AI industry to offer increased and improved infrastructure for AI education, he noted.

Source of the news: http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1150370.shtml

Comparte este contenido:

Teachers vote to stage largest-ever strike as negotiations with ministry stall

Oceania/ New Zealand/ 20.05.2019/ Source: www.stuff.co.nz.

School teachers and principals across the country have agreed to stage New Zealand’s largest-ever strike as negotiations with the Ministry of Education continue to stall.

The Post Primary Teachers’ Association (PPTA) and New Zealand Educational Institute (NZEI) Te Rui Roa announced the move on Sunday, and said rolling strike action was also possible.

Ths strike, on May 29, will involve almost 50,000 primary and secondary teachers and primary principals, and will affect hundreds of thousands of students in more than 2000 schools.

PPTA members had also given authority for a five-week rolling strike across the country if the impasse was not resolved, although they hoped that would not eventuate.

The announcement came after teachers and principals voted in secret ballots over the past week, with both unions having each rejected four pay offers to date from the ministry.

The latest offer from the Government is for a $698 million pay improvement package for primary teachers and principals, and a $500m package for secondary teachers.

NZEI president Lynda Stuart said the teaching profession was not going to give up on achieving fair pay and sustainable working conditions.

«What do we want? It’s quite simple really. We want the time to teach, we want a significant pay jolt, and we want better support for those children who have additional learning needs.

«Giving teachers the time to teach and lead, and ensuring that teaching is a viable long-term career, is absolutely essential if our children in this nation are to get the future that they deserve and need.»

It will be the third time primary teachers and principals had staged a strike during the standoff, but the first time secondary teachers had done so.

Secondary school principals were in separate negotiations.

PPTA president Jack Boyle said he hoped the strike would make the Government sit up and take notice.

«Unfortunately, we have got to a point where our bargaining team has said. ‘We do not believe that a settlement is possible through negotiation at this point’.»

Wellington Girls’ College teacher Cameron Stewart said the current school system was failing students. «We have students who will go through school without a specialist maths teacher.

«It is important that all students throughout the country get the benefit of someone who is a subject expert and is passionate about their subject.

«We don’t want people who are teaching their third or fourth [specialist] subject who have no particular experience and no training in it.»

Teaching needed to be seen as a desirable profession, with a salary which kept up with professions requiring similar qualifications, Stewart said.

Wainuiomata Primary School deputy principal Tute Porter-Samuels said many staff could not afford to strike, but neither could they afford «propping up an undervalued, underfunded system at the cost of our own health and wellbeing».

Teachers did not have enough time outside of the classroom to plan programmes for children with extra needs, call or meet parents, or collaborate on school programmes, she said.

Education Minister Chris Hipkins said the $1.2 billion pay offer was one of the largest on offer across the public sector.

It would result in an extra $10,000 for most primary school teachers, and almost as much for secondary teachers, he said.

«I certainly don’t think a strike is justified.»

Hipkins also acknowledged teachers were not just after more pay, and noted the Government had invested $95m in teacher recruitment and $217m in employing more learning support coordinators.

He wanted the unions to enter facilitated bargaining, and hoped they would take up the offer.

«We’re getting serious about the issues that they’re raising, but we’re never going to be able to solve every problem overnight. These problems have been over a decade in the making.»

Source of the notice: https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/education/112655087/teachers-have-voted-to-strike-on-may-29

Comparte este contenido:

Homeschooling is on the rise in Australia. Who is doing it and why?

By: Rebecca English.

 

This is the first article in our four-part series on homeschooling in Australia. The series will answer common questions including whether homeschooled children have enough opportunities for socialisation, and how their outcomes compare with children who attend formal schooling.


Home education is a legally recognised alternative to enrolling a child in school in all Australian states and territories. Children need to be enrolled in either a school or home education from around the age of 6 until completion age (around 17 years-old). If the parent chooses home education, they must apply to the state or territory authority for permission.

In most states and territories, the parent or a hired registered teacher is responsible for the education of the child, usually at the child’s home. Any parent, regardless of their educational background, is legally able to apply for, and homeschool their child.

