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Escuelas del mundo ▸ Schools in the world

Rosa María Torres


Hace mucho tengo en mente escribir un libro con este título, con reportajes (español e inglés) de mis visitas a escuelas y programas educativos en todo el mundo. Mis opciones profesionales y de vida me fueron llevando, casi sin darme cuenta, a viajar no solo como un modo de trabajo sino, fundamentalmente, de aprendizaje. 
He escrito bastante sobre mis recorridos por América Latina - Auladentro, Los achaques de la educación, Itinerarios por la educación latinoamericana: Cuaderno de Viajes, entre otros - pero me esperan decenas de cuadernos y libretas que me han acompañado y siguen acompañando en viajes por el resto del mundo. En tiempos pre- y post-internet, lo mío ha sido siempre el papel, tomar notas mientras observo, escucho, pregunto, converso, y los demás se van olvidando de que tengo un arma entre las manos ... Mientras logro autofinanciarme uno o dos años de escritura por las mías, comparto aquí unos pocos reportajes viejos y nuevos que voy subiendo a este blog.
For a long time I have been wanting to write a book (Spanish and English) with this title, featuring my visits to schools and education programmes throughout the world. My personal and professional choices led to me traveling as a regular means to work but also as an exceptional means to learn. 
I have written abundantly on my visits in Latin America - Auladentro, Los achaques de la educación, Itinerarios por la educación latinoamericana, among others - but dozens of notebooks with notes from other parts of the world continue to wait for me. Pre- and post-Internet, paper and handwriting are my thing when it comes to field visits. A minimally invasive way of invading people's lives and conducting interviews. After a while, people forget I have a weapon in my hands. I am writing while observing, listening, talking, asking, witnessing ... Until I can afford a self-financed "sabbatical" to liberate my notebooks, I continue to upload here some old and new texts from such visits.
Argentina
▸ Argentina: Soñar como consigna*
▸ Argentina: La vigencia y el poder de la radio
▸ Argentina: Educar a las madres en el valor del afecto y del juego
▸ Argentina: La biblioteca como núcleo de desarrollo comunitario *
▸ Argentina: Lección de hoy: Los factores abióticos
▸ Argentina: Programa de Alfabetización 'Encuentro' y Barrios de Pie
▸ Argentina, Bolivia, Brasil, Chile, México, Perú: De los planes a los hechos

Bangladesh 
▸ Bangladesh: Kazi, el sin gracia  |  Kazi, The Graceless
▸ Bangladesh: Una educación para resolver problemas de la vida
▸ Bangladesh-Ecuador-Australia: Los niños como educadores de adultos
▸ India: Los Laureados con los Premios WISE a la Educación (BRAC) | WISE Prize for Education Laureates: Bottom-Up Innovators (BRAC)

Bolivia 
▸ Bolivia: Una clase de alfabetización en español traducida al aymara

Botswana
▸ Botswana: Niños Basarwa  |  Children of the Basarwa

Brasil

▸ Brasil: El barrio como espacio pedagógico: Una escuelita itinerante*
▸ Brasil: Dos escuelas, dos directoras, dos estilos de gestión*
▸ Brasil: Una biblioteca escolar como debe ser
▸ Brasil: "Niños, no se olviden de usar el hilo dental"*
▸ Brasil: Un Congreso de Alfabetizandos en Sao Paulo
▸ Brasil: Talleres de lectura para maestros 
▸ Brasil-Ecuador: A propósito de afinidades históricas y lingüísticas 
▸ Brasil-Chile-Ecuador: Proyecto arquitectónico versus proyecto pedagógico
▸ Brasil-Chile-Haití-Paraguay-Venezuela: ¿Curricular y extracurricular?

