Page 295 of 342
1 293 294 295 296 297 342

¿Por qué la lucha de la juventud en Francia debe ser conocida en Chile?

Los grandes medios no muestran esta lucha en nuestro país. Un mes de movilizaciones. Asambleas, ocupaciones y una huelga general son un ejemplo que hay que mostrar.

Fuente: izquierdadiario.com / 13 de Abril de 2016

Derrotar en las calles la reforma laboral

El gobierno del Partido Socialista de Francois Hollande está atacando los derechos de los trabajadores y la juventud. Continuando los planes de “austeridad” para que la crisis la pague el pueblo trabajador, está impulsando una contra-reforma laboral que ni aún los gobiernos de derecha se atrevieron a aplicar, que ataca los derechos individuales de los trabajadores, a los sindicatos, negociación colectiva y huelga, así como precariza el trabajo de la juventud.

El ataque no ha quedado sin respuesta. Desde fines de febrero, centenares de organizaciones juveniles, estudiantiles y de trabajadores se han unido (“tous ensemble” o “todos juntos” es la consigna) para exigir el retiro de la ley, y mantenerse en las calles movilizados es la única forma de lograrlo.

Desde el 09 de marzo a la fecha, seis jornadas de movilizaciones masivas con un enorme apoyo popular han puesto al gobierno “socialista” a la deriva. Enfrentando la fuerte represión policial (y el “Estado de excepción”), la juventud está encabezando la protesta y llamando al movimiento obrero a la unidad. Fue tal la presión, que las principales centrales sindicales se vieron obligadas a convocar a la primera Huelga General en la presidencia de Hollande.

Aunque las burocracias sindicales y las direcciones reformistas quieran presionar por “mejorar” la ley y negociar con el ejecutivo y el parlamento (comparándose a la política de las direcciones de la CUT y CONFECH que llaman a confiar en las instituciones del régimen), son cada vez más los sectores que ven en la continuidad de su lucha y la auto-organización desde las bases, la única forma de acabar con la ley, superando la división que busca el gobierno e imponen las burocracias.

Masividad, unidad y coordinación

Así, la creciente protesta social de la juventud y los trabajadores, tuvo su apogeo el 31 de Marzo con la Huelga General en la que participaron más de un millón de personas. Este sábado 09 de marzo una nueva jornada de protesta convocó a más de cien mil personas en todo el país.

Esta “primavera francesa” se expresa también en la convocatoria a la ocupación de la plaza La República imitando el llamado de los “indignados” españoles del 15M. Así pretende el movimiento “Noche en Pie”.

Uno de los ejemplos centrales, además de la combatividad y masividad en las calles, son los ejemplos de unidad desde las bases entre los secundarios y universitarias, así como la coordinación obrero-estudiantil en Asambleas Generales de Coordinación, como gérmenes de organismos de auto-organización para superior la división que imponen las burocracias, y librar la batalla contra el gobierno sin ninguna confianza en las instituciones de la Quinta República. Así, en diversas universidades y escuelas han emergido las Asambleas Generales, como en Paris I y Paris VIII, llamando a coordinar las luchas y la unidad desde las bases.

Un ejemplo para recuperar el protagonismo estudiantil y obrero

La juventud viene protagonizando masivas movilizaciones en todo el mundo tras la crisis económica del 2009. Fue protagonista tanto en la “primavera árabe” (derrotada por la contra-revolución imperialista así como la farsa de las “transiciones democráticas, ambas abriendo paso al Estado Islámico y la guerra imperialista), con las “plazas” en Europa como los “indignados” españoles, así como las masivas movilizaciones en Chile el 2011 y las “jornadas de junio” de 2013 en Brasil.

En Europa con tasas de desocupación que doblan el promedio normal, así como en América Latina y en diversas partes del mundo, la crisis económica y los ataques de los capitalistas y sus gobiernos empujan a la juventud al sub-empleo, desocupación, precarización y miseria. Los estudiantes ven atacados sus derechos y amenazado su futuro.