Parents must submit a plan for their home education, which, in most cases, should show an alignment between their child’s learning and the national curriculum. Parents can buy a program, but in most cases, they develop their own, in line with their philosophies of education.

 


How many Australian children are being homeschooled?

Across Australia, there are around 20,000 homeschooled students and the numbers are growing. Around 1,100 students were being homeschooled in Queensland in 2013. By 2018, this had increased to 3,232 students.

This means there are around the same number of homeschooled students in Queensland as the population of Brisbane State High School.

The numbers are rising in other states too. In New South Wales an estimated 4,700 students were enrolled in homeschool in 2017 compared to around 3,300 in 2013. Around 5,300 children were being homeschooled in Victoria in 2018, compared to 3,545 children in 2013.

These numbers may not tell the whole story as they only represent families who have registered to homeschool their child. Research suggests there may be thousands who haven’t registered, and so are homeschooling their children “illegally”.

Why do families choose to homeschool?

There are many reasons parents choose to educate their children at home. For some families it will be because of religious beliefs. Geography or financial reasons might stop these families from accessing a suitable private school.

Other families might be ideologically opposed to mainstream schooling and see it as an unnecessary or inappropriate intrusion into family life.

Some of the biggest growth in home education is in the “accidental” home education group. These are families for whom school was a first choice, but it did not work. There are many reasons school may not have worked, but often it’s down to special educational need. These families would traditionally have moved their children around between schools but are now homeschooling instead.

Studies suggest families who take their children out of school, when they have a special need, and homeschool are more satisfied with their child’s education than when they were in traditional school.

 


The rise in homeschooling also appears to have links to worldwide changes in education. Many parents see schools as failing their childrenincluding for cultural reasons, and believe homeschooling is a suitable alternative. Some families feel schools are not meeting their primary objectives of education and (healthy) socialisation for their children.

What about assessments?

After a period of time (in Queensland, for instance, it’s ten months) parents report to their state or territory’s education department on their homeschooled child’s progress. The reporting requirements differ across states and territories.

For some states, such as NSW and WA, the report is delivered to a person who visits the family. For others, such as Queensland, the parent writesthe report and sends it to the department.

Unlike traditional schools, parents don’t usually “assess” their child’s learning through exams or assignments. The reports must show progress in key areas. Some homeschooled students might choose to participate in NAPLAN testing while others won’t do any testing at all.

Homeschooled students can choose to go for an ATAR and do a school-based apprenticeship or traineeship, even though they don’t do assessment.

Is it the same as distance education?

Some parents may like the idea of home education but feel they want a more school-like experience. They may choose to enrol their children in distance education.

Distance education is different to homeschooling. Dan Peled/AAP

While it’s also conducted at home, distance education is not home education and the enrolment counts as a “school”. Because it’s technically a school, distance education students are not counted among home education numbers.

The differences are many. Home education is conducted by the parent, but distance education is a school program delivered by teachers at home frequently using the internet. It is also usually delivered to a group of children, rather than a family.

There are private and public distance education schools. Some states, such as New South Wales, limit the enrolment to students who are geographically isolated or may be experiencing a special need that stops them from going to school. In others, such as Queensland, any child can enrol in a distance education school.

What about outcomes?

The volume and quality of the research on outcomes for children in home schooling is limited. In Australia, studies have focused on NAPLAN results. These suggest home-educated students score higher than state averages across every measure. The effect continues even if the child returns to school.

These children may be doing well because they receive one-on-one attention. Or it could be because the child’s learning is personalised and the child has agency over their learning.

 


Studies from the US, where there is far more data, suggest home-educated students enjoy benefits in reading, language, maths, science and social studies. And many families there cite dissatisfaction with schools’ achievements as a reason to home educate. There is no difference between home education in the USA and Australia.

The rise in numbers poses issues for education departments and government authorities charged with managing the practise. They may not be set up to deal with large, and increasing, numbers of registrations. For most departments of education, the numbers of families choosing home education has traditionally been low.

In addition, authorities may be unable to police those families who choose not to register.

The increasing choice of home education is an issue that should be on the radar of every state and territory education authority.

 

Source of the article:

Comparte este contenido:
Page 47 of 144
1 45 46 47 48 49 144