Colombia 
▸ Colombia: Un día en la vida de un niño rural 
▸ Colombia: Escuela Nueva: An innovation within formal education 
▸ Colombia: "Antes, aquí era Escuela Vieja" (sobre el programa Escuela Nueva)
▸ Colombia: Los Laureados con los Premios WISE a la Educación (Escuela Nueva) | WISE Prize for Education Laureates: Bottom-Up Innovators (Escuela Nueva)

Chile
▸ Chile: Falsas y verdaderas soluciones a los problemas de la educación
▸ Chile: Manipuladores de alimentos, manipuladores de textos*
▸ Chile: Rendimientos escolares y programas compensatorios: El P-900*

Ecuador
▸ Ecuador: Los contorsionistas
▸ Ecuador: Racismo y retardo mental
▸ Ecuador: Gabriela sabe leer pero tiene miedo
▸ Ecuador: Niños que trabajan y estudian (Centro del Muchacho Trabajador-CMT) 
▸ Ecuador: Campaña Nacional de Alfabetización "Monseñor Leonidas Proaño"
▸ Ecuador: El nombre de Ramona Cuji
▸ Ecuador: Alfabetizando con el 'Yo Sí Puedo' en Cayambe
▸ Ecuador: El aula y el patio
▸ Ecuador-Argentina: Instalaciones educativas abiertas a la comunidad
▸ Ecuador: Adiós a la educación comunitaria y alternativa

Egipto
▸ Egipto: Para eliminar el analfabetismo hay que eliminar la pobreza

Granada 
▸ Granada: Un día de comunidad-escuela 

Guinea-Bissau 
▸ Guinea-Bissau: Paulo Freire, Guinea-Bissau y la alfabetización
▸ Guinea-Bissau: La escuela del Tío Bernardo
▸ Guinea-Bissau-Brasil: ¿Escuelas para enseñar y escuelas para explicar? 

Haití
▸ Haití: El molde de la reforma educativa*

India
▸ India: Una escuela islámica en Jaipur
▸ India: Entregar no basta... (Operación Pizarra)
▸ India: Los Laureados con los Premios WISE a la Educación (Pratham) | WISE Prize for Education Laureates: Bottom-Up Innovators (Pratham)

Jamaica
▸ Jamaica: Zapatos para ir a la escuela 

México
▸ México: La escuela de la maestra Raquel*
▸ México: Los espejismos de la innovación en educación
▸ México: Madre Tierra *
▸ México: Y colorín, colorado, este cuento nos ha atormentado...*
▸ México: "Dos temores me detienen: el director y los padres de familia" *
▸ México: Derechos de los maestros, ¿y los derechos de los alumnos?
▸ México: Aprendiendo a leer y escribir en lengua mixe

Mozambique 
▸ Mozambique: 60 alumnos en primer grado 
▸ Mozambique: Escuelas sin aulas, aulas sin escuelas

Nicaragua
▸ Nicaragua: Desmantela y va de nuevo*

Perú 
▸ Perú: Círculos de alfabetización 'Sí Podemos'

República Dominicana 
▸ República Dominicana: Una clase de alfabetización entre rejas

Ruanda / Rwanda
▸ Rwanda: A blog is born

Senegal
▸ Senegal: Children's Rights: A community learning experience

Sudáfrica
▸ Sudáfrica: Buses que sirven de aulas

Tailandia 
▸ Tailandia: Un aula de clase ancha, ancha...

Uruguay
▸ Uruguay: Mi visita al Plan Ceibal y la rotura de las laptops del OLPC
▸ Uruguay: Si a los niños se les permitiera escribir libremente ...
▸ Uruguay: "Trabajo dos turnos y hago crochet"*
▸ Uruguay: Internet devuelve la vista y amplía la lectura a los ciegos

Venezuela
▸ Venezuela: Cooperativas, Misiones Bolivarianas y escuela rural
▸ Venezuela: Colegio durante el día, Misiones a la noche


* Incluidos en: Rosa María Torres, Itinerarios por la educación latinoamericana: Cuaderno de viajes, Editorial Paidós, Buenos Aires-Barcelona-México, 2000; Itinerários pela Educação Latino-Americana – Caderno de Viagens, Artmed Editora, Porto Alegre, 2001, 344 páginas. Prólogo de Fabricio Caivano.


