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Fidel in the inauguration of the new school course TODAY IT IS A MATTER OF PERFECTING THE WORK CARRIED OUT, LEAVING FROM ENTIRELY NEW CONCEPTS
Workers and students in the educational sector;
Professional and volunteer construction workers;
Leaders of the Communist Party, Young Communist League and mass
organizations that participated in the feat of renovating or building 779
schools;
Heads of enterprises and state entities that cooperated in this
major work:
Today, September 16, as was previously planned, we are
officially inaugurating the school year and strongly proclaiming the need to
carry forward to its final consequences the profound and unprecedented
educational revolution we are currently undertaking. It is not only our people’s
basic duty for humanity and social justice, but also an imperative of our times
and our future. Likewise, our achievements can be of benefit to many other
peoples in the world.
The fight for national liberation brought with it the
eradication of illiteracy, the spread of teachers and schools to every corner of
the country, the transformation of the educational system and its content, the
diversification of education, and the creation and development of technical and
professional schools. At the same time, universities grew in number and extended
throughout the entire country; special education programs were established for
the tens of thousands of children and adolescents with special needs; secondary
and higher education were put within the reach of all young people, with the
creation of hundreds of thousands of full scholarships; and many other
educational programs were developed at a rate never before witnessed anywhere
else.
Novel methods were used at every stage to overcome seemingly
insurmountable difficulties and obstacles, in the midst of relentless subversive
and aggressive actions launched from abroad, a rigorous and merciless economic
blockade, and attempts to impose technical and scientific isolation. These
conditions have lasted for more than four decades, and continue to persist
today.
Thousands of schools of all kinds were built and equipped.
Hundreds of thousands of teachers and professors were trained. The training of
cadres for the defense of the country and the Revolution was never neglected
either. The military vocational schools and academies of our Revolutionary Armed
Forces and the Ministry of the Interior forged tens of thousands of high
officials, whose proven patriotic spirit, internationalism and courage have been
demonstrated in the heroic and victorious missions discharged within the country
and abroad.
A huge effort has been made in the educational sector since
January 1, 1959. This is shown by the fact that for every sixth grade graduate
at that time in history –and the total number was barely 400,000– the Revolution
has graduated two university professionals or intellectuals.
The large number of scientists working today in the country’s
hundreds of research centers or units is testimony to the progress achieved.
That is why some talk about the first and second educational revolutions that
preceded the current stage.
Honor and glory to the men and women who achieved such feats!
Without the enormous human capital created by the Revolution, we could never
have even dreamed of the great educational revolution that Cuba is carrying out
today, whose significance will transcend the borders of our own country.
What we have done up until today has been based on universally
accepted concepts and methods that emerged from the elitist societies of the
wealthiest and most developed capitalist countries. The Revolution undoubtedly
introduced some of its own formulas, geared to our goal of bringing education to
the masses, to all the citizens of our country, especially the children and the
youth.
Today we are striving to perfect the work accomplished up until
now, and proceeding on the basis of entirely new ideas and concepts. Today we
are seeking for what should be and will be, in our judgment, an educational
system that increasingly corresponds to the equality, full justice, self-esteem
and moral and social needs of all people in the type of society that Cubans have
decided to build.
Such goals will never be within the reach of a capitalist
society. The required doses of humanism and solidarity do not exist and never
will exist in such societies, and their rates of education and culture, no
matter how great their technology and wealth will lag further and further behind
those of Cuba. There are already many indicators that provide irrefutable proof
of this fact.
The full awareness of the need for a profound educational
revolution in our country emerged at the beginning of the battle of ideas,
almost three years ago. At that point in time, we found ourselves obliged to
mobilize all of the people and to seek the support of international public
opinion, including that of the United States, to fight the inhuman and colossal
injustice committed when a humble, hard-working, honest and decent Cuban father
was robbed of his five-year-old son, the victim of a tragedy the like of which
have become an all too common occurrence, brought about by a murderous law
adopted over 35 years ago to encourage illegal emigration and to destabilize the
country.