En Francia, las protestas de la juventud y los trabajadores para derrotar la reforma laboral y la represión, son una bocanada de aire a Chile y el mundo.
El ejemplo vivo de sus luchas, combatividad, masividad, unidad e intentos de coordinación y auto-organización desde las bases, debe ser tomado por la juventud y los trabajadores.

En la actualidad en Chile, el parlamento quiere derrotarnos imponiendo leyes de represión, impunidad y criminalización. El gobierno nos pretende dividir y sacar de las calles con pequeñas concesiones dentro del modelo heredado de la dictadura (cambiar algo para que nada cambie).

Sólo mediante la unidad y coordinación desde las bases entre trabajadores y estudiantes, sin ninguna confianza en el gobierno y parlamento, podremos recuperar el protagonismo en las calles, derrotar las leyes de represión y el engaño de las reformas, y pasar verdaderamente a la ofensiva. El 21 de abril, la primera movilización estudiantil del año, debe ser un paso para ello.

Enlace completo: http://www.laizquierdadiario.com/Por-que-la-lucha-de-la-juventud-en-Francia-debe-ser-conocida-en-Chile?id_rubrique=1201

Comparte este contenido:

Planning for crisis – what can education systems do to prevent and prepare?

Fuente IIPE – Buenos Aires/ 13 de Abril de 2016

Hazards, either natural or human-made, do not necessarily lead to crisis. However, when an education system is impacted by a conflict or natural disaster, there are measures that can be put in place to mitigate risks and increase efficiency and equity.

Ministries of education (MoE) are increasingly aware of this and countries including South Sudan, Uganda, Mali, Burkina Faso and others have started planning for crises before they occur.

WHAT DOES CRISIS-SENSITIVE PLANNING ENTAIL?

Crisis-sensitive planning begins with a risk analysis, or as some would call it, a conflict and disaster risk analysis. There are many tools out there to support the development of such an analysis, including the Rapid Education and Risk Analysis(RERA), UNESCO-IIEP’s and PEIC’s guidance and more. These analyses then feed into policy and plan development and implementation. And in order for risk reduction strategies to be effectively implemented, they need to be costed and funded.

What’s important to remember is that if the ultimate goal is to develop national education systems that are crisis-sensitive and contribute to social cohesion and peacebuilding, crisis-sensitive planning needs to be linked with government systems and processes. How can we do this?

  • By ensuring government ownership when developing a specific conflict and disaster risk reduction analysis. Ideally such an analysis should be done around the time when the education sector analysis, or ESA, is in development. The central idea is that government officials in a given country lead the process of developing the methodology, implementing the data collection and preparing the analysis. Ministries in countries including Burkina Faso, Mali, and currently in South Sudan have been pioneers in this area with support from partners such as UNESCO-IIEP, UNICEF, USAID, PEIC, Search for Common Ground, and others.
  • By using data and data collection tools that belong to governments. In Mali, for example, the Ministry of Education, together with devlopment partners, developed a questionnaire  for a sampling survey to look at the effects of various risks on the system. In South Sudan, official data from the Education Management Information System (EMIS) was merged with OCHA’s vulnerability index, to highlight how the vulnerabilities related to conflict, displacement, food insecurity and epidemics affect the education system.
  • By bringing together government officials and humanitarian partners (or those who have conducted the analysis) during the planning process. Ideally, as mentioned earlier, risk analyses should take place as part and parcel of the broader education sector analysis, in order to identify risk reduction strategies. These strategies should be seen as an opportunity for partners –whether humanitarian or development partners –to work together and invest in long-term systems’ building. This may be a challenge in terms of timing, for example, if a country is in the middle of implementing a five-year plan. However, there are opportunities to integrate risk analyses during mid-term or annual reviews. In South Sudan, the education cluster, UNHCR, and local humanitarian NGOs were all involved in the crisis-sensitive ESA that has recently beenfinalized. The expectation is that they will now all be involved in developing the next education sector plan and that innovative decisions to further align humanitarian and development programmes will be made.
Comparte este contenido:

Expert meeting on quality assurance, accreditation and academic corruption

Fuente IIPE-Buenos Aires/ 13 de Abril de 2016

The Council for Higher Education Accreditation/International Quality Group(CHEA/CIQG) and the International Institute for Educational Planning (IIEP) of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) hosted a two-day expert meeting to address quality assurance, accreditation and the role they play in combatting academic corruption. The meeting built on IIEP’s long-standing research experience in two areas: ethics and corruption in education and quality assurance and governance in higher education.