Para saber más / To learn more:
Portraits of classrooms around the world

Social Education and Popular Education: A View from the South


Spider Art by Claire

Rosa-María Torres
 
Closing conference AIEJI XVII World Congress
“The Social Educator in a Globalised World”
Copenhagen, Denmark, 4–7 May 2009
(edited transcript of original presentation)

Introduction

When I was invited by AIEJI (International Association of Social Educators) to be a keynote speaker of this world conference, I had only vague ideas of Social Education. I thought of it as a foreign, European concept and movement, distant from the realities, thinking and practices in the South (“developing countries”). Accepting this invitation was therefore for me both an honour and a research and learning opportunity.

I learned that this is an evolving European construct, with specificities in each country, with an ongoing internal debate about its nature, dimensions and purposes, and with growing presence in countries in the South. There is no European consensus on the denomination and definition of Social Education and on social professions in general. Socialpædagogen, the biweekly magazine of the Danish National Federation of Social Educators circulated at this congress, highlights diverse Social Education experiences throughout the world "working with children, young people and adults who need special care due to physical or mental disabilities, or social problems." One distinctive feature of Social Education is that it deals with vulnerable groups and with the entire lifespan.

It was not easy to find references to Social Education programmes in Africa and Asia. References were also scarce in Latin America and the Caribbean, beyond the hub created by AIEJI’s world conference held in Montevideo-Uruguay in November 2005. In Latin America, Uruguay is the country that has embraced Social Education in the most visible manner, taking the French model as initial source of inspiration. ADESU - Asociación de Educadores Sociales del Uruguay
is an active national association. Nearly 300 professional Social Educators have been trained over the past few years. Many of them are working in diverse intersections between government and non-government, academic and action-oriented programmes. Last week I was in Uruguay invited by the Ministry of Education and happened to meet some of them. There must be something good in this profession that is able to attract such bright, critical and socially committed young people.


There are activities in Brazil associated to the Popular Education movement. The Department of Education of the University of Sao Paulo, for example, has organized a series of International Encounters on Social Pedagogy, with the idea of institutionalizing it in Brazil as a profession linked to non-formal education, NGOs, and social programmes (See Portal de la Pedagogía Social . See also Associação dos Educadores e Educadoras Sociais do Estado de São Paulo - Aees SP). Through informal conversations with Latin American participants in this congress, other activities have surfaced: a Social Pedagogy programme started by a private university in Argentina; a small group operating in Chile; in Nicaragua, an institution that trained social educators for over two decades is not operating any more but there are ongoing activities linked to institutions in Spain. In general, it becomes apparent that initiatives termed Social Education in Latin America still have little visibility.

Social Education and Social Pedagogy

The term Social has come to be added, in several fields, to mean different or alternative

- The World Social Forum (WSF), organized by progressive forces in the South and in the North, was launched in 2001 and was held for the first time in Porto Alegre, Brazil. Since then, the WSF is run in parallel to the World Economic Forum held in Davos.
- Social Economy is expanding as an international movement with roots and practices in the South. It proposes an alternative economic model to the neoliberal model. Social/Solidarity Economy is a work-centred economy that places people at the centre, is concerned with solving the needs of all and with preserving ecological and social equilibrium, promotes human solidarity, collaboration and networking rather than individual or corporate accumulation of profit or power. (See for example RILESS, Red de Investigadores Latinoamericanos en Economía Social y SolidariaNetwork of Latin American Researchers in Social and Solidarity Economy). In some cases, a Social and Solidarity Pedagogy is associated to such alternative economic initiatives ( See, for example, the Programa Pedagogía Social y Solidaria organised by the Departamento Administrativo Nacional de la Economía Solidaria - DANSOCIAL in Colombia).
- Social movements have emerged in many countries as a new important social and political actor, especially in Latin America.

