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Australia: equal pay for early childhood educators

Fuente: megaphone.org.au / 5 de Mayo de 2016

TO: MALCOLM TURNBULL, PRIME MINISTER OF AUSTRALIA

We all know that the time for equal pay for early childhood educators is long overdue. It is outrageous that they earn one third less than those educating children just few years older.
A responsible government that values the future of every Australian would have already fixed this injustice.
We call on Malcolm Turnbull to commit to funding equal pay for educators in 2016.
If this Government believes in a fair go and equality it will fund pay that befits the essential role of early childhood educators.
It’s time to value the work of early childhood educators. It’s time for equal pay.

Why is this important?

I am an early childhood educator.
Every day I help shape the future chances and choices of every child I educate.
But today, on International Women’s Day, my colleagues and I did something quite different — and a little scary: we chained ourselves to Malcolm Turnbull’s office.
Why? I was born in 1968. One year later, a brave woman called Zelda D’Aprano shocked the nation by chaining herself to Melbourne’s Commonwealth Building to protest against women being paid substantially less than men.
That was almost 50 years ago, yet my colleagues and I are paid one third less than those educating children just a few years older – for one reason: 94 per cent of us are female.
I have been waiting my whole life to have my work valued the same as a man. Educators are fed up. We won’t die waiting for equal pay.
We want Malcolm Turnbull to fix this.
Please stand with us and tell him it’s time to value our work by funding wages that befits our essential and invaluable profession.

How it will be delivered

Educators will publicly deliver this petition to Prime Minister Turnbull.

Link original: https://www.megaphone.org.au/petitions/equal-pay-for-childcare-educators

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Brasil: Formação de Gênero e Educação destaca o necessário empoderamento das mulheres na sociedade

Um abraço apertado, seguido da frase “Que bom que você veio, companheira. Contigo, eu ando melhor”. Foi assim que um grupo de aproximadamente 80 mulheres deu início, na manhã desta sexta-feira, dia 1º, a Formação em Gênero e Educação, organizada pelo Departamento de Gênero e Diversidade do CPERS. A iniciativa, realizada na sede do Sindicato, na capital, dá continuidade a programação do Dia da Mulher e aborda temas como saúde, sexualidade, políticas públicas, enfrentamento da violência, identidade de gênero e autonomia do corpo, entre outros assuntos que destacam os direitos das mulheres. A Formação continua neste sábado, a partir das 9 horas.
Ao iniciar a Formação, a diretora do Departamento de Gênero e Diversidade, Íris de Carvalho destacou que a iniciativa visa contribuir com a afirmação das mulheres primeiramente dentro da categoria e depois em outros espaços. “Em nossa categoria 87% são mulheres.  Por isso, a importância de nos fortalecermos. Esse será um espaço de compartilhamento e muito aprendizado”, observou.
Ao dar as boas-vindas as participantes, a vice-presidente do CPERS, Solange Carvalho, destacou as lutas diárias das mulheres por liberdade, respeito e direitos iguais. “Nós acreditamos que a Educação é uma ferramenta essencial na busca de transformações para o mundo. Nós, educadoras, temos um papel fundamental nas escolas para abordar questões como sexualidade, gênero e violência”, afirmou.

Conquistas, direitos e desafios
Na abertura dos debates, a professora e Mestre em Educação, Vanessa Gil, abordou o tema A luta das mulheres ao longo da história, onde o que prevalece é a cultura machista, o patriarcado e a desvalorização do trabalho das mulheres. “Nossos saberes não são valorizados. Somos educadas, o tempo todo, para apagar nossa história e aceitar uma cultura machista. Temos o importante papel de tentar mudar essa realidade a partir do que ensinamos aos nossos alunos”, ressaltou.
A secretária adjunta da Mulher Trabalhadora da CUT, Mara Feltes, falou sobre a organização das mulheres trabalhadoras na Central. “Nossa luta constante é para que dentro do ambiente de trabalho, e também fora dele, sejamos respeitadas e tenhamos igualdade, sem discriminação”, afirmou.
Fabiane Dutra, presidenta do Conselho Estadual dos Direitos da Mulher do RS, observou que todos os direitos das mulheres conquistados até hoje só foram possíveis através de muita luta. “Hoje estamos lutando para não perder o que já adquirimos. Como educadoras temos o dever de construir uma educação que não nos diferencie e discrimine”, alertou.
A professora e mestranda da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul – UFRGS, Paula Azevedo e a professora Leslie Campaner Toledo, abordaram o tema A Prática educativa nas escolas para promoção da igualdade. Paula compartilhou uma pesquisa feita pelo Ministério da Educação – MEC, a qual mostrou que o preconceito de gêneros, principalmente entre as meninas, é o maior dentro das escolas, ficando à frente até mesmo do racismo e da homofobia. “O grande desafio da educação é assimilar e procurar alternativas para romper o preconceito”, afirmou.
Outro assunto abordado pela professora foi o assédio sexual sofrido por meninas e mulheres. “As mulheres têm que entender que o assédio sexual não é um problema individual, mas coletivo. Quando entendermos isso nossa luta ganha força”, frisou.
Leslie ressaltou a importância da formação dos professores para abordar a igualdade de gêneros em sala de aula.  “Temos que estar abertos para a desconstrução desses preconceitos em sala de aula. O CPERS está de parabéns por nos proporcionar esse momento de formação. Agora, essas informações precisam chegar a todos os Núcleos do Sindicato”, declarou.

