Monday, February 26, 2007

Hasbrent Everett Ever Bottom

Tonucci (1)


Clarín, February 25, 2007, Education section

paper version: here.


The interview with Francesco Tonucci was Pizzurno Palace, after some action on your project City children. Tonucci a nice guy and a tremendous connection with your child part, talked and talked and talked ... And talked. I recorded about 2 hours of talk and, despite Clarin published a few notes with that material, did not exhaust all the ideas that fire inside of this head teacher. I say, and I want to get well at 65.

has been some time since February 2007, however, I still resonates a sense of the encounter: if children occupy the heart of society, be happier and the world would be, as the tango, crap. Learning to listen to the kids is one of the unfinished business of this company, who lives under the dictatorship of adult fancy.


INTERVIEW WITH FRANCESCO ITALIANO PEDAGOGUE Tonucci

"Reading to kids 15 minutes a day is to bring the miracle of reading"

In a return visit to Argentina, the Italian teacher stressed the responsibility of the school in promoting reading. Speaking to Clarín quipped: "Teachers tell me that this is too easy."

Rubén A. Arribas

"Most schools in developed countries are illegal." That holds the renowned Italian teacher Francesco Tonucci, referring to that most violate the Convention on the Rights of the Child, adopted by the UN in 1989. According to the promoter of the project The City of Children, the global rules of domestic law is among those who signed it, including Argentina, however, schools often forget Article 12, which defines that children are entitled to express your opinion as this is taken into account. Ie adults should consult with the boys of decisions which affect them, and not arbitrarily impose their views. The law says: dialogue.

Sure, they learn to talk with the children is a subject aware of any adult. So is the educational world. For example, the teacher usually require students to buy all reading the same book. What? The likes it, of course. Tonucci, renowned cartoonist ironic about the school, illustrates the situation with words: "Imagine a room waiting for a train station, we arrived and we see 20 people who read, a rarity in itself. Imagine reading, not a magazine or newspaper, but a book! Now we approach and found that all read the same book. We worry, right? And now we come a little more and we realize that all these people are on the same page .... It seems work of a demon, right? Well, that's what happens at school every day. "

And is that children today are still not the heart of the school. Education systems are not friendly to them, are incapable of caring for the child diversity. In fact, the view that overstate Tonucci reading, writing and arithmetic, to almost consider the unique skills, an approach that excludes many children. "For our educational systems, a child does not have manual skills. I know very well, was an artist and knew how to build my old toys, even me as I continue building ", but it never helped me in school. "

However, the cruelty of the situation does not stop there. "Since the school is democratic, that is, open to all, most guys do not have access to her experience of reading in your family: they have books at home and have never seen their parents read a book. How can they understand then that writing or reading is so important? "He argues. In other words: no adults engaged in reading for pleasure is impossible to transmit that reading does more than highlight the substantive text or know what to ask on an exam. A pleasure is contagious, not imposed.

"So the school has to fill that gap," he explains. "From birth, children need adults who read aloud to share with them the experience of reading, that educated in the excitement of listening." And he proposes to start something right now: "read 15 minutes a day, that's the only way to put them in the miracle of reading, that is, living through the images these words evoke." What about you read? "Novels, to learn to wait and read a book takes time." He adds, laughing: "Teachers tell me that this is too easy."

Easy but unusual. And yet, this is a more democratic base to force the boys to read and more fun than letting them all the weight of learning. But, of course, adults have no time to be democratic or amusing, much less in school. Tonucci would say, the worrying part is that it appears that those adults would never have been children.


*


City children

"The child is the epitome of the 'other': it fit all differences, all the differences. So if the mayor is capable of interacting with the children, then it is able to do with any other person, regardless of age, culture, gender, ability ...". According to Francesco Tonucci, that is the philosophical foundation of The City of Children, an initiative that since 1991 the society aware that children are also citizens. Ie adults should consult when building and reorganize public spaces, which are of all: the kids and grand. The project began in frat-his hometown-and has spread to more than 80 Italian cities, English and Argentine. Between 7 here, Rosario is the dean and this year celebrates 10 years of joining the project.

More information: www.lacittadeibambini.org


Sunday, February 25, 2007

Dragonball Boobies Episode

Writing Workshop Youth Club

Clarín, February 25, 2007, Education section

paper version: here and here.