As for Social Education, the term in Germany and in the Nordic Countries continues to be Social Pedagogy, a tradition of progressive thinking and practice, often associated to, or translated as, "community education." Here is an explanation of the differences between both concepts, found in a leaflet available at a stand of this conference:

’Social Education’ is the official translation of the Danish term ‘Socialpædagogik’. In this module we will use the term ‘Social Pedagogy’ as it indicates the fact that social pedagogical care work embraces much more than what is usually conceived as ‘Social Education’. ‘Social Pedagogy’ provides a unifying concept of work with people in many formal and informal institutional settings.” (Social Education and Pedagogy in Denmark”, VIA University College, Peter Sabroe, Department for Social Education, leaflet).

In other contexts, differences are made between Social Education and Social Pedagogy. Again, there is no consensus on the use of these two terms in Europe.

Social Education and Popular Education

While the term Social Education is not familiar in most countries in the South, its practice is widely extended. In fact, in every region in the world we may find specific and endogenous emancipatory education movements. In Latin America, Educación Popular - Popular Education - is rooted especially among civil society organizations. Just like with Social Education, there is not one single definition and there are various trends within the Popular Education movement. Many associate it with Paulo Freire; others consider it a development that preceded and surpassed Freire, and that is nurtured by many sources. Many link it to adult and non-formal education; others consider Popular Education an embracing category applied to children, youth and adult education, in and out of school.

The term popular refers to the socio-economic status of learners/participants, to the context and to the purpose: promoting awareness, social participation and organization for people’s empowerment and social transformation. What defines the popular educator is his/her social and political commitment, not his or her educational and professional background. Popular educators often work as volunteers or with very little remuneration, and with some short training. Training and professionalization of popular educators are old requests.

The table below is an attempt to compare Social Education and Popular Education in their respective contexts. 


Comparison between Social Education and Popular Education


Social Education
(Europe/Denmark)
Popular Education
(Latin America)
Historical context
1940s – wake of World War II
AIEJI (International Association for Social Educators). Original name Association Internationale des Éducateurs des Jeunes Inadaptés - created in 1951.

“From charity, assistencialism and philanthropy to social wellbeing as a human right.”
1960s-1970s – wake of Latin American military governments and dictatorships.

Brazil, Paulo Freire’s ideas and work.

Human liberation and emancipation.

Religious groups and churches involved.
Original target population
Homeless and orphaned children in the wake of World War II.
Illiterate adults (by 1950s half of the adult population in the region were illiterate).
Current target population (historical perspective)
Children
Adolescents
Youth
Adults (disabled)
Third age
Adults
Youth
Adolescents
Children
Families
Communities
Social movements
Characterisation of target populations
Ill-adjusted, maladjusted or poorly adjusted
Troubled
Disabled
Homeless
Marginalised
Excluded
At risk
With special needs
Poor
Marginalised
Illiterate
Semiliterate
Low schooling
Characteristics of educators
- Emphasis on professionalization and on continuous education and training.
- Defence of employment and of working conditions.

- Little attention to professionalisation or career development.
- Diverse training opportunities offered, often short. A few universities and NGOs offer university degrees.
- Often work on voluntary basis.
Organisation of educators
Organised in unions and/or professional associations.
National, European and international organizations.
- Not organised in unions or professional associations, sometimes organised in local associations.
- Local, sometimes national and also international organisations (i.e. CEAAL - Consejo de Educación de Adultos de América Latina, NGO network).
- Social movements have their own Popular Education bodies and programmes.
Identified similar occupations
Social workers, teachers, nurses, psychologists, therapists.
Teachers, social workers, extension workers, community agents, community leaders, cultural animators.
Work environments
Mainly non-formal education, non-school environments
Areas of work
Specialised education
Conflict mediation
Sociocultural animation
Adult education
School education
Environmental education
Leisure education
All potential areas
Purposes
Adaptation
Participation
Citizenship
Social change
Social justice
Awareness (Conscientisation)
Participation
Organisation
Empowerment
Social change
Political change
Social justice
Culture of rights
Principles
Dialogue
Respect
Participation
Learners' voices
Dialogue
Respect
Participation
Learners' voices
Dimensions of work
Pedagogical, social, political and ethical




   Elaborated by Rosa-María Torres

In the South most educators are ‘social educators’

The majority of educators in ‘developing countries’, within and outside the school system, deal with problematic socio-economic contexts and with major challenges facing individuals, families, groups, local communities and national societies.

