Tag: curriculum

  • Special education for the people with special needs

    Special education for the people with special needs


    30,000 hearing-impaired people live in Romania, or
    thereabouts. They have a fully-fledged right to integrate themselves in the educational
    life with dignity, as well as in the professional or the social life. However,
    they are low-profile, more often than not, for the simple reason that they do
    not make noise. Nor can they voice their needs or complaints, either.


    A lecturer with the University of Bucharest’s Faculty
    of Journalism and Communication Sciences, Dr Florica Iuhas is one of those
    people who have adamantly provided a staunch support for the hearing-impaired people.
    Here is Dr Florica Iuhas herself, explaining why, for instance, a mere 1% of the
    hearing-impaired people pass the baccalaureate exam for the Romanian Language and
    literature exam subject.


    Dr Florica Iuhas:

    One of the big problems is that the
    education system has not been tailored to suit their needs, since they think
    and dream in the sign language, yet they have no choice other than take their
    baccalaureate exam in the Romanian language. A hearing-impaired
    person
    does not have prepositions in their vocabulary, nor conjunctions, they
    will never be able to understand the difference between the present tense and
    the past perfect, for example, because they have a visual culture, their own
    culture. But at ministerial level, officials cannot
    understand that, for the time being, at least. A hearing-impaired
    person will never be able to have a full command of the
    grammatical standards, because, for a hearing-impaired person, the syntax and the word
    order in a complex sentence are very different from the word order in Romanian. So,
    in effect, the sign language in Romanian will have to come first, for the
    baccalaureate exam. Rote learning works perfectly well for the hearing-impaired people,
    they can manage for Geography, for History, they can pass the baccalaureate exam
    for the theoretical disciplines quite all right, they’re doing fine in
    Mathematics, some of them are even successful IT specialists, but when it comes
    to Romanian language and literature, they have serious problems, as their mind
    and language are not structured according to the grammar of the Romanian
    language we, the people with no hearing problems, can speak .


    In other words, the present education law does not make
    a clear-cut distinction between the people who can hear and the
    hearing-impaired people. Both categories need to meet the same examination
    standards. According to Dr Florica Iuhas, for the hearing-impaired people, the Romanian
    language and literature exam should be replaced by an exam in the mother tongue,
    which, in their case, is the language of the signs. As for the Romanian
    language and literature exam, it should have a much lower level of difficulty.
    By the same token, a self-sufficient department is needed, capable of training
    teachers in the sign language, for the special-needs schools. Not just anybody
    can have a command of that particular language, let alone teach it! That also
    works for any other language!


    There is another situation we need to take into
    account: if the hearing-impaired people go to a front desk, they are unable to
    communicate with the hospital employees, or, when in court, they cannot utter what
    their complaint is or what exactly the wrongdoing is, that may have affected
    them. To that effect, in the spring of 2020, in Romania, the so-called Saftoiu law
    was promulgated, it bears the name of the former deputy Adriana Saftoiu, she
    was the one who wrote it and promoted it among her colleagues in Parliament. Here
    is Dr Florica Iuhas once again, this time summarizing what that particular law
    stipulated.

    Dr Florica Iuhas:


    The Saftoiu law stipulates that all state
    institutions in Romania must provide, for a hearing-impaired person, an
    interpreter specializing in the gesture and mimicry language or in the Romanian
    sign language, as in effect, that law certified the existence of that
    particular language as the hearing-impaired persons’ mother tongue. If a Hungarian goes to
    an institution and can communicate with a Hungarian-speaking person, for
    example, in the counties of Covasna and Harghita, it is, however, impossible
    for someone with a hearing impairment to communicate with the state authorities,
    as there is no dedicated interpreter employed by the state institutions.


    And, for such institutions, there was a two-year
    period of grace, after the law had come into effect, for them to take all the required
    measures so that as of April 2022, any deaf person entering a state institution
    can have a dedicated interpreter. Notwithstanding, as we speak, there are still
    very few interpreters of the sign language. Dr Florica Iuhas explains why that happens.


