Tag: teaching

  • Romanian education system in a European context

    Romanian education system in a European context

    The COVID-19 pandemic is a worldwide ongoing
    phenomenon. It has proved disastrous in all its social and economic
    implications. As for the Romanian education system, the pandemic has occurred
    at a bad moment, so much so that the system’s chronic problem resurfaced and
    became even more serious than before. Some of those problems were highlighted
    by a survey carried by TIMSS for 2019. TIMMS is an acronym for Trends
    in International Mathematics and Science Study. TIMMS is held in a similar way
    with the PISA tests; it is implemented every three years. IEA (International
    Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement) has created
    the tests. In Romania, TIMMS has been implemented by the University of
    Bucharest. Results are far from optimistic for the Romanian pupils. Romanian
    8th-graders are less competitive than their colleagues in Europe. Their average
    score accounted for 479 points in Mathematics and 470 points in Sciences as compared to the international average
    score standing at 500 points. Disappointing as it maybe, the result is in no way
    surprising. The crux of the matter is for us to detect what it is that we need
    to take into account if we want to set things to rights.

    Professor of
    Psychology with the University of Bucharest Dragos Iliescu explains:


    The survey does not
    reveal the reason why we ended up here, Of course we all look behind, saying to
    ourselves we may have reached such a condition because of the uninspired
    reforms that have been made in the last thirty years. Yet we noticed a couple
    of aspects where the intervention is relatively easy to implement, with no
    terribly high costs to go with it. The survey points to the fact that you have
    a certain score and the score you get is associated with several other aspects
    in the education system. Each and every child or pupil who was included in the batch was also supposed to answer questions, they are
    part of a contextual survey targeting how she or he views school, how your
    parents view school, what the washback effect is, of what they experience in
    school, in certain respects. His Math and Sciences teachers also answer
    questions that are part of a contact survey, the principal is also supposed to
    answer a survey. Therefore, we can also take those contextual aspects into
    account, which can then be identified as performance predictors. We have
    identified three such aspects, that is equal opportunity, infrastructure and
    the distribution of resources in the education system, the second aspect
    pertains to the school climate, the environment and the learning experiences,
    while the third aspect has to do with the teaching staff’s recruitment as well
    as their early and lifelong training, but also with the educational support
    services mainly targeting teachers.


    In earnest, for a great many children, learning is
    marred by poverty, social inequality and all sorts of family problems. All that
    has a strong bearing on school results, which, for instance, leads up to
    functional illiteracy. According to TIMMS, 22%
    of the pupils are functional illiterates in Math and Sciences, as compared to
    the international average of 13%.

    Educational psychology expert Dragos
    Iliescu:

    The 22%, with no exception, is made
    of pupils coming from underprivileged backgrounds, they hail from families that
    usually live in rural areas or in small towns, or in backward regions, they are
    pupils facing other problems, such as broken families, where parents have left
    the country. In four years’ time, when those pupils graduate from the 8th
    grade and when they are on the labor market, what are their opportunities and
    what added value can they contribute to society? An unskilled workforce, of
    which 22% does not even succeed to make the most elementary mathematical
    operations, what jobs will they be able to have? What are the opportunities for
    those children? It goes without saying they won’t be able to finish school and
    will definitely fail in their baccalaureate exam. It goes without saying such
    scores and such blatant lack of performance are also associated with school
    dropout. Those children will never further their education going to
    the university and will only be able to do the simplest and the least skilled
    jobs you can think of.


    Social and economic disparities are glaring in
    environments where they are least expected to occur. We’re speaking about
    laboratory practical work, which came under fire since parents and pupils alike
    rue a system that ignores practical work, laying way too much emphasis on
    theory.

    Dragos Iliescu:


    The existence of a lab leads up to more practical
    classes, better grades and better performance in science classes. We’re aware such
    an effect does exist. Yet at the same time, we do not know whether
    performances are exclusively the outcome of the existence of the laboratory. Concurrently,
    schools with laboratories are usually the schools where pupils are registered,
    coming from well-to-do families. Those are the urban areas schools and schools
    of the privileged urban areas. Therefore, it is difficult for us to realize if
    that is a real consequence of the fact that the lab does exist or whether, as a
    side-effect, schools with laboratories draw brighter children anyway, or
    children coming from affluent families.


