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Teachers Quality Learning & Citizenship Conversations for Positive Social Change

Teachers Quality Learning & Citizenship Conversations for Positive Social Change . “ A Call for Teachers!” on World Teachers’ Day 2013 (5 October) –

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Teachers Quality Learning & Citizenship Conversations for Positive Social Change

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  1. Teachers Quality Learning & Citizenship Conversations for Positive Social Change

  2. “A Call for Teachers!” on World Teachers’ Day 2013 (5 October) – With International and Local Partners: UNESCO, International Labour Organization (ILO), UNDP, UNICEF and Education International (EI) – Ministries and Departments of Education & Teacher Unions   Since teachers are the most powerful force for equity, access and quality education, a call for teachers means calling for quality education for all.   Quality education offers hope and the promise of a better standard of living. There is no stronger foundation for lasting peace and sustainable development than a quality education provided by well trained, valued, supported and motivated teachers. Teachers’ professional knowledge and skills are the most important factor for quality education. This World Teachers’ Day, we call for teachers to receive stronger training upfront and continual professional development and support...Irina Bokova, UNESCO Director-General Why a Call for teachers? There is a huge shortage of professional, well-trained and well-supported teachers The challenge of recruiting teachers does not lie just in the numbers, but in the provision of quality teachers. Far too often teachers remain under-qualified, poorly paid and with low status.

  3. Lets Take a Stand for TEACHERS ! • A greater number of teachers are required if adequate provision of primary, secondary, higher, technical and vocational, or non-formal education is to be assured. • Teachers have a bigger role to play – what are the competencies in hand..? How can we expand them? – Teachers With Imagination & Courage; Teachers Without Frontiers • Are training institutions prepared for national and global challenges – multiple literacies? • Are Teacher Unions and Associations prepared to expand their horizons –bargaining for rights – teachers’ status – child rights?

  4. Article 25 A -18th Amendment –Education A Constitutional Fundamental Right State shall provide free and compulsory education to all children of the age of five to sixteen years in such manner as may be determined by law”. Whose responsibility is Right to Education? • The State • Teachers • Parents • Society

  5. Status of Right to Education Acts and Ordinances-Provision for teachers- in 25 A • Right to Free and Compulsory Education Act (2012)-Islamabad Capital Territory • Punjab RTE - Bill is ready but not shared with Public or tabled in the Assembly : • Website of SED says : Draft for legislation under Article 25-A, has been prepared and submitted to the Law Department. This law will be placed here after getting approval.Retrieved from: http://www.schools.punjab.gov.pk/?q=new_article25a • Right to Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act (2013)–Sindh • Balochistan Free and Compulsory Education Ordinance (2013) • No Rules made anywhere yet.. ! The unequivocal centrality of the clauses presented by each Act needs to be recognized by all for timely action aligned to the core education mandates of teacher unions and other stakeholders

  6. Right to Free and Compulsory Education Act as passed by the Senate (Islamabad Capital Territory); Clauses for Teachers – in the Act 17. Terms and conditions of service of teachers.- (1) No person shall be appointed as a teacher unless he possesses the prescribed qualifications.  (2) Where the persons having the prescribed qualifications are not available, the appropriate government may, by notification, relax the prescribed qualifications, for a period not exceeding two years:  Provided that a teacher, who at the commencement of this Act, does not possess the prescribed qualifications, shall acquire such qualifications within a period of two years. 18. Duties of teachers.- (1) A teacher shall perform the following duties, namely:— (a) maintain regularity and punctuality in attending the school; (b) complete the curriculum and syllabi within the specified time;

  7. Right to Free and Compulsory Education Act as passed by the Senate (Islamabad Capital Territory); Clauses for Teachers (c) assess the learning abilities of every child and supplement additional instructions, if any, as required; (d) all round development of the child; (e) building up child’s knowledge, potentiality and talent; (f) adopt learning through activities, discovery and exploration in a child friendly and child-centered manner; (g) make the child free of fear, trauma and anxiety and help the child to express views freely; (h) hold regular meetings with parents and share with them the relevant information about the child; and (i) perform such other duties as may be prescribed. (2) A teacher committing default in performance of duties specified in sub-section (1), shall be liable to disciplinary action under the applicable service laws.