The situation of rights denied to the a large portion to the population in many countries in the South presses the public school system, and educators working in it and on its margins, to deal with unsatisfied basic needs of the school population (i.e. food, health, affection, security, etc.), whose satisfaction would normally correspond to the State and to the family. This erodes the school’s main teaching-learning mission and further jeopardises the quality of educational provision. Thus, the borders between social workers and educators as well as between social action and political action, tend to be thin and blurred. 

When poverty affects the majority of the population, economic and social exclusion/inclusion imply massive phenomena that go beyond well-intentioned small-scale interventions or focused ‘alleviating poverty’ policies. Poverty is a structural condition that, as such, requires major changes in the current economic, social and political model that leads to massive exclusion and poverty. Such model and its change is no longer national in scope; it has been deepened and globalised, thus requiring global alternative thinking and concerted action. Social educators and other progressive forces in the North and in the South need to work together in the building of a new global ethics that fights social injustice and promotes equality at local, national, regional and global level. Democratizing global awareness, global protest and global solidarity vis à vis the most vulnerable majorities and minorities in the world is at the very heart of the efforts towards global social networking.

The objective is not only good quality education for all, but good quality of life for all

However, the notions of ‘quality of life’, ‘welbeing’ or ‘prosperity’ are not universal. The traditional ‘developed’/’non-developed’ or ‘less developed’ dichotomy used to classify countries, is being revised. ‘Human development’ and human satisfaction and realization are not linear categories defined between more or less and measurable by universal quantitative indicators; they are cultural, social and political constructions shaped in concrete historical circumstances.

The notions of ‘quality of life’ and ‘personal satisfaction’ adopted by the Gallup Worldwide Quality of Life Survey are not necessarily perceived as such in countries in the South. Gallup’s ‘quality of life’ places consumption
at the centre. The question asked in the survey is: “Are you satisfied or dissatisfied with your standard of living, that is, with all the things you can buy and do?.” On the other hand, the concept of Buen Vivir (‘Good Living’, Sumak Kawsay in Quechua indigenous language) in the Andean countries in Latin America places harmony at the center and is defined by three relational dimensions: harmony with nature, with oneself, and with others.

Global networks, global solidarity

In a globalised world, the role of agents of social change acquires also a global dimension, a global dimension that honours diversity, equality, inter- and multi-culturality, and rejects universal models, homogenous policies and perpetual hegemonic North/South relationships and ‘cooperation’ patterns. The wider the scope and the territories reached throughout the world, the greater the need to acknowledge and incorporate diversity to vision and to practice in all spheres.

The new challenges posed by the many world crises – the development crisis, the financial crisis, the food crisis, the energy crisis, the ecology crisis, the work crisis, the education crisis – call for radical rethinking, reshaping and re-articulation of education and learning systems worldwide. They also create new opportunities and urgencies for networking and solidarity, configuring new frontiers that challenge conventional ‘developed’/’less developed’ and North/South distinctions. The time is ripe for stronger multidisciplinary, trans-sectoral and inter-institutional linkages as well as for more and better-coordinated work with organized groups, families and communities rather than with isolated individuals.

There are conditions for effectively adopting Lifelong Learning (LLL) as a new global paradigm for education and learning, overcoming the dual educational agenda -- LLL for the North and primary education for the South. Social Education is well positioned in this endeavor: learning beyond the family and the school system, an ageless category and a continuum.

