Saturday, February 21, 2015

Education as Commons: Bachilleratos Populares in Argentina

http://www.telesurtv.net/english/opinion/Education-as-Commons-Bachilleratos-Populares-in-Argentina-20150218-0048.html

Friday, February 20, 2015

Professional Portfolio - Bread & Roses - New Dealer Oct. 1999

Education Emancipation Organization blog presents the David Barry Temple Professional Portfolio. In these posts you shall find my collection of observation reports, letters, newspaper articles, photographs and other documents spanning my career as a teacher of English as a Second Language, from 1979 up to the present for your pleasure and information.

Monday, February 16, 2015

Teachers slam curriculum decision; write their own

Teachers slam curriculum decision; write their own

LECTURE:A coalition of teachers and experts protesting adjustments to the high-school curriculum criticized the Ministry of Education’s ‘non-transparent’ decisionmaking

By Rachel Lin and Chen Wei-han  /  Staff reporter, with staff writer

Protesters outside the Ministry of Education in Taipei on Feb. 28 last year hold signs calling for open consultation before adjustments are made to high-school curricula.

Photo: Lo Pei-der, Taipei Times

A group of high-school and university educators said they would start a campaign to draft their own version of high-school curriculum guidelines following the Ministry of Education’s decision to implement a controversial curriculum adjustment — despite a ruling by the Taipei High Administrative Court on Thursday last week against the move.
“We cannot help but draft the curriculum guideline ourselves, as the government is messing [with the curricula],” Action Coalition of Civics Teachers convener Chou Wei-tung (周威同) said, adding that they are joined in the move by the National High School Teachers’ Union and other scholars.
The proposed draft curricula for history, civic and social studies would be completed by the middle of the year, he said.
The coalition had held protest rallies on Feb. 28 last year to oppose what it called the ministry’s non-transparent backroom decisionmaking in making contentious changes to high-school textbooks.
Union spokeswoman Huang Hui-chen (黃惠貞) said their drafting of the history curriculum is not aimed at provoking debate on Taiwan independence or unification, but a means of reclaiming history teachers’ principles and professionalism.
She said that the ministry had amateurs spearhead the curricular adjustment, rather than experts experienced in teaching, and that high-school history teachers are capable of drafting a professional curriculum guideline themselves.
Politics should be kept away from history, she added.
Curriculum guidelines are supposed to be general principles for publishers and teachers to edit textbooks and arrange syllabi, but they have become a set of minute directives dictating textbooks and college entrance exams, Taichung’s Bureau of Education Director-General Yan Ching-hsiang (顏慶祥) said.
He said that politicians are making curricula their tools and teachers their propagandists, reminiscent of a totalitarian regime, adding that the coalition’s initiative to draft alternative curriculum guidelines to counter the ministry’s move was “remarkable.”
Saying the ministry’s curricular adjustments were based on a certain political agenda and ideology, Democratic Progressive Party Legislator Cheng Li-chun (鄭麗君) said the coalition’s move might introduce civic engagement to the policymaking process.
However, National Alliance of Parents vice chairman Hsieh Kuo-ching (謝國清) said that from a parent’s perspective, the coalition’s proposed curricula could not have much effect in terms of college entrance exams that must comply with the ministry’s curricula, adding that the pressing issue now is to persuade the ministry to correct its curriculum guidelines.
In response to the campaign, the ministry’s curricular adjustment committee convener, Wang Hsiao-po (王曉波), said: “There’s no comparison between high-school teachers and committee members in terms of knowledge and proficiency.”
Chou said Wang’s remark revealed nothing but his arrogance, and that university academics’ lack of classroom experiences ended up with a curriculum that is too complicated for high-school students, crippling teachers and students alike.
Chou added that the drafting of curricula has always been a unilateral decision made by people in power, despite public hearings.
The director of the ministry’s K-12 Education Administration, Wu Ching-shan (吳清山), said that high-school teachers are not legally authorized to draft curriculum guidelines, as the Senior High-School Education Act (高級中等教育法) and the National Education Act (國民教育法) stipulate that the National Academy for Educational Research should put forward a draft curriculum for the ministry to approve before the curriculum can take effect.
The academy’s Committee of Curriculum Development would convene public hearings after it makes public the draft curriculum guidelines and teachers are encouraged to voice their opinions at the hearings, which is the standard procedure for devising a curriculum, he added.