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La Carta nº 559 CEAAL

– Asamblea General del CEAAL 20 al 24 de junio /Guadalajara, México.Clic aquí.
– Perú. Diálogo “La educación como un derecho: del dicho al hecho”. Clic aquí.
– Perú. Presentación del libro “El sistema que esperaba Juan García”. Sistema Nacional de EPJA en América Latina. Clic aquí.
– Chile. CEAAL. Nuevo enlace nacional. Clic aquí.
– Guatemala. CEAAL. Nueva coordinadora de la Red Mesoamericana Alforja, Verónica del CID. Clic aquí.
– Argentina. Córdoba. Educación Popular. Los desafíos para nuestra acción política, pedagógica y cultural. Clic aquí.
– Brasilia: Seminario Internacional a lo largo de la vida. Confintea Brasil +6. Clic aquí.
– República Dominicana. CEAAL. ¡Magaly Pineda Tejada, presente!. Clic aquí.
– República Dominicana. CIPAF (CEAAL). Fallecimiento de Magaly Pineda, fundadora del CIPAF. Clic aquí.
– Brasil. Instituto Paulo Freire (CEAAL). livro “Conscientização”, de Paulo Freire, é lançado pela Cortez Editora. Clic aquí.
– México. Altepetl AC (CEAAL). 4ta Escuela de promotoras/es sociales por los derechos humanos, la igualdad, la ciudadanía y la construcción de paz. Clic aquí.
– Colombia. El IPC (CEAAL) y Unaula, unidos por la restitución de tierras en Urabá. Clicaquí.
– Brasil. Instituto Pólis (CEAAL). Novos Paradigmas de Produção e Consumo: experiências innovadoras. Clic aquí.
– Argentina. CePaDeHu (CEAAL). Taller de Parto Respetado. Clic aquí.
– Perú. PDTG (CEAAL). Taller de Educación Popular Feminista.
Clic aquí.
– Brasil. CONTAG (CEAAL). Encontro Nacional de Reforma Agrária e Crédito Fundiário termina hoje defendendo a necessidade de forte mobilização. Clic aquí.
– Sudáfrica. Premio de Educación Popular. Clic aquí.
– Honduras. Encuentro Internacional de los Pueblos “Berta Cáceres vive”. Clic aquí.

– Argentina. Convocatoria a las Jornadas “Educación y trabajo de jóvenes y adultos a lo largo de la vida. Investigaciones y estudios acerca de las políticas, los sujetos y las experiencias en la educación de jóvenes y adultos”. Clic aquí.
– Argentina. Dossier: “A 40 años del Golpe: trazar puentes entre pasado y futuro”. Clic aquí.
– Semana de Acción Mundial por la Educación 2016. Clic aquí.
– Guatemala. Organizaciones presionan al gobierno a cumplir compromisos con las minorías. Clic aquí.
– Chile. Nueva Educación Pública, cuidado con las mesas cojas.
Clic aquí.
– Último libro de Eduardo Galeano se presentará en México.
Clic aquí.
– Publicación “Nuevas oportunidades educativas. Política y gestión en la Educación Básica Alternativa” de Manuel Iguiñiz y Luis Salazar.
Clic aquí.
– CLACSO. Publicación “Actores, redes y desafíos. Juventudes e infancias en América Latina”. Clic aquí.
– UNESCO. Liderazgo escolar en América Latina y el Caribe. Experiencias innovadoras de formación de directivos escolares en la región. Clic aquí.