  8. Right to Free and Compulsory Education Act as passed by the Senate (Islamabad Capital Territory); Clauses for Teachers • Other teachers related matters.- (1) The appropriate Government shall ensure that the prescribed Pupil-Teacher Ratio, is maintained in each school within one year from the date of commencement of this Act. (2) The appointing government shall ensure that vacancies of teachers in a school shall not exceed ten per cent of the total sanctioned strength and such vacancy shall be filled within four months. (3) No teacher shall be deployed for any non-educational purposes other than the population census, disaster relief duties or duties relating to elections. (4) Every child completing his education shall be awarded a proper certificate, in such form and in such manner, as may be prescribed. (5) The grievances, if any, of a teacher shall immediately be redressed in such manner as may be prescribed.

  9. Teachers Unions/Association A Formidable Organized Force Globally & Nationally – Teachers Part of the Problem but must be mobilized as Part of a Very Big Solution • Punjab has more than .6 million teachers as members of some union /association : • Punjab Teachers Union (PTU) – 450,000 members registered – oldest (1937) for public sector teachers BS 9 to BS 19-punjabteachersunion.com/‎ • Primary, Elementary Teachers Association (PETA), Punjab, • Secondary School Teachers Association • Private Sector Schools Associations • Each province has Teacher Unions and Associations organized from primary to tertiary or University level –these are registered and well organized bodies • Teacher Unions are a good platform for social and professional dialogues to improve Quality Education responding to challenges in society and learning

  10. Teachers in Pakistan- Scale Source: Economic Survey of Pakistan (2012-2013)

  11. Teachers by Province Source: Pakistan Education Statistics 2011-12

  12. Challenge of Gender in Public Sector – the Case of GilgitBaltistan Source: Pakistan Education Statistics 2011-12

  13. Professional Competencies- Another Challenge !

  14. Public & Private Sector Institutions Source: Pakistan Education Statistics 2011-12

  15. CHALLENGES OF QUALITY & ACCESS In Pakistan learning levels of 5-16 children reveals (ASER 2012) 50% of Children in grade 5 unable to reach competencies of grade 2 ! 5.7 million children of primary age group are out of school 25 million children 5-16 years are out of school The Education Emergency persists in Pakistan - Who is taking notice? close

  16. ASER PAKISTAN 2012Learning Levels- GB has better results!

  17. Learning Levels – Urdu/Sindhi/Pashto Class 2 level text Language Learning levels for class 4 have improved by 5% since 2011 49% of Class 5 students cannot read Class 2 story

  18. Learning Levels (Class 5): Urdu/Sindhi/Pashto 56% 43% 65% 46% 55% 67% 36% 40%

  19. Learning Levels - English Class 2 level text Language Learning levels for class 4 have improved by 9% since 2011 Almost 52% of the children may complete primary without learning how to read fluently in English at grade II competencies

  20. g Learning Levels (Class 5): English 68% 47% 58% 50% 62% 61% 32% 25%

  21. Learning Levels - Arithmetic Class 2 level Language Learning levels for class 4 & 5 have improved by 7% since 2011 Almost 56% of the children may complete class 5 without learning how to do division at grade II/III competencies

  22. Learning Levels (Class 5): Arithmetic 56% 44% 44% 56% 42% 56% 34% 27%

  23. Learning levels – Boys vs. Girls (5-16 Years) Girls continue to lag behind boys in learning levels Girls are behind boys by 9%in basic Arithmetic

  24. Learning levels – Public vs. Private Learning Levels are better in Private schools overall • 48% children in government and 63% children in private schools in class 5 can read class 2 Urdu/Sindhi/Pashto story. • 43% of the children in Government schools and 64% of children in private schools can read English sentences.

  25. School Attendance

  26. Attendance - Students and Teachers 1 in every 5 children in government schools was absent from school Overall attendance is better in Private schools 13% and 14% teachers in private and government schools respectively were found to be absent

  27. Collecting Deeper Evidence by ITA Research & Governance Centre Teacher Characteristics, Actions and Perceptions: What Matters for Student Achievement in Pakistan?2013 ShenilaRawal, Monazza Aslam and BaelaJamil

  28. Background & Key Questions • Drive for UPE, access and quality. • ASER data (various years) consistently show a vast majority of pupils aged between five and sixteen years of age lacking behind in basic competencies. • Teacher quality recognised as one of the most significant institutional determinants of academic success • Improvements in teaching may be the most effective ways of raising educational quality • However, debate regarding which characteristics of teachers are important is taking place. • Key Question: what makes one teacher more effective than another? • In this paper, teacher attitudes and opinions are investigated to give a more holistic approach to researching teacher effectiveness and its impact on student learning.