The participation of children and adolescents in the marches
and rallies, their moving eloquence, their spirit of solidarity and patriotism,
the fruit of the selfless efforts of their teachers and professors, in close
cooperation with their parents, had a considerable influence on the interest
shown for and the attention paid to the problems and difficulties caused by the
special period, like the shortages of textbooks, sketchpads and other school
supplies, as well as to other problems that could affect the marvelous training
that our children, adolescents and young adults had received thanks to the
educational programs of the Revolution.
We knew that Cuba occupied first place among all the countries
of Latin America by a wide margin. Cuba’s children possessed almost twice the
average knowledge in the basic subjects of primary education: language and
mathematics. This fact was recognized by international organizations, and was a
source of great satisfaction. In a search for further data and reflections,
daily meetings were held in which leaders of the Party, the Youth and the mass
organizations participated alongside representatives and leaders of our primary,
secondary and higher education students organizations. In this way, we were able
to more deeply study the existing flaws, the problems, difficulties and
shortcomings which, in spite of the extraordinary successes achieved, were
affecting our educational system, and with it, the results that a society like
ours should and could attain in all areas that make up its loftiest and most
desired goals.
For example, for various reasons there was a marked decrease in
the number of students who applied to join the teacher training colleges, to
earn university degrees as primary school teachers. Hundreds of classrooms in
the capital had more than 40 students; the average was 37. Most of the teachers
had graduated between 15 and 30 years earlier. One day, the schools would have
abruptly been left without the most experienced and highly qualified teachers.
There was a growing shortage of teachers for the 11, 12 and 13 subjects taught
in the three years of junior high schools, in a single session of classes and
with many students. There were also reductions in the amount of material
covered. I am mentioning only some difficulties, as I do not want to repeat
others that have been explained before.
There were objective as well as subjective factors involved.
But what was fundamental was the need to move beyond old concepts.
The fact that secondary education was in crisis all over the
world did not serve as any consolation to us.
In the battle of ideas, new ideas came up among us every day;
and each new idea led to others. Many were related to education, and not simply
with regard to schooling, but also in terms of the economic, cultural and
political education of all our people. Measures and more measures were adopted
along the way. Each new idea was tested out beforehand and subjected to serious
experimentation in real-life conditions. Not a moment could be wasted; we could
not just sit back and wait. Resources were scarce. Feasible solutions had to be
sought. The newsprint tabloid format used to publish the University for All
materials, valuable literary works, or the content of especially important
televised Round Table discussions, was a consequence of the shortage of
resources needed to print books since spending just one dollar, it was possible
to print materials at a cost 150 times lower than that of any book sold in any
bookstore in the world.
Perhaps the most transcendental idea was that of using the mass
media, audiovisual equipment and computers to transmit knowledge to children,
adolescents and adults in the schools and in their homes. The use of television
and video has had a major impact on primary and secondary education. Today,
there is a television set for every classroom in the country, a total of 81,169,
and a VCR for every 100 students. In the last school year, 44,790 computers were
delivered to schools and more than 12,000 young people were trained to teach
computer skills not only in the universities but also from kindergarten to Grade
12. Actually, very interesting experiences had been registered on the children’s
capacity to assimilate it
All 2,320 of the country’s rural schools that did not have
electrical power were equipped with solar panels in order for them to take
advantage of these technologies as well.
Another equally transcendental idea is that of taking
university education to every corner of the country. That is, in fact, a
necessity imposed by the tens of thousands of new teachers and professors
trained in intensive courses, the social workers, the art instructors, the
workers and technicians following higher education courses, the students from
the comprehensive upgrading of youth and other ongoing programs, many of which
will have to pursue their university studies while working on their respective
assignments and living at home.
It would be impossible to list all of the examples that could
be cited. Many of you present here know how many of these initiatives emerged
and developed. The work has been intense, the results encouraging.