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OECD: How teachers teach and students learn Successful strategies for school

5 de Mayo de 2016
This paper examines how particular teaching and learning strategies are related to student performance on specific PISA test questions, particularly mathematics questions. The report compares teacher-directed instruction and memorisation learning strategies, at the traditional ends of the teaching and learning spectrums, and student-oriented instruction and elaboration learning strategies, at the opposite ends. Other teaching strategies, such as formative assessment and cognitive activation, and learning approaches, such as control strategies, are also analysed. Our analyses suggest that to perform at the top, students cannot rely on memory alone; they need to approach mathematics strategically and creatively to succeed in the most complex problems. There is also some evidence that most teaching strategies have a role to play in the classroom. To varying degrees, students need to learn from teachers, be informed about their progress and work independently and collaboratively; above all, they need to be constantly challenged.

How teachers teach and students learn

 

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Argentina: CTERA participó en el Ministerio de Educación de la Nación de la reunión paritaria para empezar a discutir el convenio colectivo de trabajo

Fuente: CTERA 5 de Mayo de 2016

CTERA PARTICIPÓ EN EL MINISTERIO DE EDUCACIÓN DE LA NACIÓN DE LA REUNIÓN PARITARIA PARA EMPEZAR A DISCUTIR EL CONVENIO COLECTIVO DE TRABAJO.

 

En el día de la fecha, miércoles 4 de mayo, la CTERA junto a los sindicatos nacionales SADOP, CEA, UDA y AMET, participó de la reunión paritaria para empezar a discutir el Convenio Colectivo del sector, acordado en la paritaria 2015.

La delegación de CTERA estuvo integrada por Eduardo López – Secretario Gremial -, Luis Branchi – Secretario de Acción Social – y Alejandro Demichelis – Secretario de Prensa -.

 

El Secretario Gremial de CTERA, Eduardo López, planteó la necesidad de avanzar en un Convenio para los trabajadores de la educación para elaborar una normativa marco que contemple los derechos de los docentes de todo el país.

Para ese objetivo es necesario que participen no sólo los sindicatos nacionales y el Ministerio de Educación sino también las provincias representadas en el Consejo Federal de Educación.

Luis Branchi – Secretario de Acción Social – expresó la urgencia de empezar a discutir el Convenio Colectivo y la necesidad de empezar a discutir  las temáticas que hacen al trabajo docente.

La comisión que discutirá el Convenio Colectivo de Trabajo de los docentes empezará a  funcionar con regularidad para avanzar en este histórico anhelo de los trabajadores de la educación de Argentina.

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Australia: Teachers say close manus and Nauru, Welcome, Refugees

Fuente: www.megaphone.org.au  / 5 de mayo de 2016

TO: PRIME MINISTER MALCOLM TURNBULL AND MINISTER FOR IMMIGRATION AND BORDER PROTECTION PETER DUTTON

We call on Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Minister for Immigration and Border Protection Peter Dutton to immediately:
– Close Manus Island and Nauru detention centres, and
– Bring all refugees and asylum seekers on Manus and Nauru to Australia for processing and resettlement.

Why is this important?

We, the undersigned teachers stand in solidarity with the family camp asylum seekers and refugees on Nauru who have been holding daily protests against their ongoing detention and offshore processing since the 20th of March.
There is no prospect of safety for refugees on Nauru. The mental health crises, sexual abuse, assaults in the community, discrimination and violence at school and permanent insecurity is intolerable and unnecessary for child and adult refugees.
Now it is clear that the detention of refugees on Manus Island is illegal. Amnesty International described Australia’s detention camp there as “tantamount to torture”, after visiting the centre in November 2013. All asylum seekers and refugees on Manus can and must be immediately brought to Australia.
The discrimination of the offshore camps is stark; while some asylum seekers have spent 1000 days in detention on Nauru without a refugee determination, others who shared the same boat journey to Australia have been living in the community in Australia for nearly three years. The cost of running the offshore prisons alone could pay for half of the $4.5 billion the Turnbull government won’t spend on the last two years of Gonski.
As teachers we uphold the rights of all children to live in a safe environment, to have access to educational opportunities and not be subject to discrimination. As teachers, we embrace the opportunity to work with refugee students and colleagues, and we know that when given a proper welcome, refugees enrich school communities. We address justice and human rights in our classrooms, and we teach our students to stand up to bullying, abuse and lies.

Link original: https://www.megaphone.org.au/petitions/teachers-say-close-manus-and-nauru-welcome-refugees?bucket&source=facebook-share-button&time=1462065364

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EEUU: The Armed Campus in the Anxiety Age

Fuente: http://www.theatlantic.com/ 5 de Mayo de 2016

Campus-carry laws add unnecessary worry to communities already overwhelmed by unease.