    Consequently, the backdrop against which education and
    the set of teaching methods are implemented is sometimes more important that
    the content of the courses proper. Which has been emphatically highlighted by
    the TIMMS tests.

    Educational psychology
    expert Dragos Iliescu:


    In fact, the TIMMS surveys point to
    the fact that the curricula and the syllabus do not matter that much, and I am
    going to tell you how I know that. One of the allegations quite often made by the
    detractors of those tests runs as follows: Romanian children’s results in such
    tests are poor because the proper content is not being taught with us. To put it
    differently, in our system, the content which is taught is different from what
    is tested through those international tests. But here’s how we can do it. Take
    each of the tested subjects and analyze if it is taught or not, in keeping with
    each and every school’s curricula. And that is how we can actually detect the
    test coverage ratio through the national curricula. And that is how we found
    out Romania was the country where the test had the widest curricular coverage.
    We have a 88% coverage of that. We teach 88% of what is included in the test, quite unlike
    Finland, Europe’s leader regarding such tests. In Finland, a mere 41% of the
    test is covered by the curricula. So it does not matter what you teach, but how
    you teach it. Therefore, the massive difference between Romania and Finland
    does not lie in the curricula. We should have had much bigger scores, as for our
    children, that content is exactly what is being taught and which was tested
    afterwards. The quality of teaching matters, rather, the creation of
    competences matters, pertaining to mathematical reasoning and not to the rote
    implementation of several formulae.


    (Translation by Eugen Nasta)

  • Education for health in Romania

    Education for health in Romania


    The National Statistics Institute has as of late made
    public a series of worrying data. Accordingly, of the reported 200,000 births
    in 2019, more than 700 have placed girls younger than 15 center-stage. Almost
    18,000 of those births have been by mothers aged 15 to 19. Under
    the circumstances, at the level of the European Union, nearly a quarter, 23 per
    cent, of the underage mothers are from Romania. Such statistics should not come
    as a surprise, though. They confirm the occurrence of a plight the Romanian
    society has had to face for quite some time now. One of the causes of that
    plight is the lack of sexual education, even though it has been included in an
    optional course labeled Education for health. The course has been taught for
    many years now, as early as the 1st grade. Optional courses are
    taught by teachers, but in certain cases such courses are taught by specialists
    working for several non-governmental organizations, NGOs. Youngsters for
    youngsters is one such organization. For almost 30 years now, Youngsters for Youngsters
    has been involved in promoting education for health among the pupils of
    Romania. Adina Manea is the president of Youngsters for Youngsters.

    Adina Manea:

    If we speak about the programs run by ‘Youngsters for Youngsters’ , we work with high school pupils for the clear
    reason that we need to cover such a shortage in our national education system.
    In high school, at the age of 15, 16, 17 or thereabouts, statistics at national
    level has revealed that for many years now that is the age when adolescents
    begin their sex life, so it is important for them to know all these things
    before they start having sex. But we also speak to them about self-knowledge
    and communication, we speak about values, about decisions, about responsible
    patterns of behavior, about how we communicate…Then we broach the issue of
    contraception and obviously, the HIV prevention and what happens with the
    AIDS-related issues.


    The law has taken effect since 2014, yet the number of
    those who took that Educ Health, Education for Health, course is still very
    limited. For instance, in 2019, a mere 140,000 pupils, that is 4.6% of the
    number of pupils all told, registered for the course. And also in 2019, an
    initiative to change Law 272 of 2004 on the protection and promotion of child’s
    rights was presented before Parliament. By and large, changes pertain to
    replacing the notion of sexual education with that of sanitary education..
    The prospective changes to the law also stipulate that the parents’ and the
    children’s legal representative’s consent be mandatory, so that schools can run
    sanitary education programs. Both these changes are in no way auspicious, or at
    least that’s what some of the civil society representatives believe.

