Photo by Evan Silver, Erge, Adjara

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Minister's Meetings Across Georgia Begin

Minister of Education and Science Dimitri Shashkini and the staff of TLG have begun a series of meetings with TLG volunteers. The first two meetings have been held in Tbilisi and Kutaisi.

At both meetings TLG volunteers had the opportunity to ask the Minister questions regarding new developments and reforms within the Georgian education system. The volunteers also shared their own experiences teaching in public schools, allowing the Minister to hear first hand their challenges and concerns. Common challenges faced by the volunteers included lack of coordination with co-teachers; power outages due to the weather conditions, especially in the villages; lack of supplies such as schoolbooks and dictionaries; and student discipline and attendance issues.

In addition to addressing the issues mentioned above and expressing his gratitude to the volunteers for their service and their special part in the Georgian education system, the Minister took time to explain some of the reforms currently underway across Georgia, such as:

Creation of the new National Curriculum; beginning in the 2011-2012 school year, the new curriculum will be introduced to the first through sixth grade levels. In the following 2012-2013 school year, the new curriculum will be introduced to the seventh through twelfth grades. It contains 60%-80% compulsory content, which includes English instruction beginning in the first grade. New subjects have also been added, such as information and communication technologies, world culture, and a heavier emphasis on mathematics and sciences.

Minister Shashkini spoke about the goal of supplying all first graders with Netbooks. In September 2010, the first 3,000 first-graders received their Netbooks. The computers have wireless ability, and come packaged with educational programs and games.

Certification of teachers; In order to regulate the quality of public school teachers, the teachers will undergo professional development training and a certification process, in both teaching methodology and in their subject areas. Until 2014 completing the certification process is voluntary. For the teachers who take the test this year, they will receive a pay raise of 75 GEL. Eventually, all teachers will essentially need to regain their right to teach and their salaries will be raised to 1000 GEL.

In addition to teacher certification, the Minister also described efforts to increase school director efficiency and professionalism as well. Minister Shashkini hopes to create a system where school directors are expert managers in order to make their schools more dynamic and competitive.

The Minister also mentioned that TLG is an essential part of this comprehensive reform and a vital piece of the puzzle that will improve the entire education system. Since TLG is not a purely educational program, it also fits perfectly in the development and cultural revolution of Georgia.

We will be holding similar meetings in every region where there are volunteers. Batumi is next for those in Adjara, so we will see you all soon!