12 resultados para Education-secondary

em Comissão Econômica para a América Latina e o Caribe (CEPAL)


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Includes bibliography

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The inalienable right of all people to education is enshrined in various international covenants, conventions and agreements, yet the actual fulfilment of this right varies in quantity and quality from one country to the other. On average, the compulsory length of schooling in the countries of the region is 10 years. Half of these countries have already made all secondary education mandatory, which is eminently reasonable since it is commonly accepted as a minimum threshold for lifelong well-being and skills-building. The main article in this edition of Challenges discusses this subject in depth, and shows how far behind we are in ensuring that all adolescents have access to the education to which they are entitled. It focuses on the low secondary school-completion rate and low level of learning acquisition, the strong socioeconomic and sociocultural stratification, the lack of citizenship skills, and the persistence of a relatively high dropout rate at all levels of secondary education. The main challenge in guaranteeing the right to education lies in reducing learning and attainment gaps by helping the groups that are presently lagging behind the most. As is customary, there are also reports on relevant meetings and conferences held in the region over the past half-year, together with the opinions of experts and adolescents and success stories in promoting school attendance in Uruguay and the Dominican Republic.

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This study analyses digital inclusion in secondary education in the Tarija School District in the Plurinational State of Bolivia for the 2012-2013 school year, using the indicators in the Plan of Action for the Information Society in Latin America and the Caribbean (Plan of Action elac). This is an exploratory and descriptive analysis based on a sample of 311 students, 108 teachers and 15 school principals. According to the findings, teenagers use the Internet to look for information and entertainment; the expansion of mobile technology among them offers numerous educational opportunities; and insufficient training for teachers on how to integrate information and communications technologies (icts) into the learning process is a top challenge. The existence of icts in schools has been confirmed, but not their use. Local and national efforts are helping to reduce the digital divide and promote equality of opportunity for young people.

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Existen diversos pactos, convenciones y acuerdos internacionales que prescriben de manera inalienable el derecho de todos y todas a la educación, aunque la expresión de este derecho, en cantidad y calidad, varía de un país a otro. El promedio de enseñanza obligatoria, establecida por derecho, es de diez años en los países de la región, si bien en el 50% de ellos toda la enseñanza secundaria (baja y alta) ya es obligatoria. Esto es razonable, si se considera como un umbral mínimo para aspirar a niveles de bienestar y desarrollo de capacidades a lo largo de la vida. El artículo central de esta edición de Desafíos profundiza en este tema y muestra los rezagos y metas para avanzar en la plena titularidad del derecho a la educación en adolescentes. Destacan la baja tasa de conclusión de la educación secundaria y de aprendizajes pertinentes, la fuerte estratificación socioeconómica y sociocultural, los atrasos en competencias ciudadanas y la persistencia de un nivel relativamente alto en deserción escolar, sobre todo a lo largo del ciclo secundario. Sin duda el principal reto para avanzar en el derecho a la educación es reducir brechas de logro y aprendizaje, favoreciendo a los grupos que hoy presentan mayor postergación. Junto al artículo central, y como es habitual, se informa sobre encuentros y conferencias en la región acerca de este tema durante el semestre en curso, se presentan opiniones expertas y de adolescentes, y se destacan experiencias positivas de promoción de asistencia escolar en el Uruguay y en la República Dominicana.

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En este artículo se provee de evidencia sobre la existencia de diferencias en el rendimiento en pruebas académicas en la enseñanza media entre quienes asistieron al nivel inicial y quienes no lo hicieron. A partir de datos del Programa para la Evaluación Internacional de Alumnos (pisa) de 2009 a 2012 respecto de varios países latinoamericanos, se utiliza un método no paramétrico basado en la generación de contrafactuales que descompone las brechas entre factores observables y no observables. Se encuentra segregación por nivel socioeconómico en el acceso; brechas de puntajes considerables —condicionales a los controles utilizados— y más amplias mientras más tiempo se permanece en educación inicial; y diferencias importantes en las brechas entre países. En general, las brechas halladas son mayores en Lectura que en Matemáticas.

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This article shows how certain aspects at the secondary level of Uruguay’s public school system produce inequalities in student achievement. The 2006 edition of the Programme for International Student Assessment (pisa) (oecd, 2006a) points to three key aspects of the institutions that regulate secondary education that play a part in reproducing inequalities of origin, hindering the equalizing role that guides the education system. First, the teacher assignment mechanism has the dual effect of sending a revolving door of young and inexperienced teachers to schools in unfavourable sociocultural contexts as well as concentrating teachers with more experience in schools in favourable contexts. Second, the geography-based system for assigning students to schools reproduces the residential segregation process. Lastly, the centralized system for supplying educational and technological materials is inadequate to the needs of the schools.