    ʺBecause they are disheartened
    by the institutions’ inability to pay them or to conclude collaboration contracts
    with them, or hire them. So no step forward has been taken, actually, you can even
    see that for yourselves on TV: the president who signed that law, whenever he
    makes a speech in public, is not accompanied by an interpreter, which is not
    okay. In any civilized country, joining the president, whenever they make a speech
    to the nation, there is an interpreter, and that, because the president of a
    country is everybody’s president. So what should a hearing-impaired person do? Do
    the lip-reading as they watch the president speak? According to the law, not only
    the television, but the institution must have an interpreter as well.


    The TV stations are also faced with the same problem,
    the limited number of dedicated interpreters. Dr Florica Iuhas is a sign
    language interpreter herself. At the Journalism Faculty, she opted for teaching
    a sign language course to those interested. However, it is the only such course
    across the country.


    Dr Florica Iuhas:

    ʺ I have been asked, for instance,
    by people working for the Mobile Emergency Service for Resuscitation and
    Extrication, they asked me ‘could you also teach us, since we’re faced with
    the situation of having to help families with those particular special needs
    and we cannot communicate with them!’ And then the idea crossed my mind, to do
    such a course with is open to everybody and not only to the University of
    Bucharest students, because of the impending necessity for the people who can
    hear to make themselves understood by the hearing-impaired persons, as you do
    not know who you may interact with.


    In Romania, that is a revolting iniquity, and that iniquity
    has been lasting for a good number of years, given that for decades, 48
    countries have officially recognized the sign language as the mother tongue of
    their hearing-impaired citizens, the former deputy Adriana Saftoiu stated. A
    language in continuous progress, the Romanian sign language has only 8 thousand
    signs, as compared to the 38 thousand signs of the French sign language or to
    the 50 thousand signs of the German sign language. Unfortunately, in Romania, there hasn’t even been such
    a concern to develop this special language, to enrich it. There is no institute
    or department where the Romanian sign language is studied.


    Florica Iuhas:

    ʺYet the hearing-impaired people are among
    us and they also need to communicate, they need to develop that language. I hope
    Romania will understand that it is important for such persons to be integrated
    in the vast majority of Romanians, and that it should make an effort to develop
    that language as well and to integrate the hearing-impaired persons.

    It was
    the conclusion drawn by Dr Florica Iuhas, a lecturer with the University of
    Bucharest’s Faculty of Journalism and Communication Sciences, herself a voice
    of Romania’s hearing-impaired people.

    (EN)

  • November 16, 2021 UPDATE

    November 16, 2021 UPDATE

    COVID-19 The coronavirus epidemic stays on a downward trend in Romania. On Tuesday the
    authorities reported 4,128 new Covid infections out of over 55,000 tests, which
    accounts for a 7.41% positive rate. Another 397 related fatalities were also
    reported, including 54 that had not been recorded in the system earlier. Some
    14,000 Covid patients are currently receiving hospital treatment, including
    almost 1,700 in intensive care. The incidence rate is on the decrease in
    Bucharest, dropping to 5.34 cases per 1,000 inhabitants on Tuesday. In related
    news, non-invasive testing is due to begin in schools for children and
    teachers. At the moment, almost three quarters of Romanian schools and kindergartens
    are holding in-person classes, the rule being that only schools with a
    vaccination rate among their staff of at least 60% can reopen for in-person
    teaching, the rest holding classes on line. As for vaccination, the pace has
    dropped steadily in recent days, compared to a peak of over 110,000 doses
    administered on 27 September. Nearly 7 million Romanians are fully vaccinated
    at present.




    SCHOOLS Legal and financial education have become
    compulsory skills in primary and middle schools in Romania. President Klaus
    Iohannis Tuesday signed a law amending the Education Act, to include these
    areas in the national curriculum. The document also includes financial and
    legal education in the teaching programmes of local lifelong learning community
    centres. In a first stage, these subjects can be introduced as optional school
    subjects only, because national curricula must be approved by the Education
    Ministry.




    ECONOMY Romania,
    Hungary and Lithuania have the biggest annual growth rate in the European Union
    in the third quarter of this year compared with the same period last year,
    according to preliminary data published by the European statistical office
    Eurostat. GDP grew in the EU by 3.9%, with Romania at 8%, Hungary at 6.1% and
    Lithuania at 6%. However, according to the latest figures published by the
    National Institute for Statistics, Romania’s economic growth rate slowed down
    to 0.3% in the third quarter compared with the previous quarter. In the first
    nine months of the year, GDP grew by 7.1% compared with the same period last
    year. Economic experts say the growth rate will slow down even more this autumn
    and winter, while the inflation rate may go up to 8% in the context of the
    current political crisis.