    Adina Manea:


    Introducing such a phrase, ‘the
    parents’ mandatory consent’ in a child law is an issue of overregulation. The
    Education Ministry, for everything happening in school, has specific
    methodologies regulating everything. Both the curriculum pertaining to the core
    stuff, that is the mandatory disciplines, and the optional ones, such as the
    Educ Health. This optional Education-for-health course is taught by members of
    the teaching staff, it is not being taught by people from outside the system.
    Yet at the same time, school are entitled to carry their own protocols with
    non-governmental organizations they check, they know and which they trust. All
    that entails the parents’ consent since nobody from outside the school can
    teach there without the parents’ consent.


    Adina Manea, alongside other representatives of the
    civil society, also shares the opinion that the label sanitary education has no longer been in use
    in Romanian for quite a long time now. Yet there’s more to it than that. The
    courses and activities Youngsters for youngsters run in schools are not
    limited to the basics of reproduction alone, they tackle such topics as
    pregnancy and infection prevention, these are pieces of information that could
    also be useful for the parents.

    Adina Manea:


    According to statistics, we can see
    that in Romania, the adults, that is children’s or pupils’ parents, could
    benefit from such courses as they do not know enough information they can dispatch
    to their children. A possible hindrance of that is the fact that such kind of
    education is basically run the family. Which is fine! It should be done in the
    family quite all right! But there where the family doesn’t know how to do that,
    is unable to do it or simply doesn’t exist, what are we supposed to do?


    But there where the family does exist and gets involved
    in the pupil’s life, what is the parents’ take on this issue, that of replacing
    sexual education with another phrase, sanitary education ?Iulian Cristache is the
    president of the Parents’ Association Federation.

    Iulian Cristache:


    It is true that such a label has
    prompted parents to be reluctant, which includes us, the Parents’ Association
    Federation, sharing the belief that it would better to speak about education
    for health which should indeed included a sexual education module. No doubt
    about it, sexual education must be there, yet it should be taught, of course,
    according to the pupil’s age. Teaching sexual education in primary school is
    one thing, doing that for the middle school is something different, while
    teaching it in high-school is a totally different thing. But all things
    considered, we definitely need sexual education because we have a lot of girl
    children with children. Sadly we are at the top of the table in Europe as
    regards this chapter as well and we really need that kind of education.


    As for the legislative change initiative, the Parents’ Association Federation has not been invited to take part in consultations.

    Iulian Cristache:


    We haven’t been co-opted. I
    purposefully turned up for the parliamentary commission, so we were there. Our
    take on that is known, we sent a written version of it and we had press
    releases of that. They didn’t want us there but we did go there, still. You
    know what they say; If you don’t want us, we want you.. We only did our duty,
    from this point of view. All thigs considered, it’s true there is some sort of
    reluctance to that, since there are a great many parents who deem sexual
    education a taboo topic, which is in no way normal.


    According to the Parents’ Association Federation, the
    current Education-for-health optional course ought to be encouraged to a much
    greater extent.

    Iulian Cristache:


    Unfortunately, if parents are not
    informed about that and if the principal continues to view the optional courses
    simply as a means to add up to the teaching load for part of the staff, then
    there’s nothing we can do about it. The key prerequisite is to consider, when
    it comes to education for health, taking that sexual education module. We have
    examined the curriculum, and saw it was very well adapted to suit the current
    needs. So I don’t think changes that still need to be made are substantial any
    more. And speaking about the new project, yes, the teaching staff should indeed
    include professionals capable of teaching these things. There are the Biology
    teachers, but there should also be trained nurses, there should also be
    physicians from the family planning offices. We do need professionals, so much
    so that information should be correctly dispatched without however being
    distorted.


    At present, the initiative to change Law 272 of 2004
    has been again sent to Parliament. We recall the President has refused to
    promulgate it.


  • January 14, 2021 UPDATE

    January 14, 2021 UPDATE

    VACCINATION More than 3,500 new coronavirus cases and 66 related deaths were recorded on Thursday in Romania. The total number of confirmed cases is now over 684,000, while the death toll is 17,035. 1,101 Covid patients are in intensive care. 90% of Romanians who caught the virus have recovered. Some 155,000 healthcare workers and those working in social care have received the first dose of the Covid-19 vaccine in Romania. Phase two of the vaccination campaign gets under way on Friday, targeting the elderly, chronic patients and workers in key sectors, totalling some 5 million people. PM Florin Cîțu says the pace of vaccination will be stepped up, the target being the immunisation of more than 10 million people by September. 62% of Romanians say they want to be given the vaccine according to a poll conducted by Reveal Marketing Research between 6th and 11th January.