The meeting, held March 30-31 in Washington, DC, brought together representatives from accrediting and quality assurance (QA) bodies, colleges and universities and higher education associations in Asia, Africa, Europe and North America. Co-chairs of the meeting were Sir John Daniel, Chair of the United World Colleges International Board, and Muriel Poisson, Head of the Research and Development Team, IIEP-UNESCO. IIEP was also represented by Michaela Martin, Programme Specialist who focuses on higher education policy-making, planning and management.

For the purposes of the meeting, “academic corruption” was defined as any prescribed action in connection with admissions, examinations or degree awarding that attempts to gain unfair advantage, including cheating, plagiarism, falsification of research, degree mills and accreditation mills.

Topics addressed included the background and history of academic corruption in higher education; an overview of quality assurance and its current role in addressing and combating academic corruption; and key questions to be considered in developing an advisory on the issue of academic corruption, including 1) whether existing codes of good practice are sufficient to make QA agencies resilient against corruption, 2) how QA agencies and higher education institutions can best work together to prevent academic corruption and 3) whether QA agencies should work together with other stakeholders (government, student associations, oversight authorities and society) to prevent academic corporation.

“Corruption in higher education is an incredibly serious problem that many stakeholders are reluctant to face,” said Sir John Daniel. “We hope that our work will be a wake-up call.”

“Academic corruption in higher education implies distorted selection processes, the overall devaluation of degrees and underqualified professionals. It also has detrimental effects on ethics and values,” Muriel Poisson noted. “To restore trust, a comprehensive set of strategies needs to be developed. Making quality assurance ‘integrity sensitive’ is one of them.”

“While some quality assurance agencies use already certain integrity standards, they can be more explicit on certain practices through which Higher Education Institutions could address corruption,” said Michaela Martin.

A joint CHEA/IIEP-UNESCO advisory statement on quality assurance, accreditation and academic corruption will be developed in the next several months.

“We are delighted to have been co-host of this important and productive expert meeting,” said CHEA President Judith Eaton. “Providing an international forum to address issues related to quality assurance internationally is an important focus for CIQG.”

Comparte este contenido:

Perú: Trámite de informes de escalafón se reduce de 30 a 4 días hábiles

Simplificación administrativa del trámite se inició a fines del 2015 en 14 UGEL del ámbito rural del país y en las 7 de Lima Metropolitana

Fuente Minedu/ 13 de Abril de 2016

Gracias a la estrategia de modernización y simplificación administrativa en las Unidades de Gestión Educativa Local (Ugel), impulsada por el Ministerio de Educación (Minedu), los trámites para emisión de informes escalafonarios, que solían durar en promedio 30 días, serán resueltos en menos de 4 días hábiles.

El informe escalafonario es un documento importante para los docentes, pues constituye el insumo principal para todas las acciones de personal, así como para participar en concursos para el acceso a cargos o ascensos en la carrera pública magisterial, en la carrera administrativa o para jubilarse.

El proyecto de simplificación administrativa del trámite de informe escalafonario se inició a fines del 2015 en 14 UGEL del ámbito rural del país y en las 7 de Lima Metropolitana. Este año se extenderá a 52 UGEL más.

Este procedimiento no solo garantizará un mejor servicio al docente, sino que, más importante aún, permitirá “liberar de tiempo administrativo al maestro para que pase mayor tiempo en el aula con los estudiantes”, señaló José Carlos Vera, director de Apoyo a la Gestión Educativa Descentralizada, de la Dirección General de Gestión Descentralizada del Minedu.

