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  • `Exceptional' school year starts with confusion for 1st gr. parents

    ArmeniaNow.com, Armenia

    Lessons in Change: `Exceptional' school year starts with confusion for
    parents of first graders

    By Marianna Grigoryan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    When the new school year started two weeks ago in
    Armenia, the opening bell rung sour notes for some
    parents confused by republic-wide changes in the
    education structure.
    Beginning this year, Armenia converts from a 10-year,
    to a 12-year program (see
    http://armenianow.com/?action=viewArticle&amp ;AID=1577&lng=eng&IID=1087).


    Unaware of the new reforms in education, disbelieving their children
    are ready for school life, or taking into account the unhygienic
    conditions in some schools, many parents have kept children at home
    who should be enrolling for the first time.

    As the situation became apparent, the Minister of Education and
    Science, Yerevan Municipality officials and other representatives of
    the education discuss to how they can overcome this `exceptional year'
    and the difficulties and problems that the new educational system has
    created.

    (To accommodate the conversion, this year should see two kinds of
    `first graders' - junior and senior - 5.8-6.5 year olds, and 6.5-7
    year olds.)

    `We have schools this year that have no first grade pupils or have
    just a few, which causes problems. This is unprecedented,' says Narine
    Hovhannisyan, the Head of the General Education Department at the
    Ministry of Education and Science.

    Since Soviet times and until this year, children began school at 7. A
    World Bank credit program has provided for the systemic changes,
    however the mental shift has not yet penetrated.

    The 12-year education is a requirement for all the countries that have
    joint the Bologna Treaty. Armenia has joined the Treaty in 2005. The
    purpose of the Bologna process in Europe is to create a joint
    educational system. Armenia is the last among the CIS countries to
    join the 12-year education system.

    `This is based on international experience,' says Nurijan Manukyan,
    head of the General Education Supervision Department at the RA
    Ministry of Education and Science. `The 10-year education system is
    still operative in the African and Asian countries. And we are
    committed to striding evenly with the world, we are committed to
    advancement and every failed year will keep Armenia back from world
    developments.'

    Many Armenian parents, however, have chosen to be out of stride,
    believing that six year olds should be concerned with toys instead of
    books.

    According to the data of the Ministry of Education and Science, the
    number of first graders this year should have grown from about 40,000
    pupils registered last year to at least 52,000 as the schooling was to
    include also children aged 5.8 and older.

    However, unlike the estimations of the experts who supposed to have
    nearly 15,000 children of 5.8 and older, the preliminary surveys have
    shown the number of children under 6 going to school so far, at nearly
    10 times less.

    `Many parents believe if they don't take their children to school this
    year but take them the next year the children will learn 11 years
    instead of the 12,' says the education department's Hovhannisyan.
    `Besides, many parents who were aware of the changes took their
    children to school earlier, which also caused problems.'

    Narine Hovhannisyan says there have been schools even in the central
    part of the capital that have had just one or two applications for
    admission to the first grade.

    In Yerevan and particularly in the Kentron community, 10 of the 36
    schools did not have a single `junior' first class pupil on September
    1.

    `The law provides opening first grade even if there is just one pupil
    registered, but in practice it is more suitable to encourage parents
    to take their children to other schools if there are only 2 or 3
    applications,' says Deputy Mayor of Yerevan Kamo Areyan.

    School principals disagree. They believe having no first grade and
    sending children to other schools discredits their schools.

    The experts at the Ministry of Education assert they need to take
    measures to overcome the situation, adding that they have anticipated
    problems that must be worked out over the coming years.

    `If the school lacks first grade this year, it will not have graduates
    either. If it does not have applications next year, it will lead to
    its self-liquidation,' says Manukyan. `The principals and the teachers
    should care for attracting pupils to their schools.'

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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