DRAFT READING AND WRITING CLUB YOUTH "OF THE CITY OF BUENOS AIRES

Three young confess their secret
writing them back to

school Jonathan (18) a construction worker and is trained to be a boxer, Karen left the Street in poetry and dreams of becoming a journalist Rocío policy. Only three cases, among many, to show that writing and reading are also passion of the boys. Ruben A.

Arribas

Adults err when they say that kids are bored to read or write. The three writing workshops and storytelling one team organized by the Literacy Project for Youth Club to prove it. Many students have approached their stories, comics or cartoons to try to publish in "Put the chest," a book sponsored by the Ministry of Education of the City of Buenos Aires. Moreover, this experience, combined with the national program "All to study," several students return to school in 2007.

This is the case of Jonathan Leguizamón, Karen and Rocío Domínguez Domínguez, writing workshop participants at the headquarters of Patrician Park. Saturday after Saturday, during the second half of 2006, they and their peers have enjoyed capable of arming teachers to enable them to work situations and share their stories with others. And were they oral or paper, or invented autobiographical, have known only one rule: play first, learn later.

And that is playing to the boxer lends his fists to the gloves of writing. Jonathan (18) lives in Villa Soldati, in the morning working as a mason and the afternoons, Saturdays included-train 4 hours in the gym of his father, a boxer and his uncle and grandfather. From them he learned that you must train hard and take care with food, no pizza, bread or soda, if you want to be world champion. Yes, with only 5 defeats in 34 fights, a tough guy as he came to the workshops because his mother insisted he scored and it was.

a Saturday, plus training, won his Soldati lazy to leave and went to the workshop. There he met his friend Ivan Pedrozo and a teacher who, to his surprise, invited him to finish a couple of stories that began with a few lines of Cortázar and Dolina about boxing. A Jony, which they called Ivan, and liked the idea so much they decided to write together. Since then two are inseparable, never forget to put a "pineapple" or "hook" in his writings.

Karen Dominguez (16) prefers the poetry and song to boxing, although that does not mean that you look good stories of his two companions. Lives in Patrician Park and until a time course in La Boca. Without going to school, his days were limited to the TV, chat or go out with a friend. When bored, he says, typed stories "about things that happen." And she found writing helped her overcome the bad times, which are "the most inspired me," he says.

The workshop served a love song for a contest, is engaged with poetry, especially with Neruda, and learned to choose better words for their texts. His is the excerpt: "Many times in life, sometimes things that happen are very unfair and we wonder why life it? Why life takes from the poor people and gives the haves? And in most cases no answer. "

Rocío Domínguez (19) likes Karen texts: "A lot of feeling in his writing, a mixture of pain and helplessness." Rocio lives in Lomas de Zamora, near the Ocean Fair, "a place where children beg for food in business," he says. Although he left school in 2004, tried but failed to return after "Repeat depressed me greatly. Not wanting to go to school, refused to leave home, do not want to do anything. Or would buy. " As would Jony: repeat put the ropes.

She, like Karen, the data of the workshop it became a friend. Rocio told his mother, whom he admires for how each day to get ahead, and it quickly found support from the preceptor Stella Maris Spera, who works in "All to study" and Youth Club. Today Rocío feel you are back in the center of the ring, he wants to finish high school, be a political journalist and comment on the reality of their neighbors. As Jony and Karen, in 2007 will be another opportunity. All three seem excited to play it first and learn later. Confident they still read and write Group will help knock the school failure.

*

a collective phenomenon that promotes social inclusion
Frugoni To Sergio, coordinator of Project Literacy for Youth Club, kids enjoy building and share the sense that they suggest a text or an oral narrative. He and his team believe that reading and writing are collective phenomena, not just single and lonely. Therefore, they propose to practice both in group and foster knowledge and also social inclusion.

mid-2006 opened three writing workshops-Lugano, Patricians and Bajo Flores Park-and one-Callao-storytelling, all in schools functioned as Saturday Youth Club. In 6 months they managed to develop more or less stable at about 40 youths from 9 to 19 years and published a book "Putting the chest, which contains part of the material generated. Given the good results in 2007 Frugoni expects further dialogue with the schools and that these, for example, they open their libraries. More information: 4339 1874 and clubdejovenes@buenosaires.gov.ar .