ATLANTA, Ga.—A while back, a student at Georgia Tech, where I teach, showed me a series of anonymized “threats” that students in a notoriously difficult class of mine had posted in an online discussion forum. I’d just returned grades, and nobody was happy. “Does he have kids?” one asked. “I’m going to steal them and blackmail him,” answered another.” “Had kids,” added a third.

They’re the kind of comments you wouldn’t think twice about—just typical college students communing over a tough professor. Unless, that is, you also knew that those students might be permitted to carry concealed firearms on campus. Then their words might take on a different tenor, even if just hypothetically.

Eight states already allow gun possession on college campuses. Texas was the latest to adopt a campus-carry law, which will take effect August 1. Andlegislation allowing licensed gun holders over 21 to carry concealed handguns on college campuses set to reach the Georgia Senate floor as early as this week might make my state the ninth. (Of the remaining states, 19 currently ban concealed carry on campuses, and 23 leave the decision up to individual campuses.)

Texas’s law has incited a spate of recent distress among educators. Fritz Steiner, UT Austin’s dean of architecture, cited the law as a catalyst for seeking another position—he is leaving UT to become the dean of the University of Pennsylvania School of Design. The University of Virginia media studies professor Siva Vaidhyanathan, who is a UT Austin alumnus, withdrew his candidacy as a finalist for dean of that school’s Moody College of Communication due to his concerns about the new gun law. And faculty everywhere spurned a University of Houston Faculty Senate presentation on teaching after the law’s enactment. The tips it offers to faculty in the campus-carry era include “Drop certain topics from your curriculum” and “limit student access off-hours.”

University administrators don’t particularly like such policies either. Among those testifying against campus carry before the Georgia Senate Judiciary Committee last week was the University System of Georgia chancellor Hank Huckaby. His office, along with the presidents and campus police chiefs of all 29 University System of Georgia institutions, including the University of Georgia and the Georgia Institute of Technology, all oppose concealed carry on campus. And it’s not just the administrators and faculty who are concerned. A survey conducted by Georgia Tech’s Student Government Association two weeks ago revealed that a majority of students oppose concealed handguns on campus.

College students’ whole lives have been lived bathed in vague and constant threat.
Like elsewhere, critics of campus carry in Georgia make appeals to the safety of students and faculty. Concessions in the current bill would still prohibit guns in dormitories, fraternities and sororities, and athletic facilities—an exclusion justified by the possible presence of alcohol in these areas. Last weekend, the gun control advocacy nonprofit Everytown for Gun Safety aired a television ad opposing campus carry, which also cites alcohol’s impact on gun safety as a primary concern.
Meanwhile, Governor Nathan Deal, who had been swayed to oppose campus carry in a bill two years ago that expanded Georgia gun laws, has indicated his support for the measure this time around—partly because the “Wild West scenario” predicted after 2014’s so-called “Guns Everywhere” bill has not come to pass.

Apart from the discharge of firearms themselves, another case against guns on campus appeals to the chilling effects it might have on free speech. Writing last week for The Atlantic, Firmin DeBrabander cited the University of Houston presentation as evidence that campus carry could censor college classrooms. If faculty and students cannot discuss contentious issues in the open without “fear of inciting angry students to draw their guns,” Debrander reasons, then democracy itself could be undermined.


But both the appeals to safety and to free speech only superficially address the problem with guns on campus, and they do so by taking positions that many gun-rights proponents don’t share anyway. Safety cuts both ways, and appeals to security have long justified support for expanded gun rights in America. If college campuses are among the few venues where guns are prohibited, argue gun advocates, then they will become targets for attacks. And when it comes to free speech, supporters of expanded gun rights will happily pit their Second Amendment against their opponents’ First. These arguments lead nowhere—particularly in states like Texas and Georgia with strong and proud cultures of firearms ownership.

A better case against guns on campus appeals to anxiety rather than safety or speech. Deep and pervasive unease already pervades college campuses, and safety and speech worries are just instances of a more general and more universal anxiety.

Today’s college students are beset by unease. And it’s no wonder why—their whole lives have been lived bathed in vague and constant threat. Today’s 21-year-old students were born in 1995. They were kindergarteners on 9/11, and their whole childhoods were backgrounded by forever war. Their primary and secondary schooling took place under the supposed reforms of No Child Left Behind, which meant an education designed around lots of high-stakes testing and the preparation necessary to conduct it.
They entered high school just after the 2008 global financial crisis, after which declines in the tax base led to billions of dollars of funding cuts to primary, secondary, and postsecondary public education. Here in Georgia, the lottery-funded HOPE Scholarship, which had paid full college tuition for students who kept a 3.0 average, increased its achievement requirements for full tuition and eliminated support for books and fees. Meanwhile, tuition rose precipitously—35 percent over the last five years at Georgia Tech—as funding declined. And as state funding has waned, flagships like UGA and Georgia Tech have increasingly pursued more lucrative out-of-state enrollments, while increasingly relying on gifts, endowments, grants, and contracts as state funding has become a minority contributor to institutional budgets.