Students demand curricula remain in place

Students demand curricula remain in place

By Wu Po-Hsuan and Chen Wei-han  /  Staff reporter, with staff writer

Tue, Feb 17, 2015 - Page 3

A group of student protesters rallied in front of the Ministry of Education building yesterday, demanding the withdrawal of a set of controversial high-school curriculum guidelines that the ministry plans to implement in August — despite a decision by the High Administrative Court on Thursday last week ruling against the proposed changes.
More than 50 protesters — joined by Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Legislator Huang Wei-cher (黃偉哲) and Taiwan Solidarity Union (TSU) Legislator Chou Ni-an (周倪安) — held placards protesting against what they called the ministry’s illegal act of drafting and implementing the new curriculum guidelines.
The draft amendments to the history curriculum only focus on Taiwanese history, with certain chapters having more than half of their contents revised, National Chengchi University’s Graduate Institute of Taiwan History associate professor Lee Fu-chung (李福鐘) said.
The proposed curriculum would replace a pluralistic, global perspective on Taiwanese history with a distinct pro-China bias, as it stresses the contributions of the Qing Dynasty to Taiwan’s development and downplays the role of Japan, he said.
It also reintroduces an outdated term quan fu (光復) — meaning the recovery of Taiwan by the Republic of China from Japanese rule, he said, adding that the term is a throwback to former president Chiang Kai-shek’s (蔣介石) regime.
Ordinary teachers have been excluded from the ministry’s decisonmaking process, Dazhi Senior High School teacher Huang Yi-chung (黃益中) said, and the official notification that a curriculum hearing was to be held arrived only after the registration deadline had expired, Huang said, adding that the ministry refused to disclose records of the hearing in the name of personal data protection.
He said the “defective curricula” should be revoked and teachers should be consulted before curricula are drawn up.
Youth Group in Defense of Taiwan Culture and History activist Lan Shih-po (藍士博) said they held protests against the ministry’s curricular adjustments last year, and he regretted that the ministry had ignored their appeals.
He demanded that the ministry redraft the curriculum guidelines, saying that the ministry’s draft proposal was procedurally flawed according to the High Administrative Court’s ruling. Restoration of Taiwan Social Justice activist Lin Yu-lun (林于倫) said that the ministry’s proposed changes do not do justice to the period of Japanese rule or aboriginal history, adding that the ministry should not serve as a mouthpiece for the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) or China.
In response, K-12 Education Administration director Wu Ching-shan (吳清山) said the ministry would consider appealing the court’s ruling after it receives the verdict documentation.
However, the court’s ruling was based on the ministry’s information disclosure, rather than the contents of curricular adjustments, he said.

Sunday, February 15, 2015

Professional Portfolio - letters - Project Freire 1998

Education Emancipation Organization blog presents the David Barry Temple Professional Portfolio. In these posts you shall find my collection of observation reports, letters, newspaper articles, photographs and other documents spanning my career as a teacher of English as a Second Language, from 1979 up to the present for your pleasure and information.




Friday, February 13, 2015

Taipei court rules against education ministry over curriculum adjustments

Taipei court rules against education ministry over curriculum adjustments

By Alison Hsiao  /  Staff reporter

Taitung Girls’ High School teacher Chou Wei-tung brings a hammer to the guidelines for teachers in Taipei on March 1 last year.

