Romania: Education system on the verge of collapse
Antid Oto
aorta at HOME.NL
Mon Jan 25 10:40:41 CET 2010
REPLY TO: D66 at nic.surfnet.nl
Romania: Education system on the verge of collapse
By Diana Toma
25 January 2010
The introduction of free-market relations into the states of the
former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe 20 years ago has led to an
unparalleled social and cultural decline.
This is especially clear in Romania, a country that prior to the
introduction of capitalism had already suffered greatly under the rule
of the Stalinist dictator Nicolai Ceausescu and the dictates of
Western banks and financial institutions. The rapid and dramatic
unraveling of the Romanian education system is symptomatic of the
decline in all aspects of the country’s social life.
Romania’s education system was expanded substantially after the Second
World War. Even though Ceausescu increasingly sought to bring state
schools and universities under the control of his party and the state
police after assuming power in the 1960s, most Romanians had access to
a relatively good education.
Romania today, with a population of 21.5 million, has more than
500,000 illiterate (and many non-literate) people, 76 percent of whom
come from rural areas. According to one report by UNICEF last year,
the drop-out rate tripled in Romania in the 2000-2009 period, with 20
percent of children giving up school. The main cause of dropping out
is the high cost of keeping a child in school. Although education in
the public system is nominally free in Romania, parents must provide
about €500 per month to keep each child in school and provide the
necessary material for a study year. Given the low level of wages in
the country, this sum is beyond the reach of many families.
In addition, one fifth of Romanian children do not attend
kindergarten, one third of high school graduates do not go on to take
their graduation exams, and one quarter of pupils are unable to solve
basic math problems.
The education system in Romania has been subject to a series of
reforms largely dictated by the political priorities of the party in
power. No fewer than 15 major changes to the education system have
been implemented by 13 ministers in the course of 20 years. In today’s
Romania, school inspectors, school principals and even teachers are
hired or dismissed according to the whims of the political party that
has majority at a state or federal level.
Recently, the education sector was hit by a series of strikes and
protests. The longest conflict took place in November 2005, when a
general strike lasted for three weeks and ended with the government
promising to increase teachers’ salaries by about 12 percent. One-day
strikes in 2008 and 2009 were followed by an attempt to initiate a new
reform of the education system. Eventually, this reform was annulled
by the Constitutional Court.
In the course of a series of struggles, ordinary trade union members
have increasingly come into conflict with the trade union leaderships,
which share close links to the political establishment in the country.
Key leaders from the trade union bureaucracies have been lured into
important official jobs in exchange for party membership. In 2008, the
CNSLR-Brotherhood (the National Confederation of Independent Unions of
Romania), one of the leading trade union federations in the country,
signed a cooperation agreement with the Social Democratic Party,
thereby making a mockery of its so-called “independence.”
This is not the first time such an agreement has been struck between
trade union leaders and political parties, to the disadvantage of the
working class. The step from the trade unions into politics is common
coin in Romanian political life.
In 1999, a law for the decentralisation of public institutions was
introduced, which means that the administration of school buildings is
currently under the remit of local authorities. The municipality owns
the buildings and is obliged to maintain school infrastructure. In
fact, the run-down of schools is commonplace. With heating
insufficient or completely absent, students study in cold classrooms
and under dim lighting. The government says it can do nothing, and for
their part the municipalities blame the government for failing to
provide funds for basic repairs. In this circle of mutual accusations,
it is pupils and students who suffer.
Most of the above-mentioned reforms of the education system were not
put into practice, with the result that there are no properly enforced
national criteria for curricula. Children are instructed on the basis
of largely outdated and often irrelevant information. This rift
between theory and practice diminishes the interest in learning.
The declining standard of education in Romania is reflected in the job
prospects of those studying. Official unemployment rates indicate a
youth unemployment of around 20 percent for the last decade, and this
rate has inevitably increased as a result of the economic and
financial crisis, which has forced Romania to request huge loans from
the International Monetary Fund.
At the same time, there is little incentive for those with an
education to join the teaching profession. The average wage of a
teacher is around €500 per month, and many prefer to find other work
or go abroad to find a better job.
The educational sector has suffered at the hands of all of Romania’s
governments during the last two decades, irrespective of whether they
consisted of right-wing, conservative or social democratic
administrations.
The current conservative government led by Prime Minister Emil Boc has
issued an emergency ordinance reducing the number of teachers in
pre-university education in 2010. The reduction will be done in two
stages, with the axing of 15,000 jobs by August 31 and a second phase
involving the loss of 18,000 jobs by December 31.
The current government ran an election campaign promising teachers
higher wages. The reality following Boc’s election is the reduction of
wages and unemployment for thousands of teachers. The Boc government
together with its predecessor regimes bear responsibility for the
decay of the education system, sentencing hundreds of thousands of
Romanian children to illiteracy by assigning priority to satisfying
the demands for cuts laid down by the International Monetary Fund and
Romania’s international creditors.
http://wsws.org/articles/2010/jan2010/roma-j25.shtml
**********
Dit bericht is verzonden via de informele D66 discussielijst (D66 at nic.surfnet.nl).
Aanmelden: stuur een email naar LISTSERV at nic.surfnet.nl met in het tekstveld alleen: SUBSCRIBE D66 uwvoornaam uwachternaam
Afmelden: stuur een email naar LISTSERV at nic.surfnet.nl met in het tekstveld alleen: SIGNOFF D66
Het on-line archief is te vinden op: http://listserv.surfnet.nl/archives/d66.html
**********
More information about the D66
mailing list