#schools

mlansbury@despora.de

Free lunches, brain breaks and happy teachers: why Estonia has the best schools in Europe

How did #Estonia, a small country that is relatively poor compared with most of the EU, become an educational powerhouse?

In the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s Programme for International Student Assessment (Pisa) rankings, which measures 15-year-olds’ abilities in maths, reading and science, the top spots are held by a handful of Asian countries, but Estonia ranks next – the best in Europe.

Its teachers are highly educated, the focus is on social and personal skills as much as academic learning and the typical curriculum is packed with a wide range of subjects, from robotics to music and arts.

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2024/mar/27/free-lunches-brain-breaks-and-happy-teachers-why-estonia-has-the-best-schools-in-europe

#education #schools #teachers #Europe #EU #curriculum

claralistensprechen3rd@friendica.myportal.social
faab64@diasp.org

The Global Education Cluster, jointly led by #UNICEF and Save the Children, issued a report detailing the Israeli army's demolition of schools in #Gaza.

The data shows that more than 70% of Gaza's #schools have been destroyed or targeted by Israel, rendering it unfeasible for children to resume education in the near future.

#SaveGaza #StopIsrael #SaveTheChildren
#palestine #Israel #Occupation #Apartheid #Politics #PeaceNow #StopTheWar #CeasefireNow

mlansbury@despora.de

UK: Crumbling schools plagued by leaks and cold, BBC finds

Schools in urgent need of repair have told Panorama they are struggling to keep children warm in buildings that are "not fit for purpose".

At one primary in Devon, temperatures are so low that children keep gloves and coats on during some lessons.

The head teacher says despite parts of the school being seemingly impossible to heat, he has been told it does not qualify for extra money for repairs.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-68021766

#ToryDictatorship #Tory #Tories #UK #schools #cold #warm #PeopleNotProfits #wealthy #ToriesOut #HumanRights

ramnath@nerdpol.ch

#UN FAILS AGAIN

the evil ones will not stop

tens of thousands of deaths of innocent civilians, including MANY doctors, nurses, women and children, are a modern medieval horror that casts an indelible, lasting, terminal pile of shame on anyone in Netanyanu's government and (I'll say it clearly) anyone who supports Israel's actions.

But the deaths of tens of thousands of innocents is still a fraction of Gaza's population of over two million. What is actually FAR more damaging to Palestine's survival is the systematic and deliberate destruction of the entire infrastructure.

#Mosques, #churches, #schools, #libraries, #hospitals, hundreds if not thousands of residential apartment blocks, roads, gas stations, power systems, water supplies, and much much more. In fact, everything a civilization needs to function. If #Gaza is to be eradicated, that's what will do it unless there's a ceasefire VERY soon.

Source: https://youtube.com/watch?v=xlkaqbMmvUUSee less

SPECIAL: RayMcGovern & Matthew Hoh : The myth of the Mossad.

aljazeera@squeet.me

Gaza residents shelter in UN schools amid Israeli attacks | Al Jazeera Newsfeed

Residents across the Gaza Strip have sought shelter in UN-run schools. But many of those schools have been targeted by Israeli air strikes. Subscribe to our...#AlJazeera #AlJazeeraEnglish #alJazeera #aljazeeraEnglish #aljazeeralive #aljazeeravideo #aljazeeraEnglish #aljazeeralatest #aljazeeralive #aljazeeralivenews #bombardment #gazastrip #idf #israeliairstrikes #israeliarmy #latestnews #newsheadlines #schools #shelters #unrwa
Gaza residents shelter in UN schools amid Israeli attacks | Al Jazeera Newsfeed

libramoon@diaspora.glasswings.com

https://www.nationofchange.org/2023/09/26/sunrise-movement-launches-green-new-deal-for-schools-campaigns-in-high-schools-across-us/

#Sunrise Movement launches #Green New Deal for #Schools campaigns in high schools across US
By Ashley Curtin -September 26, 2023

..."Students are launching Green New Deal for Schools campaigns in more than 50 high schools across America. From Pennsylvania to Michigan to Arizona, the campaigns are asking that school districts face the climate crisis, listen to students’ needs and deliver on the campaign’s promises to address climate change.
...
“For too long, students have been left out of the decision making spaces within our schools,” Shiva Rajbhandari, Sunrise Movement organizer and Idaho’s youngest elected school board member, said. “Students are the most important constituents of our school boards and they deserve to call the shots for their own education. Public schools belong to us, and we know we deserve better.”

The demands for the Green New Deal for Schools campaigns include:

Safe and clean buildings
Free and healthy lunch
Pathways to green jobs
Climate disaster plans
Climate curriculum
Student organizers were trained on how to run campaigns in their schools, plan protests, and grow their organizing skills during multi-week summer camps hosted by the Sunrise Movement in numerous states across the country. The Green New Deal for School campaign “comes on the heels of Sunrise’s historic win for an American Climate Corps, building youth momentum across the country,” according to a press release from the Sunrise Movement."

mlansbury@despora.de

'Austerity is a False Economy that has Brought the Nation's Roof Crumbling Down'

The collapsing school buildings scandal has exposed how the Government failed to ‘fix the roof while the sun was shining’

The scandal is just the most obvious example of the reckless and self-defeating approach taken by this Government to the public sector.