    SALARY LAW The government is looking at bonuses in the public sector and if they are justified as part of drafting the state budget for this year, PM Florin Cîţu said on Thursday. He explained that he is considering amending the salary law to eliminate inequalities in the public sector. He said the pensions law would also be amended this year to take into account the contribution principle. The government on Wednesday increased the gross minimum wage by approx. 3%.



    SCHOOLS Most schools in Romania will reopen on February 8, if the COVID-19 situation stays the same as in the past few weeks, president Klaus Iohannis said on Thursday. He had a meeting with the PM Florin Cîţu, the education minister Sorin Cîmpeanu, the health minister Vlad Voiculescu, the head of the Department for Emergency Situations, Raed Arafat, and the head of the National Centre for Infectious Disease Monitoring and Control, Adriana Pistol. Iohannis explained that when the infection rate in a locality goes above 6 per thousand, a lockdown will be introduced. He also said the situation will be re-assessed prior to opening schools, with a final decision to be made on February 2. As far as universities are concerned, each institution will be free to decide. With the exception of two months, schools have been closed in Romania since March last year, with teaching being conducted online.



    PROTEST Healthcare trade unions in Solidaritatea Sanitara federation picketed the government building in Bucharest and prefecture offices around the country to demand more protection measures for healthcare workers amid the pandemic. They also demand a rise in the basic salary for all healthcare staff as of January 1 this year, to the level stipulated in the salary law for 2022. The federation also wants the government to give up on the reduction of the basic salary as a result of a government order issued at the end of 2020, and to grant all healthcare workers special bonuses and a risk incentive for the entire duration of the pandemic.



    AIR FORCES Four Romanian F-16 aicraft with Air Base 86 in Borcea (south-eastern Romania), together with US Air Force aircraft deployed in Europe, took part on Thursday in the Prime Accord multinational military exercise. The exercise included escort and combat patrol missions. According to the Romanian defence ministry, the action was designed to reinforce NATO assurance measures in south-east Europe, and to check the integration of Romanian and NATO command and control structures. (tr. A.M. Popescu)

  • Online teaching systems during isolation

    Online teaching systems during isolation

    Just like the rest of the planet, the Romanian society is constantly adapting to the paradigm shifts triggered by the novel coronavirus pandemic. As in any major crisis, vulnerable social categories are the most affected. A major pillar like the education sector, is also being reconfigured by the new social distancing rules. And as secondary and high school students try to keep up with the school curricula, the virtual medium remains the main alternative to classroom teaching.



    “Young Initiative Association has invited teachers to a webminar on online teaching, where they can exchange best practices. Teachers Ana Andronache and Maria Stan discussed the pros and cons of distance teaching, together with human resources experts in the education sector.



    Ana Andronache teaches English at “Horia Hulubei Highschool in Măgurele (Ilfov County). For her, online teaching has substantially facilitated the use of digital resources:



    Ana Andronache: “I love this system where we no longer have to print a lot, to waste paper and other materials. Now it is very easy for us to show them live materials, images and videos that weve always wanted to present in the classroom, but we lacked the technology to do it. Another advantage is that online learning is a great learning opportunity for us—it certainly was for me. Ive learnt how to use a lot of new platforms, which I would never had the time to explore without this isolation period.



    Maria Stan teaches English at the International Computer Science Highschool in Bucharest. What she misses the most these days is the direct interaction with the kids, and the children feel the same:



    Maria Stan: “The biggest disadvantage of online teaching is the limited human contact. At first we were all enthusiastic that we had managed to find a way to see each other and stay in touch after all. On the other hand, most of the students told me they would never skip classes again, because they miss their classroom, the school environment.



    But the lack of access to technology is one of the most important negative factors facing the Romanian education system. Teachers are trying to improvise special teaching methods for the children who havent got a computer with an internet connection. Here is Ana Andronache again.