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

What Does Tim Hortons Hiring

Alejandro Tiana, secretary general of Education of Spain


Clarín, 18 February 2007 , Supplement Education

paper version: here. INTERVIEW WITH ALEJANDRO

TIANA, SECRETARY GENERAL OF EDUCATION OF SPAIN

"The school not ensure better results"

90 In Argentina copied the English model. Now the two countries premiere education laws. According to Tiana, Spain seeks to improve primary-secondary bridges. Is the formula to reduce the 30% drop in half. Ruben A.

Arribas

"educational systems have much to do with the history, traditions and culture of each country. Copies of one system to another, in general, have not worked. Of course, study serves to see how other countries have faced some problems in a novel way. And also to open up possibilities to think about the system itself. "

With those words, then Alejandro Tiana contextualizes his comments on education systems and Argentinean English. In addition to Secretary-General of Education, Ministry of Education and Science of Spain, Tiana (Madrid, 1952) is a recognized expert in the matter. For example, among other important positions, he served as CEO of Innovation and Development of the Organization of Iberoamerican States (OEI). Given its profile and that Spain launches education law on 14 September gave a lecture at a conference organized by the International Institute for Educational Planning. The next day talked with Trumpet.

According to Tiana, a secondary compulsory until age 18, the polytechnic, does not guarantee better results. "In this regard, we must consider two points: one, if the education system can ensure quality education, another if it is responsive to the conflicting cases. If no such conditions, I am not a supporter of extending the compulsory school. " In other words: "The problem is not those who pass the course, but who have difficulty moving, do not like to study or drop out. They are those who must deal with the system and provide ways to integrate them. "

in Spain reaches compulsory school age 16 to 30 percent of students do not complete. Despite some views that extend up to 18 called the new law, Law for Education (LOE) - prefers to concentrate on improving primary education and building bridges from there to the school as a way to reduce the alarming rate of dropouts. According to Tiana, increase academic rigor without the means to support it is increasing the risk of school failure and, therefore, the frustration of the boys. Hence a further fracturing of society, rather than cohesive, there is only one step.

Despite their reluctance to extrapolate between educational systems, are encouraged to highlight a notable aspect of there that might serve here. This is the process of devolution of responsibility in education from the state to the regions, ie, which in Argentina would be decentralization to the provinces. At this time, in Spain the state takes a 4.5 percent spending and encourages collaborative programs with the autonomous communities, which are those that deal with the rest of education spending. Tiana was referring to the subject, always controversial in his country: "It's been a long process, from 1980 to 2000 - but I think we have a mutually respectful. Constitutional conditions are obviously other, but perhaps the process model and serve as a reference in Argentina. "

And, as the mistakes of others can also learn, are encouraged to self-criticism. Thus, features a pair of earrings for English subjects: ensuring regulatory stability and prestige of education. For the former, suggests that the debate should increase as political: "In general, many respond in a simplistic way-or white or black to very complex issues. Educational systems are things that are good and things that are wrong. Politicians should encourage and correct each other. "

As for social recognition, it also assumes some responsibility: "Politicians and the media should sensitize society and show the individual and collective benefits associated with education. That's a message we must reiterate to go looking through. " Indeed, perhaps these two pending issues should English also put on the agenda in Argentina.




* Religion and sexuality
The new education law legislation on 2 English in Argentina hot topics: religion and sex education. Regarding the first, Alejandro Tiana said that it respects the Constitution and existing agreements with the various religious communities. This implies a different treatment for the Catholic religion against the other. In the absence of a review of the agreements signed with the Vatican, as requested by the secular sector, public schools must offer the subject of Catholicism within the schedule classes and give students the freedom to attend it or not. Instead Jews, Muslims and evangelicals must meet a minimum number of students per school, about 20 - and have to give after-school class. Of course, the state pays the school professor and gives the necessary space.

addition, the new law does not provide a specific subject of sex education, but it is presented through several blocks curriculum. Of these, the most important are health and hygiene in the subjects of natural sciences, some reflections on ethics and sexuality in a matter-of a total of about 50 - dedicated to the dimension sex of the person in a new subject called Education for citizenship and human rights.

Given the great controversy surrounding the two cases, Tiana summarizes the position of the ministry: "The school should not indoctrinate or impose a moral vision, but a reflection on sexuality."