The alternative and alterative nature of Social Education

The world has become a hostile and uncertain place to live for the majority of the world’s population. Inequality within and between countries is growing. In many regions and countries (both developing and developed), the battles against poverty, unemployment, hunger, school dropout, and others are not making progress. For millions of people, and especially for the most disadvantaged, the word future does not entail hope anymore.

In this context, the room for Social Educators is likely to expand. Many will view it as a damage-control device, ready to fill in the holes left by education and learning systems that are not doing their job properly -- the family, the school system, mass media, politics. Not accepting such remedial and compensatory role implies among others assuming an explicit political role vis a vis the need for systemic and structural change at local, national, regional and world level.

In fact, all education should be social, empathetic, relevant, contextualised, differentiated, responsive to specific needs and cultures, aimed at enhancing learners’ critical thinking, empowerment, autonomy, participation and organisation for personal and social transformation. Being alternative is not enough; the real challenge is becoming also alterative -- a social, political, pedagogical and ethical force that pushes others towards major changes in all these spheres.

Learning Anytime, Anywhere (WISE Summit, Doha, 2011)


Jaume Piensa

Rosa María Torres
 
"Learning Anytime, Anywhere"
session at the World Summit on Innovation in Education (WISE 2011)
Doha, Qatar, 1-3 Nov. 2011

The format adopted for the debates required no presentations by the speakers but individual questions posed by the Chair of the session and questions coming from the audience and through Twitter. This format favors flexibility and dynamism, but it also limits a more contextualized and holistic understanding of the speakers' viewpoints and backgrounds.

The text below is a reconstruction of my intervention.

Four people participated in this #WISED34 debate:

▸ Graham Brown-Martin, Chair (Learning Without Frontiers, UK) @GrahamBM
▸ François Taddei (Centre for Research and Interdisciplinarity at Paris Descartes University, France) @FrancoisTaddei
▸ Rosa-María Torres (Fronesis, Ecuador) @rosamariatorres
▸ Ruth Wallace (Centre for Social Partnerships in Lifelong Learning, Charles Darwin University, Northern Territory, Australia) @RuthwallaceNT

What is Lifelong Learning (LLL)

Most people continue to associate LLL with adult education or to use it as equivalent to lifelong education or continuing education. The term, however, is selfdescriptive and should provide no room for confusion: Lifelong Learning means learning throughout life, "from cradle to grave." This is a fact of life in the first place: learning is a continuum, lifelong and lifewide. Adopting LLL as a principle for policy formulation implies introducing major changes to the conventional education and training paradigms.

Awareness on LLL challenges the school-centered mentality. It looks beyond the school system and acknowledges the other learning systems where we learn throughout life: home, community, media, play, work, arts, sports, social participation, the Internet and the virtual world, etc.

LLL also challenges the traditional focus on education and on teaching. Learning is the main concern, in and out of school. The main failure of the school system is precisely that there is lots of teaching but little learning taking place.

▸ Rosa María Torres, Lifelong Learning in the South: Critical Issues and Opportunities for Adult Education, Sida Studies 11, Sida, Stockholm, 2004.

What do international agencies understand as LLL? 

Most of the agencies that use this term continue to associate LLL with adults and adult education, rather than with a life-cycle perspective.

In OECD countries, and specifically in Europe, LLL emerged as an education and training strategy to ensure the necessary "human resources" for economic development.

Beyond definitions and glossaries, it is important to look at the content of policies and programmes labelled LLL. In the case of the European Commission, for example, in spite of the rhetoric on informal learning, four out of the five benchmarks established in the LLL Programme 2000-2010 (see below) were related to formal education, from early childhood to higher education. "The decreasing levels of low-achieving 15-year olds in reading and falling levels of adult participation in learning are among the largest concerns."

The goals were not met, as acknowledged by the
evaluation released in Sep. 2011. Not only "developing" countries (the global South) but also "developed" ones (the global North) have problems to accomplish agreed education and learning agendas.