  29. Source and Methodology of Data Collection • SchoolTELLS-Pakistan survey of 120 primary schools in rural Punjab. • Survey covered three districts: Faisalabad, Mianwali and RahimYar Khan. • 20 villages from each district and two schools from each village (1 Government, 1 Private, where available) totalling sample 120 schools overall. • Each school visited once, teacher absence recorded. • Series of questionnaires – school questionnaire, teacher questionnaire, student questionnaires.

  30. More on data…variables include Students: • Standard variables (age, gender etc.) • Children’s aspirations • Ability (Ravens test) • Private tuition • Details on their health in the last three years • Their involvement with household chores as well as in the family business. Teachers: • Teacher’s age • Qualifications • Experience • Political affiliations etc. • Information on pedagogical style and time-on-task. • Questions on teachers’ views on various aspects of the teaching profession • A teacher test aimed at evaluating the teachers’ ability to teach at the primary school level.

  31. Key findings: Actions, skills, perceptions? • Ability to teach, subject matter knowledge and attitudes to teaching matter more than observable teacher characteristics. • Teachers’ salary not appear to significantly affect their students’ performance. • Teachers’ levels of satisfaction with their salary rates also do not significantly impact student outcomes. • Teacher’s skills matter! • The tests conducted on teachers in math and language aimed at understanding levels of teacher skills and subject. • Teachers maths scores are positively related to student outcomes.

  32. Key findings: Attitudes, Perceptions & Competencies • Perceptions and attitudes: Teachers who are dissatisfied with the school’s facilities are also associated with poor student performance. • Those teachers who are associated with political parties and those that are active in teacher unions have a significant negative impact on student learning with low test scores than for those taught by less politically active teachers. How can the engagement be positive professionally for learning outcomes? • Teachers who are confident in their maths teaching capabilities have students who perform significantly better than those who are less confident.

  33. Key findings: Gender biases? • Gender matching of teachers and students in Pakistan according to the findings is not of significance. • A large proportion of both male and female teachers are of the opinion that boys are more capable in maths than girls. • And more significantly a higher percentage of male teachers than female teachers are of the opinion that boys are more enthusiastic about their studies. • However, neither of these aforementioned biases appears to significantly impact on student test scores. • This suggests that although teachers in Pakistan may hold some gender biases about their pupils’ capabilities, these do not appear to impact on the results of the children they teach. Research Matters for Raising the Professional Status of Teachers

  34. Pre STEP Initiative for Teacher Education in Pakistan – Ground Baking Pre –Service Professional Development (2008-2013) DOOR TOWARDS BECOMING A 21ST CENTURY TEACHER Pre STEP Supported : • 22 Pakistani universities and 75 teacher colleges to raise the level of academic standards in teacher education programs Delivered: • 1887 scholarships • 21 research grants to partner universities and apex bodies to conduct research on effective teacher preparation strategies and their implementation Teacher Licensing is the next Big Initiative and Will Elevate the Status of Teachers- We must do it!

  35. In-service Education & Training Pre-service Education &Training Other Pedagogical Support Training Follow-Up Accountability Incentives Shifting Paradigm of Teacher Education- From In-Service Training to Continuous Professional Development New Model Box Adjusting Systematically to New Realities 1: From empty vessels to adult reflective practitioners • From one-off training to long term systematic training opportunities, at the local, provincial and national levels • From fragmented dislocated training, to processes in contexts and cultures that make space for in-service capacity-building opportunities addressing lifelong teacher education • From skill training, to training on content supported by school/curricular reforms • From isolated/individual efforts, to collaborative processes where support groups can be developed through mentors or District Teacher Educators and Teacher Educators • From passive participants, to thinkers, actors and key reform agents. ISO 9001 - 2008 Accreditation and Licensing Source: Kiyani – DSD 2012

  36. Addressing Teachers Shortages A Total of 5.24 million teachers needed by 2015 world wide 57 million children of primary school age currently out of school, 54 percent of them are girls 250 Million children are not learning Situation in Pakistan In each province/area the Education Sector Plans being developed to identify teacher shortages against targets of enrolments needed for right to education 25 A for 5-16 year olds Education needs higher allocations – Beyond the 2 percent GDP and currently even lower expenditures! (

  37. International Pledges and Commitments • EFA Goals • MDGs 2 & 3 • Emerging Post 2015 Development Agenda • GMR UNESCO - Education Transforms Lives