Para tal objetivo se ha previsto, entre otras cosas, contratar y capacitar personal de apoyo para ordenar y digitar los legajos docentes en un nuevo software llamado LEGIX, que permitirá reemplazar las fichas personales que se llenaban a mano y emitir los informes escalafonarios de manera inmediata.

A la vez, se entregarán equipos de cómputo, lectora de barras y separadores, tapas para el archivo de los legajos, acciones en el marco del proyecto de inversión pública “Mejoramiento de la gestión educativa descentralizada de instituciones educativas en ámbitos rurales de 24 regiones del Perú”.

En este marco, se desarrolló en Lima el primer Taller Nacional de Simplificación Administrativa del Trámite de Emisión de Informe Escalafonario, con la participación de servidores de las 26 UGEL con las que se trabajará en esta primera etapa del año.

La Dirección Técnico Normativa Docente – DITEN participó del taller brindando asistencia técnica sobre la nueva norma del Sistema Escalafón y pautas metodológicas para el trabajo en el proyecto.

Comparte este contenido:

With Second Strike Looming, Twin Cities Janitors Clean Up

April 13, 2016 / Mark Brenner

Twin Cities janitors were headed for a second strike in as many months when they reached an agreement March 7.

A thousand janitors who clean Minneapolis office buildings walked off the job for a day February 17 and filled downtown. It was the city’s first janitors strike in decades, although security officers, also represented by Service Employees (SEIU) Local 26, have struck twice in recent years.

“I was surprised by how many members struck, since we hadn’t done it before,” said executive board member Brahim Kone, who has been a janitor for 15 years. “But now the fear is gone. Members are ready to fight.”

The tentative agreement pushes wages for most of the workforce over $15 an hour immediately, providing a 12 percent increase over the four-year agreement.

It adds new workload protections, including the right to review your workload with a steward on company time. Health care co-pays and deductibles will decrease. Part-timers will now be able to use the health plan at no additional cost.

“They fought us on everything,” Kone said. “Even the simple language like having a union billboard was so hard.”

But employers fought off the union’s effort to lift up the lower end of the market. They refused to eliminate the bottom tier (a transitional pay scale for newly unionized contractors) and will maintain the practice of paying new hires a slightly lower wage their first two years on the job.

“I’m proud of the settlement, but we lost some stuff too,” Kone said.

COORDINATED PROTESTS

The strike was buoyed by a week of action, organized through the coalition Minnesotans for a Fair Economy (MFE), to address the Twin Cities’ extreme racial and economic inequality. The area’s racial divides in unemployment, graduation rates, and poverty are among the worst in the nation.

Besides the janitors strike, St. Paul teachers held “walk-ins” at 50 schools to push for more student services, like counselors.

Members of the worker center Centro de Trabajadores Unidos en Lucha (CTUL), who work for a cleaning contractor at Macy’s, struck for better pay and the right to unionize.

U.S. Bank workers, who are also unionizing through the Committee for Better Banks (backed by the Communications Workers and UNI Global Union), occupied the bank’s headquarters—along with hundreds of supporters who were also pushing the company to drop its payday lending operations.

And protesters from across the coalition blocked highway traffic during morning rush hour, creating a three-mile backup into downtown Minneapolis.

EDUCATION FOR ACTION


In a combined leadership school, members from different unions, worker centers, and faith and community organizations discussed how the “Dirty Dozen” most influential Minnesota-based corporations are connected to elected officials and each other. Photos: Greg Nammacher.

A hundred members from the coalition’s partner groups—which include unions, worker centers, and faith and community organizations—took part in a parallel leadership school, and turned out for one another’s actions.

They learned practical skills, like speaking to the media and marshaling for a rally, and discussed bigger-picture topics, like how the economy works and how it reinforces racial inequality.

This kind of training really brings people together, said Todd O’Connor, a Local 26 member who works as a security guard at Target’s corporate headquarters. “It feels like we’ve known each other for years.”

MFE affiliates have been conducting their internal education separately for the past two years, though often sharing similar exercises and materials. For instance, the “Dirty Dozen” is an analysis of the most influential Minnesota-based corporations, including household names like Target, US Bank, Wells Fargo, Best Buy, and General Mills.