European Union: Lifelong Learning benchmarks for 2010

1. EU average rate of early school leavers to be no more than 10%;
2. Total number of graduates in mathematics, science and technology in the EU to increase by at least 15% (achieved in 2004), with a decreased gender imbalance in these fields;
3. At least 85% of 22-year-olds to have completed upper secondary education;
4. Percentage of 15-year-olds who are low-achieving in reading to have decreased by at least 20% compared to the year 2000;
5. Average participation in lifelong learning to be at least 12.5% of the adult working age population (age group of 25–64 year).

European Commission: Interim Evaluation of the Lifelong Learning Programme (Sep.18, 2011)
European Report on the Future of Learning by Tony Bates (Nov. 11, 2011)



Poverty, creativity and innovation 

There is lots of talk about innovation, creativity and problem-solving as qualities and skills of the 21st century. Currently, innovation in education tends to be strongly associated with modern technologies -- as if there was no innovation before the emergence of ICTs! Visions of innovation are rather futuristic and sophisticated, requiring specialists, experts, etc.

However, the most creative and innovative people in the world are the poor. They are born problem-solvers. Otherwise, they would not be able to survive. Surprisingly, we do not see this mentioned. If we want to learn about innovation and creativity, we should get out there, observe and live with the poor for a while.

The challenge is how to make schools and other learning institutions places where the poor can enhance - rather than inhibit - their innovativeness, creativity and problem-solving skills and expand them to other domains beyond survival and daily life.

▸ Rosa María Torres, On Innovation and Education


Testing does not necessarily reflect learning


T
ests and testing are not necessarily the best ways to capture learning. Additionally, standardized tests deny diversity, assume the classical "one-size-fits-all" approach.

PISA
(Programme for International Student Assessment) tests, proposed by OECD and for OECD countries, do not match the realities, needs and aspirations of most young people in the South. Often, these and other tests tell us what our children and youth don´t know rather than what they know and are able to do.


"Developing countries" are very diverse and face very different realities than "developed countries", also heterogeneous. If PISA tests were prepared in non-OECD countries, reflecting our cultures and realities, how would 15-year-olds in OECD  countries do in such tests? Underprivileged children and youth develop strong survival skills - essential for life and increasingly important in today's world - that wealthy children and youth often do not need to develop, at least at an early age.


The "global banking education model"

Paulo Freire characterized the conventional school system as "banking education": learners who are considered to know nothing and teachers who think they know everything, and who deposit knowledge in their heads like checks in a bank.

That banking education model has now become global, among others thanks to the expansion of ICTs. Global teachers located in the North and eager learners located in the South, mere consumers of information and knowledge produced elsewhere and whose only knowledge credited is "local wisdom".

Since it decided to become a "Knowledge Bank", the World Bank acts as a global teacher offering ready-to-use knowledge and strategies for "development". All we have to do in the South is get trained and assimilate that information.

The global banking model is such because it reproduces the traditional teaching model at a global scale - the world as a global classroom is a usual metaphor - but also because it is incarnated by a bank and its international partners.

▸ Rosa María Torres, About "good practice" in international co-operation in education

Neuroscience and pro-age education and learning

Over the past years, neuroscience is contributing key new knowledge on topics we had only vague ideas of. A better understanding on how the brain works, at different ages and in different circumstances, shows the need to review many conventional stereotypes on education and learning.

Now we are confirming that all ages are good to learn, and that each age has its own cognitive possibilities and limitations.

Within a LLL framework, and based on ongoing results from neuroscience research, I am developing the concept of "pro-age education and learning": let us allow each person - children, young people, adults, the elderly - to learn according to their age, rather than fighting against their age.

Unfortunately, neuroscience research and results are not reaching the population at large, not even teacher education institutions, policy makers, journalists, etc. 