  38. Education For All Goals : Six internationally agreed education goals to meet the learning needs of all children, youth and adults by 2015. Goal 1Expanding and improving comprehensive early childhood care and education, especially for the most vulnerable and disadvantaged children. Goal 2Ensuring that by 2015 all children, particularly girls, children in difficult circumstances and those belonging to ethnic minorities, have access to, and complete, free and compulsory primary education of good quality. Goal 3Ensuring that the learning needs of all young people and adults are met through equitable access to appropriate learning and life-skills programmes. Goal 4Achieving a 50 per cent improvement in levels of adult literacy by 2015, especially for women, and equitable access to basic and continuing education for all adults. Goal 5Eliminating gender disparities in primary and secondary education by 2005, and achieving gender equality in education by 2015, with a focus on ensuring girls’ full and equal access to and achievement in basic education of good quality. Goal 6Improving all aspects of the quality of education and ensuring excellence of all so that recognized and measurable learning outcomes are achieved by all, especially in literacy, numeracy and essential life skills. Pakistan is struggling to achieve these by December 2015! The challenges of learning and governance are multiplying in Pakistan

  39. The Post 2015 Challenges – 14 Core Areas For Our Teachers • A comprehensive and transformative agenda was discussed at the 68th UN General Assembly last week covering14 areas; Poverty, gender and education as cross cutting Each of the 14 areas is about education and teachers engaging actively for understanding and action to make a difference to society and responsible citizenship. • Eradicate poverty in all its forms through a multifaceted approach; • Tackle exclusion and inequality; • Empower women and girls –with equal access of women and girls to all services; • Provide quality education and lifelong learning: Young people should be able to receive high-quality education and learning, from early childhood development to post-primary schooling, including not only formal schooling but also life skills and vocational education and training; • Improve Health ; • Address Climate Change; • Address environmental challenges; • Promote inclusive and sustainable growth and decent employment • End hunger and malnutrition; • Address the Demographic Challenges; • Enhance the Positive Contributions of Migrants; • Meet the challenges of urbanization; • Build peace and effective governance based on the rule of law and sound institutions and • Foster a renewed global partnership

  40. Global Monitoring Report GMR - Proposed Goals

  41. Education transforms lives- GMR Education lights every stage of the journey to a better life, especially for the poor and the most vulnerable.  That means making special efforts to ensure that all children and young people – regardless of their family income, where they live, their gender, their ethnicity, whether they are disabled – can benefit equally from its transformative power. Education empowers girls and young women, in particular, by increasing their chances of getting jobs, staying healthy and participating fully in society – and it boosts their children’s chances of leading healthy lives. To unlock the wider benefits of education, all children need the chance to complete not only primary school but also lower secondary school. And access to  schooling is not enough on its own: education needs to be of good quality so that children actually learn. Given education’s transformative power, it needs to be a central part of any post-2015 global development framework.

  42. ITA Contributions – Research, Awards and Social Dialogues for World Teachers Day 2004-2015 • Status of Teachers 2008 • Empowered Stories -Social Dialogues - Anita Ghulam Ali WTD Awards -Mobilization of Teachers Unions -Research diversity -Policy Round Tables -Teacher Education - Quality Assurance

  43. Call for Empowered Teachers Stories Volume II - UNESCO-ITA • Details: ITA/IPL and UNESCO calls for Stories from Teachers in Pakistan on Best Practices on National Professional Standards for Teachers 2009* Full document for downloading at: http://unesco.org.pk/education/teachereducation/files/National%20Professional%20Standards%20for%20Teachers.pdf & Ideas given below for each of the 10 Standards The best 100 stories will be selected by an eminent panel of practitioners, each one translated in Urdu/English to be published as "Stories from Empowered Teachers II" 2013 ;for use in classrooms and teacher education institutions across Pakistan • Who can write: Teachers from ALL SCHOOL SYSTEMS ACROSS PAKISTAN (as long as a teacher is a practicing one ) • Words’ Limit: 500-750 words - to be concluded with some key questions for tomorrows teachers .. some ideas to consider at the end of the story • Important Dates: August 30- September 30th, 2013

  44. A Call for ActionSomePledges & Responses By Teacher Unions On September 8, 2013 International Literacy Day .. There is a dire need to work collectively at all levels to enhance Status of Education in Pakistan -----------A LONG WAY OF STRUGGLE • Get as many out of school children enrolled as possible • Impart education through modern teaching methodologies in the classroom • Focus on teacher and student learning outcomes by emphasising on teaching abilities and interactive learning environment • Provision of free or subsidized education to deserving students to encourage greater enrolment • Lobby and advocacy with different stakeholders for promotion and implementation of Article 25-A.

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