Members discuss how these companies are connected to elected officials and to each other, and how they’re using these connections to advance a corporate agenda. “People don’t always see how things are connected,” said Mary Spaulding, a member of Take Action Minnesota. “This shows where these companies overlap, that they are intertwined.”

MFE affiliates are moving towards more joint education—like the leadership school—to foster a common outlook and sense of shared strategy.

“$15 an hour is connected to health care, and that’s connected to why so many people can’t vote because they’re on probation or parole,” Spaulding said. “Now you have allies, no matter where you’re going.”

STRIKE BUILD-UP

These education programs dovetailed with internal organizing by the janitors, who started building for their strike six months in advance.

As a supplement to their 100-person bargaining team, the janitors grouped their work sites geographically into a half-dozen “strike zones.” The 20-30 stewards in each zone teamed up to lead education and contract campaigning with their co-workers.

Each zone planned its own action to support the contract fight—and designed its own flag. Some of these elements were inspired by what the janitors learned from unionists and farmworkers they met two years ago on a delegation to Brazil.

Stewards started leading monthly lunchtime conversations, which the union reports reached 600 members each month. These discussions began with contract enforcement questions on health insurance, paid time off, and workload.

But they expanded to address the ways employers use divide-and-conquer to weaken the union, the outsized political influence of corporations and the wealthy, and who really runs Minnesota’s economy.

“Now it’s back to organizing. We have to be prepared,” Kone said. “My co-workers are saying that the one day strike wasn’t enough—we’ll need to do more next time.”

A version of this article appeared in Labor Notes #445. Don’t miss an issue, subscribe today.
Mark Brenner is the Director of Labor Notes.
Comparte este contenido:

Red Latinoamericana de Estudios sobre el Impacto de la Evaluación y la Acreditación Universitaria (RELIE)

Fuente Boletín UNTREF7 13 de Abril de 2016/

Durante el año 2015, el Núcleo de Estudios e Investigaciones en Educación Superior del Mercosur (NEIES/MERCOSUR) dependiente de la Secretaría de Políticas Universitarias aprobó la conformación de la Red Latinoamericana de Estudios sobre el Impacto de la Evaluación y la Acreditación Universitaria (RELIE), conformada por la UNTREF (Coordinador: Norberto Fernández Lamarra), la UBA (Coordinadora: Catalina Nosiglia), la UP (Coordinador: Martín Aiello) y la UNGS (Coordinadora: Mónica Marquina) por Argentina; la UDELAR (Coordinador: José Passarini) por Uruguay, la USIL (Coordinadora: Rocío Robledo) por Paraguay y la UNISINOS (Coordinadora: Maria Isabel da Cunha) por Brasil. El objetivo principal de la Red es constituir un grupo académico regional que contribuya al estudio y la reflexión del impacto de los sistemas de evaluación y acreditación universitaria en las instituciones. Se pretende analizar los resultados sustantivos de las evaluaciones externas, tanto de procesos de evaluación institucionales, como en las resoluciones de carreras de grado y de posgrado en los sistemas universitarios de las instituciones involucradas en la red. Del 11 al 13 de mayo se realizará la Reunión Inicial de la RELIE y el Seminario Internacional «Planeamiento, Evaluación y Acreditación Universitaria en el contexto de América Latina» en la UNTREF, institución coordinadora de la Red. Mail de contacto: pae@untref.edu.ar

Comparte este contenido:

Amor e política em tempos difíceis

“Em 2010, apenas 10% dos adultos jovens usavam mensagens para propor um primeiro encontro, mas em 2013 já eram 32%. Assim, um número cada vez maior de nós volta e meia se vê sozinho, olhando para a tela de um telefone enquanto é tomado pelas mais variadas emoções”. Os números estão no livro “Romance moderno”, co-autoria entre o humorista Aziz Ansari  e o sociólogo Eric Klinenberg, que contribuiu para o projeto com uma extensa pesquisa sobre como as pessoas de diversas partes do mundo se sentem quando trocam afetos diante de uma tela de celular. Há tempos considero as mensagens de texto inadequadas para relações afetivas. Não apenas romances, mas amizades ou relações familiares mais perdem do que ganham na lógica do whatsapp, corruptela de “what is up?”, ou “o que está rolando?”, pergunta banal que pode levar a respostas ainda mais banais.