Getting into college also became harder. In the arms race to raise test scores and thereby rankings, admissions have pushed average SAT scores at Georgia Tech up from 1420 in 2013 to 1449 in 2015, only adding to the anxiety of admission. Twenty-five points doesn’t sound like much, but because of the way the SAT is scored, it might amount to a difference of as few as one or two incorrect answers on the exam. A couple answers might measure a differential in academic performance and potential, but it might also represent the accident of a cold testing facility or a stressful commute into the exam. Every aspect of these kids’ lives are drawn taut. One badly timed sneeze can spell disaster.

Once enrolled, college campuses are brimming with new anxieties, and newly trenchant versions of old ones. The issues of preparation, access, and affordability to create an environment in which mere survival overwhelms learning—let alone indulgences like free speech. Then someone like me comes along and teaches the same class I would have taught five or 10 or 15 years ago, only to find that students are falling apart from the stress rather than from the materials. No wonder they fantasize about kidnapping my family.

A concealed-carry campus becomes a campus in which everyone carries a potential gun.
Even the successful students still must contend with a much worse economic lot than their cohorts did in the past. At Georgia Tech, even students who pursue “practical” degrees in areas of supposed economic growth, like computing, still face massive competition and pressure for jobs. I have students who have filed hundreds of applications and endured five or 10 separate interviews for a single entry-level job, including time-consuming cross-country trips to all-day interviews, before finally receiving an offer. The only greater motivator than fear is debt.


Guns arrive on campus today in this context of massive, wholesale collegiate anxiety. DeBrabander is right to worry that they might have a chilling effect on speech, but the chill goes so much deeper, straight to the bone. A concealed-carry campus becomes a campus in which everyone carries a potential gun. And the potential gun is far more powerful than the real gun, because it both issues and revokes a threat all at once. Made habitual and spread atop an already apprehensive base, that sort of mental anguish is nothing short of terrorism.

Think back to those online comments from my students. Even if they were merely playful—which really is all that they were—they suddenly seem threatening once firearms are in the picture. You don’t even need a gun to make it happen. The idea of a gun is sufficient. And that’s just me! I’m the one with the tenured professorship! Now imagine the students, all trying to make it through my class and everything else with all those ideas of guns in the room and on the quad.

An unspoken secret about firearms is that both proponents and opponents of gun laws share a common position: that guns ascribe a feeling of power and control to their bearers. Gun detractors are foolish not to acknowledge this truth of firearms, and they are reckless for sneering at gun owners who seek (legal) refuge in this feature of the weapons. Yes, we pay a dear price, measured in mortal lives, for that feeling of control and power when firearms are used improperly. And yes, as a nation, we seem to have decided that this price is acceptable. But not just from insanity or evil. When violence does erupt, it finds its source in fear and anger and hopelessness more than it does in mental instability. Absent other comforts and certainties, is it any wonder that firearms become such a tempting salve?

Yet in giving in to that temptation, we pay another price, too. It’s harder to see but even more pervasive. It is the quiet, constant apprehension of the idea of the gun in the room, the truly silenced barrel of the firearm that probably doesn’t exist but might, and whose possible existence alters the way we think and behave.

That guns on campus are having their moment right now is no accident. The entire college experience, along with the supposedly prosperous young adulthood into which college spills out, is imploding under the weight of unprecedented apprehension. And worst of all: That apprehension isn’t even neurotic and overzealous. It’s entirely reasonable for young people to fear a future that has never been more tenuous.

There are reasons to fear on college campuses. But those fears are misdirected at hypothetical bad guys with guns against whom good guys with guns would prevail. We’d better spend our worry—and our legislative effort—de-escalating the massive anxiety among college students today. We can do that by providing the resources to teach them well as kids, to give them affordable opportunities to pursue higher education, and to help them secure productive places in society matched to their talents and capacities. The great tragedy and sorrow of the push to extend gun rights to every nook and cranny of American life is not that firearms make people feel greater power and greater control in those contexts. It’s that they are so stripped of that power and control that they should need to seek solace in guns in the first place.

IAN BOGOST is a writer, game designer, and contributing editor atThe Atlantic. He is the Ivan Allen College Distinguished Chair in media studies and a professor of interactive computing at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

El link original: http://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2016/03/campus-carry-anxiety-age/472920/

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