Rosa María Torres, Child learning and adult learning revisited 

The Basarwa in Botswana

I would like to tell you a story from Botswana. While working there with the Ministry of Education, back in the 1990s, I heard about an indigenous group called the Basarwa. They were well known because they rejected schooling. I got interested in understanding why. The explanation was simple: the Basarwa have seen or heard that schools punish children. In their culture, children's punishment does not exist. Adults relate to children through dialogue, not through fear. Parents love, take care and respect their children. Basarwa parents may be unschooled, but they are wise.

Rosa María Torres, Children of the Basarwa Niños Basarwa

Related texts
Rosa María Torres, Over two decades of 'Education for All' ▸ Más de dos décadas de 'Educación para Todos'


Adult Literacy in Latin America and the Caribbean: Plans and Goals 1980-2015

     Plans and Goals for Adult Literacy (1980-2015)

Major Project in Education for Latin America and the Caribbean 
Education for All
UNLD
Década de las Naciones Unidas para la Alfabetización
 Iberoamerican Plan for Youth and Adult Literacy and Basic Education (now integrated within Metas 2021 / 2021 Goals)


Jomtien (1900)


Dakar (2000)


LIFE
  Iniciativa de Alfabetización 'Saber para el Poder'
1980-2000
1990-2000
2000-2015
2003-2012
2006-2015
2007-2015
OREALC-UNESCO
UNESCO-UNICEF-PNUD-UNFPA-The World Bank
UNESCO
UIL-UNESCO
OEI
Eradicate
 illiteracy
by 2000
Reduce
 illiteracy
by 2000
Reduce
illiteracy to half 
by 2015
Reduce
illiteracy
by 2012
Reduce
illiteracy to half 
by 2015
Eradicate
illiteracy
by 2015
   Elaborated by R.M. Torres

The table provides an overall picture and the texts in red highlight what few government officials and even education specialists seem to know or take into account:

▸ The race to eliminate or reduce adult illiteracy in Latin America and the Caribbean is several decades old - slow, tortuous and unsuccessful so far.

▸ Since 1980 there have been various successive or simultaneous plans - regional, continental, global - co-ordinated by diverse international agencies, with different deadlines and goals, all of them signed and approved by ministers of education and Chiefs of State of the countries involved.

▸ The original goal of "eradicating" illiteracy was reduced to the much more modest one of "reducing" it to half. What was believed a rather easy goal, achievable in a short period of time, has proven a much harder endeavour. Stubborn poverty adds to the also stubborn dysfunctionality of school systems which continue to produce new generations of illiterates, thanks to exclusion and/or low school quality. 

▸ In the past few years we have reached the absurd of both goals - "eradicating" and "reducing" - coexisting, even with the same deadlines. Different international agencies (UNESCO, OEI), same countries. As can be seen in the table below, it is likely that none of the two goals will be accomplished by 2015. 
 

Estimated Rates and Projections for Adult Literacy (15 years of age and over) 1985–2015

1985-1994
2000-2006
Projections for 2015
Latin America and the Caribbean
87%
91%
93%
- Latin America
87%
91%
94%
- The Caribbean
66%
74%
78%
Developing countries
68%
79%
84%
World
76%
84%
87%
          Elaborated by R.M. Torres. Source: EFA Global Monitoring Report 2009 


Included in: Rosa María Torres,
Regional Report "From Literacy to Lifelong Learning: Trends, Issues and Challenges for Youth and Adult Education in Latin American and the Caribbean" prepared for the Sixth International Conference on Adult Education - CONFINTEA VI  - held in Belém-Pará, Brazil, 1-4 Dec. 2009. Available in English and Spanish.

Related texts in this blog
▸ Rosa María Torres, Somos América Latina ▸ We are Latin America 
▸ Rosa María Torres,  Sobre Lectura y Escritura ▸ On Reading and Writing

To Learn More
▸ Rosa María Torres, Over Two Decades of 'Education for All' ▸ Más de dos décadas de 'Educación para Todos' 
▸ Rosa María Torres, América Latina: Cuatro décadas de metas para la educación (1980-2021)
▸ GLEACE

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