Photo: Liu Hsin-de, Taipei Times

The Taipei High Administrative Court on Thursday ruled against the Ministry of Education in a case involving the ministry’s controversial “minor adjustments” to high-school curriculum guidelines.
The court said the ministry should make its information more transparent and complete for public perusal.
The “minor adjustments” made to the guidelines for history, civic and social studies, Chinese and geography in January last year sparked controversy, leading to protests by civic groups, high-school teachers and academics — who called the changes “de-Taiwanization and Sinicization” of the education system tailored to the Chinese Nationalist Party’s (KMT) view of history — and prompted the Taiwan Association of Human Rights to bring the case to court.
Examples of the contentious changes to the history curriculum included revising the term “Japanese-governed period” to “Japanese occupation period,” and naming the period during which Koxinga, also known as Cheng Cheng-kung (鄭成功), ruled Taiwan in the 17th century the “Ming Cheng period,” with “Ming” signifying China’s Ming Dynasty, despite the Ming not, in official terms, claiming sovereignty over the island, the groups said soon after the changes were announced.
The Taiwan Association of Human Rights filed an administrative lawsuit against the ministry in October last year after its administrative appeal, filed in March, was rejected.
The association said that even before the appeal, it had asked the ministry and the National Academy for Educational Research for information related to a resolution to adjust the curriculum, including a complete list of the review members, complete meeting minutes and ballot results.
The two agencies denied the request and simply offered abridged meeting records that “concealed key decisionmaking processes,” the association said.
According to Article 9 of the Freedom of Government Information Act (政府資訊公開法), individuals “may request government agencies to provide government information,” which means people have the right to request information related to the curriculum outline changes because it “is a national policy that concerns people’s rights to education,” it said.
“The Ministry of Education has repeatedly said that information about the changes should not be made public, which is brazenly against rights protected by the law and made us wonder whether its reluctance has something to do with its flawed decisionmaking process,” the association said.
The court’s ruling has safeguarded the public’s right to know and up held democracy, the association said, while calling on the ministry to immediately make public the information it has withheld and not appeal the ruling.
Minister of Education Wu Se-hwa (吳思華) yesterday said that the information was not entirely transparent due to concerns over the possibility that personal information could be leaked, adding that a new review process would be more thorough once put in place.
He said that the ruling would not affect the rollout of the curriculum adjustments this year, adding that the ministry would discuss with the National Academy for Educational Research about whether to file an appeal.
Additional reporting by Wu Po-hsuan

Monday, February 9, 2015

Students give up on tough English exam 英文科題目難 不少學生放棄

Students give up on tough English exam
英文科題目難 不少學生放棄

The National College Entrance Examination English exam took place on the morning of Feb. 2. Many students found the topic too difficult and gave up.
二月二日大學學測英文科,不少學生認為題目很難乾脆放棄。

Photo: Liao Shu-ling, Liberty Times
照片:記者廖淑玲攝

The National College Entrance Examination‘s English exam took place on the afternoon of Feb. 2. The English essay section of the exam gave two separate book titles and asked examinees to imagine the possible contents of each, then choose which one of the books they would like to read, providing a reason for its selection. A large number of students found the topic was too difficult and gave up. Most students believe this year’s exam was tougher than last year’s, especially the English essay, which was not a traditional “picture-story telling” style of question.
A student surnamed Chen from Yang-Tze Senior High School, who sat the exam, said one of the book titles was about admiring other people’s strong points, while the other was concerned with how to obtain the abilities of a leader. He chose “look upon others with admiring eyes,” because it was an easy topic to develop. Another student named Lin said the English exam was too difficult and it was hard not to throw in the towel, adding that it even caused a nearby student to laugh out loud.(Liberty Times, translated by Edward Jones)
大學學測二月二日上午考英文,英文作文要考生就兩本不同書的書名設想可能的內容,並說明選擇想看那一本書的理由,不少學生認為題目很難乾脆放棄。
大多數考生認為考題較往年難,尤其英文作文不是傳統「看圖說故事」的題型,而是用兩本書的書名封面,要考生選擇想念其中的哪一本,並說明理由。
揚子高中的陳姓考生說,考題中的兩本書,一本是欣賞別人的優點,一本是有關於如何具備領導統御的能力,他選擇用欣賞的眼光看待別人,不難發揮,倒是有另一名林姓考生說,英文考太難了,讓他不放棄都難,引得一旁同學哈哈大笑。
(自由時報記者廖淑玲)
TODAY’S WORDS
今日單字
1. tough adj.
困難 (kun4 nan2)
例: That’s a really tough question, let me think it over.
(那真是個很難的問題,讓我好好想想。)
2. admire v.
欣賞 (xin1 shang3)
例: He may have a fiery temper, but I admire his steely resolve.
(他或許脾氣暴躁,但我欣賞他鋼鐵般的決心。)
3. throw in the towel v. phr.
放棄 (fang4 qi4)
例: When the going gets tough, Fredrick always throws in the towel.
(每次一遇到難題,費德烈就放棄了。)

Sunday, February 1, 2015

Professional Portfolio - O.R. 5-24-99 "How can we compare descriptions of our forests?"

Education Emancipation Organization blog presents the David Barry Temple Professional Portfolio. In these posts you shall find my collection of observation reports, letters, newspaper articles, photographs and other documents spanning my career as a teacher of English as a Second Language, from 1979 up to the present for your pleasure and information