Lembro de ter resistido até onde pude a não aderir ao whatsapp, em grande parte porque me parecia o fim de uma conversa em que, do outro lado do aparelho, seu interlocutor pode escrever duas palavras e enviar. As frases completas, com suas pontuações, pausas, argumentações, começaram a desaparecer. Claro que ainda há quem, como eu, redija textos de seis linhas, sobretudo depois que aderi ao whatsapp na web, mas na tela do celular, na velocidade e frieza dos textos curtos, soluçantes, fragmentados, a comunicação é mera ilusão, e a ferramenta mais serve para afastar do que para aproximar, mais produz mal entendidos do que diálogos.

Quando se trata de relações amorosas, existe alguma possibilidade de troca afetuosa em mensagens de áudio, onde a voz do ser amado chega carregada de todos os tons e semi-tons da delicadeza. Ainda assim, estranho quando um casal prefere trocar mensagens de voz a falar sincronicamente no bom e velho telefonema de casal. Seguindo o argumento do filósofo italiano Giorgio Agamben, os dispositivos de comunicação podem produzir dessubjetivações, argumento que contraria grande parte dos estudos que buscam identificar novas formas de subjetivação nessas novas formas de conversa.

Isso que se passa no amor também acomete outra paixão, a política. O pathos do debate político – em que pese a inexorável e necessária democratização da informação via redes sociais – é inflamado, e nessa conversa tudo importa: o tom de voz, as argumentações de parte a parte, as interrupções, as pausas, os silêncios, as exasperações. Nada disso é coerente com ambientes como o do Facebook ou do Twitter, onde as polarizações muitas vezes são resultado de dois extremos: ou falta conversa ou há excesso de troca de mensagens, sem que ninguém se entenda.

A intenção dessas reflexões não é nem nostálgica – ah, como era bom quando discutíamos política no bar ou quando namorar à distância era só falar ao telefone – nem é de repúdio aos debates nas redes, o que seria de todo inútil ou vazio. A ideia é pensar que as formas de relação afetivas, assim como as formas de debate político, estão ainda mais marcadas por mecanismos de desentendimento que, embora se apresentem como facilitadores, mas não necessariamente o são, por exigirem dos sujeitos outras habilidades diferentes daquelas que caracterizavam a conversa por voz. Lembro que por muito tempo acreditamos que a voz – como produção de som com sentido –foi aquilo que distinguiu os humanos dos não-humanos. Observo que o vazamento de áudios de conversas telefônicas mobilizam não apenas pelo seu conteúdo, mas pelo poder da voz em transmitir aquilo que vai além do texto.

Seja no amor intermediado por mensagens de texto, como tão bem discutem os autores de “Romance moderno”, seja na política via internet, como se vê todos os dias em ambientes cada vez mais inflamados por polarizações, há ganhos e perdas. Em tempos de crise de representação, a fala direta dos sujeitos políticos, via redes sociais, tem valor de contestação do modelo de democracia representativa, só capaz de representar a si mesma e a seus interesses particulares. Ao mesmo tempo, como num velho ditado popular, por vezes o Facebook parece aquela “casa em que falta pão, todo mundo grita e ninguém tem razão”.

Em tempos de crise nas relações amorosas, a troca de mensagens de texto pode indicar o desengajamento dos sujeitos em suas parcerias afetivas, ou pode simplesmente aumentar a ansiedade envolvida nessas trocas, como também identificam os autores e “Romance moderno”. Se há mais ganhos do que perdas, ou vice-versa, impossível contabilizar. Pensar nas transformações, no entanto, talvez seja uma forma de não se deixar levar ingenuamente pelo que muda. Ou, um modo de resistir a não me tornar muda.

Comparte este contenido:
Page 295 of 342
1 293 294 295 296 297 342