
April 2007
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For at least the last thirty years, the character of the school in the North and West has been marked by conservative and business dogmas. To the number of these that keep returning, we note the increased inclination for a system of marking pupils during the entirety of their education. Even if giving marks does not hold up under analysis in terms of its educational effectiveness, it is seen in the eyes of public opinion to assure against academic failure. The Canton of Geneva recently held a referendum in which a large majority of voters approved the return of marks at school. With the notion that boys do not succeed in mixed classes, the idea of single-sex classes –and in effect single-sex schools - is being discussed as a possible solution to the academic problems of boys. In the United States, the Bush administration has just authorized – in effect encouraged – the creation of separate schools for girls and boys. What is not said is that the success of girls seems to worry the very old macho base of the neoconservatives. Another dogma is affording the Darwinian theory of evolution equal status with the creationist ideology which seeks to be imposed (under the new trappings of “intelligent design”) in the United States, but also in Europe, most notably in Great Britain, the Netherlands and Poland. The holders of this ideology state that the traditional scientific model of evolution by means of natural selection is not sufficient to understand the origin, the complexity and the diversity of life, and that there are examples of irreducible complexity which cannot be explained by the Darwinian theory of evolution. In addition, since the 1980s, educational policies have been greatly influenced by international economic organisations – in particular the OECD and the Bretton Woods institutions – which in turn are followed by state domestic politics, assuring the best alignment possible of the schools to the demands of the contemporary market – the credo of the decision-makers and educational policy-makers inscribed within the logic of competition. It was within this context that the ideology of “testing” took flight in that it takes the idea of social selection established in schools and allows pupils – these future workers – to be selected according to their results, in the various educational streams which are the means of selection and elimination before the forces of the workplace. The idea of placing students, of sorting them by means of academic performance, gender and belief, constitutes a worrying regression in the ideal of democratic education for all without discrimination. In the face of this conservative and reactionary offensive, it is time to rediscover the classical notions of education in cooperation, solidarity and the interest of the child and to denounce these abuses of language and power. |
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The consultative group of World Action Week (a network of francophone NGO’s) recommends the following theme for the 2007 campaign: Education, A Human Right. Info : actionweek@campaignforeducation.org
Ungdomshuset is an autonomous social centre situated in Copenhagen, Denmark. It has been in existence since 1982, and is the result of battles carried out by the Danish “squat” movement, which was able to take possession of the site from the authorities in order to follow practices of self-management and to develop a counter-culture at variance with capitalism and in opposition to State institutions. Nevertheless, today Ungdomshuset is more than ever in danger, condemned to disappear by the municipality, which chose to sell the property to an extreme right-wing sect. |
RECIT aims to put online organisations that work to train citizens, in order that each person can become the actor of their own life as a citizen in solidarity with the world. Several initiatives for solidarity are carried out by many organisations, associations and people: RECIT constitutes an informal network for the exchange of experiences, research and common action that enables individuals to leave their isolation and to become part of a movement together. http://recit.net/spip.php?rubrique160 (in French only)
Avaaz.org is a community of world citizens who are engaged in confronting the major challenges of the world order. Their aim is to guarantee that the opinions and values of all persons in the world – and not just the political elites and the corporations not assuming their responsibility – make global decisions. The members of Avaaz.org act on behalf of a world that is more just and more peaceful and of a vision of globalization with a human face. |
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This new report published by UIS analyses various approaches to equity in teaching and proposes a framework to measure it. Today most experts agree that an education system which provides high-quality instruction to all children is an essential goal. This publication presents a new framework to measure disparity in terms of education access and resources and presents the results of the framework applied to 16 of the largest or most populous countries in the planet. Amongst these countries, three are in Africa (South Africa, Egypt and Nigeria), five in Asia (Bangladesh, China, India, Indonesia and Pakistan), four in Latin America (Argentian, Brazil, Ecuador, Mexico and Peru), as well as Canada, the Russian Federation and the United States. http://www.uis.unesco.org/ev_en.php?ID=6840_201&ID2=DO_TOPIC
The parliamentary assembly of Francophonie (APF) is regrouping the representatives of 73 parliaments or inter-parliamentary organisations in five continents. Its action is aimed principally at promoting and defending democracy, the rule of law, respect for human rights, the spread of the French language internationally and cultural diversity. http://apf.francophonie.org/spip.php?rubrique83 (French only)
Edition number 44 of the Revue internationale d'éducation de Sèvres is dedicated to the idea of citizenship and the role of the school in the formation of the citizen in several countries: England, Spain, Denmark, South Africa, Switzerland, India and France. www.ciep.fr/ries (French only) |
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The Faculty of Education (Haute EcolePédagogique) in Fribourg, Switzerland, is offering a summer course in 2007 to teachers, a continuing education course which highlights the need for communication with parents who are experiencing poverty, to be open to the reality of their lives, their fears and their hopes for school. This course aims also to study in depth the ways to support children from underprivileged backgrounds in their educational apprenticeships. Haute école pédagogique de Fribourg. Enfants des milieux défavorisés et apprentissages scolaires. http://www.hepfr.ch/dyn/9.asp?url=42824%2Easp (French only)
The IHRIP is offering scholarships for human rights organisations in Africa and Asia, in the Middle East, Latin American, the Caribbean, Eastern-Central Europe and in the Community of Independent States in order to allow their teams to undertake exchange projects in professional development. |