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We Must Stop the Brazilian Lie that Access to School Equals Success PDF Print E-mail
2007 - June 2007
Written by Cristovam Buarque   
Thursday, 21 June 2007 10:52

São Paulo University's Law School For years it has been said that Brazil took a great educational step forward when it placed 95% of its children in school. But no one mentions the very small increase we made in the percentage of high school graduates; no one claims that we are improving the quality of the education of these few students who do finish secondary school. The discussion is concentrated upon access; what is forgotten is success.

We commemorate the increase of access and do not take responsibility for the lack of success. Thanks to the Bolsa-Escola, the student snack, and the transportation, school access did increase but without a decrease in the student dropout rate or an increase in learning.

Access is not success. Three letters completely change the meaning of the two words. For access, all that is needed is a school, the assignment of some teachers to watch the children there, the payment of a bolsa, and the guarantee of a snack.

But the children with access will not have success if the school lacks quality, if the student does not learn. Besides access, it is necessary to guarantee attendance, few absences, completion of K-12, and learning. Only then will we one day have the possibility of celebrating success.

This concentration upon mere access necessitates adopting an automatic promotion system without regard for learning. Some students leave school after snack time; others remain for the entire school day, but this involves no more than three hours of class time; they then leave without homework, without a reading assignment, without anything to prepare for the next school day.

Attendance is irregular throughout the month and in a few years dropouts occur. The failure is absolute, but, at the same time, the access is assured.

Access is an available space for the student in some school; success is the student attending school with few absences, studying, passing to the next grade, finishing high school, and, above all, learning.

To achieve success, several criteria must be met. The school building must be pleasant and well equipped with the necessary quantity of teachers. The teachers must receive quality preparation and show dedication - and this demands very good remuneration. The schedule must be rigid and completed in a classroom throughout the year, with homework and a reading assignment.

In view of the poverty level, it is also necessary to complement the Bolsa-Escola with the Poupança-Escola to the end of high school. The Poupança-Escola is a deposit made in a savings account if the child is promoted to the next grade at the end of the school year.

The money can be withdrawn only when the student completes high school. This program was implemented in the Federal District of Brasília between 1996 and 1998 and is now close to approval in the Federal Congress through a Senate initiative.

By preventing student dropouts and encouraging high school graduation, the Poupança-Escola complements the Bolsa-Escola. It stimulates the student to study in order to be promoted and to stay in school until graduating high school.

Linking this to the Program of Serial Evaluation (PAS), which selects the student by means of tests during high school itself, gives the K-12 student the expectation of going on to a university education. This has been implemented in the University of Brasília in the Federal District since 1996.

As a preliminary condition for all this, we must stop the deceit, the lies, and the shameful fallacy of the publicity claiming that access is success. We must put an end to the political illiteracy and the social insensibility that hides the difference made by three distinct letters.

The greatest cause of failure, in spite of access, is that even those who are literate ignore the difference between access and success. Or they perceive the difference, but then prefer to read by manipulating the letters, ignoring that access is different from success.

By doing this they are leaving millions of young Brazilians to pass through their studies without learning to read as they should.

Cristovam Buarque has a Ph.D. in economics. He is a PDT senator for the Federal District and was Governor of the Federal District (1995-98) and Minister of Education (2003-04). He is the current president of the Senate Education Commission. Last year he was a presidential candidate. You can visit his homepage - www.cristovam.com.br - and write to him at mensagem-cristovam@senado.gov.br

Translated from the Portuguese by Linda Jerome - LinJerome@cs.com.



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Comments (7)Add Comment
Dead right..... Access is not Success !!!!!
written by ch.c., June 22, 2007
And acess doesnt mean quality either.
Lets face it, Hodja newspaper, owned by Globo TV, have done some students tests and comparisons with 32 other countries.

BRAZIL CAME UP......LAST !!!!!! Yesssssss....at the queue of the queue !

Sorry guys...this ranking has been done by YOURSELVES !!!!!!
Of course....had these tests been done by your government, they would have ranked Brazil at or near the top. GUESS WHY !!!!!!!
Of course....had these tests been done by foreigners, you would have simply said they are ranting !!!!


NOOOOOOO......once more : the testS and the rankings were done.....BY IMPARTIAL BRAZILIANS !!!!!!!


laugh.....laugh.....laugh !!!!!!!
...
written by macunaima, June 24, 2007
Hodja newspaper?

Never heard of it.
To:Macunaima
written by João da Silva, June 27, 2007
Hodja newspaper?

Never heard of it.


Nor have I.May be the good senator and ch.c are going to start a new Newspaper with this fancy name. If they do, I would love to be one of the columnists (paid of course).
Curiosity
written by Gty, June 27, 2007
Hey ch.c...whats up with you man. Why so much animsoity towards Brazil? I visit the site because I have a Brazilian wife, some business interests and many friends there, some of the articles and posting are pretty entertaining. I enjoy especially those postings that defend Brazil's current state and trash the US, comparing the two, I get a good chuckle.

But your banter is always hateful and full of venom, what happened to you, Carioca break you heart? Ladroes get you in Copacabana? Something happened...clue us all in.
Racism is the lowest form of ignorance.
written by Ryan-NYC, June 29, 2007
in reply to "Cutioosity".

I have addressed his racist and hateful ranting before, and specially despised a few self-hating Brazilians who actually applaud his moronic postings. CH.C is very consistent in his bashing of Brazil and Brazilians. I can't help but wonder why he wastes his time here to insult Brazil and Brazilians in every single posting he decides to offer his ignorant take.

My conclusion is similar to yours; someone that unhappy and full of hate must have some sort of trauma to fuel tha much prejudice against an specific group of people, nation and culture. One needs no graduate degree in psichology to arrive at that conclusion either, as it seems pretty obvious, A ceral box, text book, superficial child psicology trainning will siffice to rander a diagnosis of his condition. He suffers from a cronic affliction of "Brazilian bug up his ass". Aparentlly there's no known cure o treatment for it as of yet.


Curiosity, that is!
written by Ryan-NYC, June 29, 2007
Curiosity, that is!
Spin doctors and half truths.
written by Ryan-NYC, June 29, 2007
I seriously doubt that any sane and reasonably intelligent Brazilian, or human for that matter, assumes that access to education equals success. It make increase the chances of a better paying job or career and by proxy a better quality of life. This should not be confused with a "guarantee" of it. Many factors can and ultimetlly contribute to the outcome of an education and higher level of expertise on any given field of activity.

The promisse or prospect of persuing "happines" or "success"-personal or economic- (by whatever standards you may chose to measure either) is not the same as the guarantee of success or happines, but only the chance of "persuing" it.

Considering the shift on the nature of education from actually educating to trainning people for the workforce and supply industry with qualified professionals ( in great numbers to curb wages and increase competition for the same jobs) education has lost tremendously in its quality. In a modern world, pratical skill overshadows a true and universal education.

In an ever increasing globalized market place, what matters is proficiency as the means to attain a competitive edge, not education. India is a great example of it.Limited to a class of people and within a caste system, but a great exemple nontheless.

It would also be propostorous to compare (which seem to be a cronic malidy here) Brazil (a developing country) with the rich DEVELOPED nations of the first, industrialized world. It's pointless to do it.

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