The first conclusion to be drawn from what we have achieved is
that we urgently need to continue working and to improve what has already been
done. You could almost say that we are just beginning.
I shall try to briefly offer a few figures.
The state budget allocation for the year 2002, including the
investments already made, is estimated in 3,121 million pesos, which is 11.4
percent of the Gross Domestic Product. This is an indicator in which we have
always been above all the other countries of the hemisphere.
The total number of students in educational institutions is
2,623,300; of these, 423,277 are boarding students and 635,739 are semi-boarding
students. The remaining 1, 564,284 students go home every day after classes.
Primary school, including kindergarten: 995,581
Junior high school: 502,533
Senior high school: 161,017
Special education: 55,668
Technical and professional education, including the intensive
training of teachers; the training of art instructors and physical education and
sports instructors; and vocational and professional art schools, among others:
606,653.
The number of those studying in the universities under
different modalities is already 201,257.
There are also 100,591 students in the schools for the
comprehensive upgrading of young people between the ages of 17 and 30 who were
unemployed and who today have the possibility to study while receiving from the
State a monthly allowance corresponding to their educational level.
In the coming weeks, schools will be opened for no fewer than
90,000 workers from the sugar cane sector affected by the downsizing of payrolls
resulting from the restructuring of that industry, a direct consequence of the
extremely low sugar prices on the international market and the considerable net
losses in hard currency sustained by the country.
These workers will receive a decent remuneration based on their
previous wages. At the same time, they will be acquiring extensive general and
professional knowledge that will raise their self-esteem and be of great benefit
for both the workers and the country. For the first time in history studying
becomes a full time job.
The number of teachers and professors currently working to
carry forward these programs is 222,286.
Total number of workers in the education sector, both teaching
and non-teaching: 433,200.
Number of educational centers: 13,343.
Throughout the country, over the last eighteen months, 4,453
new classrooms were created, with a capacity for over 90,000 students. In the
capital’s primary schools, the ideal goal of 20 or fewer students per teacher
and classroom has now been achieved. In the rest of the country’s provinces, the
goal of 20 or fewer students per teacher and classroom has been fulfilled in the
majority of primary schools and in classrooms with more than 20 students, there
are two teachers instead of one. In all of Cuba there are only 19,000 primary
school students, or 2.6% of the total enrollment, which still do not enjoy these
favorable conditions, but this will be remedied during the current school
year.
Our greatest challenge today is at the junior high school
level. For example, in the capital of the Republic, there are 167 junior high
schools, with an enrollment of 89,900 students, which provide a total of only
1,657 classrooms of different sizes, that is, for 30, 35, 40 or even 50
students. Due to this limitation, there are around 35,000 students who have only
a single session of classes every day, either in the morning or the afternoon.
Every day, about 50,000 junior high school students leave
school at noon to go home or elsewhere for lunch, and part of them do not return
in the afternoon for the rest of their classes or for extracurricular
activities, some of them optional, in the case of the tens of thousands who have
a single session of classes. As a result, many junior high school students can
be seen on the streets during school hours. In the junior high schools of the
capital we need the equivalent of almost 1,200 classrooms for 30 students each,
along with measures to deal with the lunch problem, to perfect the organization
of the activities and to improve the students’ discipline combined with a more
demanding stance on the part of teachers and relatives, so as to overcome these
difficulties. With the cooperation of almost all of the existing professors
determined to teach two or more subjects, the reinforcement of the comprehensive
teachers in training and the optimal use of the modern audiovisual means
available, the adolescents will increase the knowledge that they can and should
acquire in that important stage of their lives.
The other provinces that are facing similar problems at this
educational level will solve them with their resolute and tenacious efforts.
Why is Cuba heading towards a top place in education worldwide?
It is no longer possible to compare it with the countries of Latin America and
the rest of the Third World.
Let us take a look at a few figures from various sources on the
state of education in the developed countries, and compare them with the figures
from our own country.