    EU Romania’s
    foreign minister Bogdan Aurescu attended a ministerial meeting of the Eastern
    Partnership held in Brussels, where EU foreign ministers agreed to expand the
    criteria for imposing new sanctions against Belarus. The new sanctions would
    target those involved in weaponising the plight of migrants. The European Union
    is accusing Belarus of intentionally creating a migrant crisis on the border
    with Poland and the Baltic countries in retaliation to the Union’s earlier
    sanctions against the regime in Belarus for its crackdown on the opposition.
    Minister Aurescu presented Romania’s stand on the strategic priorities of the
    Eastern Partnership post-2020 and called for a consolidation of the security
    dimension in the Eastern Neighbourhood, as well as for greater involvement from
    the EU in solving the frozen or protracted conflicts in this region.




    MILITARY The EU is considering a joint military force of up to 5,000 troops by
    2025, to intervene in a number of crises without needing to rely on the US,
    according to a draft strategic plan, Reuters says. The EU
    Rapid Deployment Capacity should include land, sea and air capabilities. Two decades after the EU leaders first agreed to
    set up a force of 50,000-60,000 troops, which never became operational, the
    strategy drafted by the EU diplomacy chief Josep Borrell is the most concrete
    effort to create an independent military force that does not rely on US assets.
    Not all the 27 EU member states would have to contribute troops, but a
    consensus would be required for any deployment. Since 2007, the EU has had
    battlegroups of 1,500 troops available, but they have never been deployed, in
    spite of efforts to use them in Chad and Libya.





    Radio and TV Parliament
    approved the new leadership of the Romanian Radio Broadcasting Corporation,
    which Radio Romania International also forms part of. With the support of the
    Social Democratic Party, the new director general at Radio Romania isRăzvan-Ioan
    Dincă, a former National Opera director who has a court of first instance
    conviction for abuse of office and false statement but who was later acquitted.
    The leadership of the Romanian television was also appointed, with the
    journalist Dan Cristian Turturică becoming the new director general, with the
    support of the National Liberal Party. The members of the new boards are
    appointed for a 4-year term and have to take an oath in Parliament. (tr. A.M. Popescu)

  • Education Minister announces new middle school curriculum

    Education Minister announces new middle school curriculum

    The Romanian Education Minister Pavel Nastase has announced the new curriculum for the middle school, which lays more emphasis on acquiring new skills and less on accumulating knowledge. Minister Nastase has explained that representatives of the Romanian Academy were part of the team that drawn up the new curriculum, which was also green lighted by the teachers themselves, as it is the latter that have to teach the respective subject matters.



    Pavel Nastase: “I had two meetings with Romanian Academy representatives and the final approval was given by the beneficiaries of this new curriculum, that is the people who teach these subjects. We invited two teachers from Bucharest and one from a rural area to present the opinions of the people who will actually teach using these textbooks. The curriculum for the 5th grade, for the entire middle school for that matter, is better than the old one.



    Minister Nastase has also said that a project of revising school curriculum for all grades was initiated, which should be ready in one year at the most. He also pointed out that the issue of textbooks is one of his priorities.



    Pavel Nastase: “The textbooks in use include too much information and are not in line with school curricula. This is because the people in charge with organizing the procurement of textbooks from various publishing houses do not check thoroughly whether the textbooks are drawn up in keeping with the curricula. So we have changed the methodology and asked that the assessment committees should be only made up of senior teachers. Well have a training session ahead of the assessment process and I hope that starting this year well have better textbooks.



    The Education Minister has also said that the current education law has 365 articles, of which over 150 have been modified since 2011.



    Pavel Nastase: “We are considering not only a new education law, but also an analysis in order to diagnose the problems in the public education system as a whole. Working on this analysis, which we refer to as ‘the state of education, we should be able to set our priorities straight and draw up public policies in the field of education. Later we will decide if we need a new education law or any other regulations in the field.



    Pavel Nastase has also mentioned a project of the Romanian presidency and one proposed by the Romanian Academy, which include several new elements that the Education Ministry intends to consider.