    Ana Andronache: “Those who dont have as much access to technology as the pupils in urban communities are at a disadvantage. What I can tell you, from the experience of other colleagues, is that they used WhatsApp on their parents phone, because in many cases there is just one smartphone in a family. But the teachers and parents talked and found a time when the kids would have access to that phone, so they managed to have these children involved as well. They managed to send them recordings of the classes, films, photos and other materials. So the issue of children without internet access was at least in part solved.



    Obviously, the teaching process also requires a specific emotional and psychological state, which is characteristic to classroom teaching. And managing the behaviour of each student, now in front of a computer screen, is also a challenge.



    Ana Andronache: “Another aspect we covered was the switch from classroom to online teaching, and we wanted to discuss what we call “classroom management. Our experience showed that students tend to speak all at once while online, they tend to use lots of emoticons during classes. So teachers should apply a set of rules designed for the online medium. These rules, announced from the very beginning, will improve the efficiency of online interactions.



    Another sensitive issue raised by online teaching in this unprecedented period is respecting the privacy and personal space of those connected to web platforms. And while turning on the microphone is compulsory, cameras may stay off if users choose so. Ana Andronache explains:



    Ana Andronache: “We are also talking a lot about limitations, about respecting the identity and personal space of each user. In our case, it was important to find out who doesnt want to turn the web camera on, and we respected that for each child. We didnt force any child to connect to Zoom, for instance, with the camera on, if they didnt want to.



    And a certain classroom routine, which would prepare students for classes and which, according to psychologists, is extremely useful, can be transferred into the online classes as well. Word games, relay games or even short physical exercise sessions may improve childrens focus during the class.



    Ana Andronache: “Another element also worth mentioning is the classroom routine. We noticed that this is a highly beneficial option in online classes as well, particularly with secondary school children. And at present there are plenty of energizer games on the internet.



    Until students are able to return to brick and mortar schools, the best online teaching methods are constantly tested and assessed by teachers in Romania. And of course, for this to succeed, the students and parents help, support and prompt response is also vital.


    (translated by: Ana-Maria Popescu)

  • Measures benefitting teaching and healthcare staff

    Measures benefitting teaching and healthcare staff

    After its EU accession in 2007, Romanias healthcare staff, like many other categories, were given the green light to leave the country, thanks to the right to free movement in the EU. Be they physicians or nurses, they all chose to go to Western Europes richer countries such as France, Germany and Great Britain, where their professional status was recognized and respected.



    Expenses with the medical system per capita vary a lot among EU member states, so it was only natural for healthcare staff to choose those countries that channel more money to the system. Thus, between 2009 and 2015, Romania lost half of its physicians. More than 4,000 Romanian doctors are working in France and almost the same number in Germany. Adding to them are over 3,000 working in Great Britain, about 600 working in Belgium and as many as 800 working in Italy and Spain.



    Romanias teaching staff is another professional category with low salaries, which makes teaching an unattractive job for many young people, including those who have a calling for this profession and are very proficient. Romanias education system in general has been faced with an acute personnel shortage, as the teachers and prospective teachers are leaving the country or are reconverting, choosing to work in the private sector where they get better paid. In recent years, the political parties that have been successively in power have tried, and failed, to fix the problem: they promised pay rises and professional and logistic facilities.



    This week the Romanian Senate has passed an amendment to a law under which doctors and teachers will be allowed, even after turning 35, to file applications for having a house built by the National Housing Agency subordinated to the Ministry for Regional Development, Public Administration and European Funds. The Liberal Senator Marcel Vela explains:



    Marcel Vela: “The Romanian state is investing huge amounts of money in the education and training of young medical students, and if Parliament does not help them to find a job in their sector more easily, these resident doctors are tempted to go abroad to find professional fulfilment.



    Ecaterina Andronescu, a former education minister, currently a Social Democrat Senator, has also pleaded the cause of the teaching staff:



    Ecaterina Andronescu: “I dare ask you to agree with our proposal to extend the amendment to the law under discussion, by also including the teaching staff alongside resident and specialist physicians. Teachers are a very important category in all communities.



    The amendment has been passed with unanimity of votes and forwarded to the Chamber of Deputies, which is the decision-making body on this matter.


    (translated by: Lacramioara Simion)