Since 2010, it has cut infrastructure spending as a share of GDP by a third as a part of Osborne’s supposed plan to “fix the roof” of the nation’s public finances.

https://bylinetimes.com/2023/09/05/austerity-is-a-false-economy-that-has-brought-the-nations-roof-crumbling-down/

#BylineTimes #austerity #ToryLies #ToryIncompetence #UK #Tories #Dystopia #Dystopic #Britain #schools #buildings #ToryCorruption #corruption #concrete #Raac #corruption

mlansbury@despora.de

Russian high-school textbooks promote war in Ukraine

Russia's Education Ministry introduced updated history textbooks that include segments about the war in Ukraine that Russia calls a “special military operation,” the annexation of Crimea, and Western sanctions, CNN reports on Aug. 9.

The recently published textbooks incorporate maps depicting occupied Ukrainian areas as Russian territories, endorsing Russian officials' narrative that Ukrainians and Russians are "one people." Ukraine is also portrayed in the textbooks as an "ultranationalist state" where all things Russian are regarded hostile and persecuted.

https://kyivindependent.com/russian-high-school-textbooks-promote-war-in-ukraine/

#RussiaInvadedUkraine #InformationWarfare #propaganda #WarCrimes #Russia #RussianWarCrimes #textbooks #schools

danie10@squeet.me

Do computer labs in schools still make sense in 2023, and do they still function 5 years after opening?

An empty computer lab showing lots of screens with a keyboard and mouse next to each one.
This post was sparked by an interesting comment on LinkedIn in response to a government minister opening a new school computer lab at a rural school, and saying it is essentially a PR gimmick!

He did not go into specifics except to quote another one that was opened a few weeks before, and it is an “empty vessel”.

But he voiced something that many suspect and may not really have vocalised. We know there are good intentions (a blend of PR and a hope that this makes a difference) but what is the impact of these labs, and how long do they actually keep operating in reality? Are there any follow-up surveys conducted annually to check on this? In many cases, such initiatives are just “pushed” into schools by external actors with good intentions, and there is no real planning around the long term sustainability or measuring the success of such labs.

I’ll reference two posts below which are penned by actual educators, one of whom was situated at a rural school themselves. The bottom line is there is still a need, but it seems to depend on how the lab is integrated with, and complimenting, classroom teaching. Times have also changed a lot, with many learners now having their own mobile computing devices, even if it is just a tablet or cellphone.

If we look at the rise of early tech leaders like Bill Gates, many of them learnt what they did from shared computing resources. They had no computer or even cellphone of their own. The question is, are learners with this type of aptitude identified and allowed to innovate using the computer labs?

Also, having 25 standard Windows computers all teaching only Office365 is to me defeating the object of the exercise. That teaches kids to succumb to Microsoft and really reminds me of Pink Floyd’s song “Another Brick in the Wall”. I used to play that song flat out when I got home from school. Learning computers needs to be innovative and creative, and be teaching actively about changing things, doing things differently, and creating things.

The irony is that to learn and create often comes from having very little and needing to invent something to work like a pair of pliers, a hammer, a saw, and some wood. Young kids really love to create things.

What about rather (or at least also) having Raspberry Pi computers with free Linux, free LibreOffice, Python, FreeCAD, Home Assistant, or maybe even Sweet Home 3D (for redesigning their parents’ home), on them to learn about dissecting and changing software, and also creating fun applications all on completely free software. It is software that those kids can use in their businesses one day at no cost. What about, learning about open source licensing? Maintenance costs are low, and there are no software license costs at all, making it more sustainable over the longer term.

They can even have fun changing that software, and learning how to submit improvements upstream to sites like GitHub. Remember Mark Shuttleworth from South Africa? This is what he does today as his global business, building Ubuntu Linux. How many learners in South Africa today know who Mark Shuttleworth is, or what Ubuntu Linux is, and where it came from? I’ll just mention Impi Linux, and leave that here.

For me, the most important lessons are around creativity, making something with very little, and seeing what you can do with what you have.

Of course in South Africa, crime and security are a big issue, and I’d guess that 25 Raspberry Pi’s are a smaller temptation to steal, and easier to lock away (they’d all fit inside the school safe).

But as one of the articles stated, do schools that are getting computer labs, already have a school library? Often this is not the case and a school library sparks creativity, knowledge and inspiration amongst the broader segment of learners. Books and a love of reading really needs to be cultivated as a first foundational step. If not, a good school library should be the first step before a computer lab. Books can be taken home and read slowly to absorbed information, and the information is presented in a structured way to boost learning.

The two articles I referenced are https://www.edutopia.org/blog/pros-cons-computer-labs-mary-beth-hertz and https://www.iste.org/node/6758. Neither call for labs being obsolete, but they do call for more thought about how they are implemented.
#Blog, #computerlabs, #opensource, #schools, #technology