Primary school enrollment rate:
Cuba 100; Spain 100; France 100; the Netherlands 100; Italy
100; Japan 100; Norway 100; Portugal 100; Sweden 100; Denmark 100; United
Kingdom 99; Finland 98; Canada 95; United States 95; Ireland 92; and Germany
86.
Sources: UNESCO and Euridice.
Percentage of students who reach fifth grade:
Cuba 100; Germany 100; Denmark 100; Finland 100; Japan 100;
Norway 100; Canada 99; United States 99; France 99; Italy 99; Spain 98; Sweden
98; Ireland 97; and Portugal 97.
Sources: UNICEF and UNESCO.
Educational achievement in mathematics:
Third grade: Cuba 78.2; Canada 54.4; England 40.2; Iceland
34.1; Ireland 53.7; Japan 77.4; Norway 31.6; Portugal 45.4; Scotland 44; United
States 54.6; and the Netherlands 59.6.
Fourth grade: Cuba 81.6; Canada 70.4; England 53.2; Iceland
56.9; Ireland 71.3; Japan 86.7; Norway 63.7; Portugal 60.7; Scotland 62.4;
United States 70.3; and the Netherlands 83.4.
In third grade, we are rated above them all.
In fourth grade, we are surpassed only by Japan and the
Netherlands.
Sources: OECD and UNESCO.
Existence of educational channels:
Canada yes; Japan yes; Denmark no; Spain no; United States no;
Finland no; France no; Ireland no; Norway no; the Netherlands no; Portugal no;
United Kingdom no; Sweden no.
Source: Public information.
Cuba has something more than an educational channel. Every day,
the two national channels broadcast 10 and 12 hours of educational materials, in
addition to the educational channel presently in full development. This
currently covers the capital of the Republic and a large part of the provinces
of Havana and Santiago de Cuba, and before the end of the current school year,
it will extend to all of the provincial capitals and major cities, as well as a
large part of the rural communities. It will also provide many more hours of
educational broadcasting as part of a system organically linked to all levels
and types of education in the country.
No other country in the world is doing anything like it.
Source: Public information.
Existence of TV sets in every classroom
Cuba, yes; Germany, no; Canada, no; Denmark, no; Spain, no;
United States, no; Finland, no; France, no; Ireland, no; Italy, no; Japan, no;
Norway, no; the Netherlands, no; Portugal, no; the United Kingdom, no; and,
Sweden, no.
It is the privilege of an educational method that only exists
in our country.
Source: Public Information.
Ratio of teachers per number of inhabitants
Cuba one per 42.23; Denmark one per 53.6; Portugal one per
54.7; Sweden one per 55.4; France one per 62.7; Ireland one per 64.6; Canada one
per 66; United States one per 67.7; Spain one per 68.5; the Netherlands one per
69.6; Japan one per 77.8; Germany one per 78.7; Finland one per 79.2; Italy one
per 83.5; and the United Kingdom one per 83.95.
Source: UNESCO.
Maximum number of students per classroom in primary
school:
Cuba 20; Canada 25; Spain 25; Norway 25; United Kingdom 25;
Denmark 28; Germany 30; United States 30; Finland 30; France 30; Japan 30; and
Portugal 30.
In the cases of Germany and the United States, there is not a
single figure for the whole country; it varies from state to state.
Source: Public information.
As can be seen, we are already far above the most developed
countries in most of the main educational indicators. Almost without noticing,
we are leading the way. They do not have the slightest possibility of surpassing
us within their capitalist social and economic models. As our current projects
continue to mature and we gradually overcome the deficiencies and difficulties
we face, we will even further increase our advantage.
These educational indicators will be accompanied by the efforts
of tens of thousands of art instructors who are already in training, the
explosion that will take place in the arts in general and in other intellectual
fields, and the rapid advances of our people towards an ever-higher degree of
comprehensive general culture.
These are not simply dreams or fantasies; the realities are
already becoming visible. And it is well worth fighting for them!
Patria o muerte!
Venceremos!
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