Dear teachers and
students of the José Martí Experimental School;
Compatriots:
There is a widely
held belief, backed even by international organizations involved
in education, that the state of junior high school education in
the world today is a disaster. I share this opinion, and will
not hesitate to state some of my own views on this issue,
including the situation in Cuba.
The traditional
system of teaching in junior high schools, a system inherited
from the West and designed for elite minorities, does not in any
way fulfill the requirements for a quality education for all
children and adolescents.
One of the
measures that contributed the most to the success of primary
school education in Cuba was having the same teacher accompany
the same group of children, instructing and educating them, from
first through fourth grade. In grades five and six, the task is
shared by two teachers, who also continue with the same students
until they have completed primary school.
When children
reach junior high school, which encompasses grades seven, eight
and nine, there is a radical and abrupt change in their lives.
Under the current system, teachers specialize in certain
subjects, which they teach to numerous different classes; they
might teach hundreds of different children at a time. As a
result, no one has any special responsibility, since the
teachers do not and in fact cannot get to know all of these
children personally and learn about their general conduct,
personality, temperament, personal problems and difficulties at
home. Nor can the teachers develop a relationship with their
students’ parents or guardians and thus ensure their support
for the work of the school and the comprehensive education of
their children.
Students pass into
the hands of 11, 12 or even 13 different teachers, depending on
the grade they are in. These teachers, for their part, teach
their particular subject to four, five, or in some cases up to
ten different classes, with 30 to 40 students in each, on any
given day, with an average of 200 to 300 students per teacher.
It is a challenge for teachers to even remember all of their
names, no matter how brilliant and capable they may be. I often
wonder if a teacher working in such conditions could actually
manage to read and analyze in depth the test answers or essays
written in the tangled handwriting of 200 or more teenagers.
Such a system has no relation whatsoever to a genuine education;
it is merely a rudimentary, inefficient and complex method of
instructing.
It is a system
that turns students simply into groups of pupils that come and
go from one teacher to another, with no room for the integration
of their knowledge, culture and values. At this early age,
students are subjected to varying and sometimes contradictory
treatment and criteria on the part of their teachers. No matter
what efforts are undertaken by school principals, counselors and
other administration staff, this is far from the ideal way in
which to educate 12-year-old children, who are entering a
decisive and irreversible stage in the development of their
personalities and their lives as a whole.
The application of
such a method in practice is plagued with insurmountable
difficulties. The number of teachers needed is multiplied. If a
teacher gets sick or cannot teach his or her classes for any
other reason, 200 or more students are affected. Countless hours
of class time are lost for this and other similar reasons.
This extreme
specialization in teaching at such an early age is absurd and
unnecessary. Training highly qualified teachers for each subject
requires incalculable time and costs, which are not within the
reach of the vast majority of the world’s peoples. These
teachers are able to transmit very little of their profound
knowledge in any area of the sciences or humanities, despite the
exhausting and self-sacrificing labor of teaching numerous
different classes over the course of several hours every day.
Moreover, this entails insurmountable obstacles when it comes to
having so many and such a variety of professionals as are
required.
If 25,000 junior
high school students were to be taught 10 different subjects,
there would have to be 1000 teachers, an average of 100 per
subject, if the number of classroom hours per week were more or
less the same for each subject. Although this is not exactly the
case, the variations in classroom time further complicate
program planning and the exact need for teachers by subject. In
Cuba, the subjects which are most decisive and thus accorded the
highest number of classroom hours a week are Mathematics and
Spanish, and these are also the subjects with the greatest
shortage of teachers; the same is true for teachers of such
important subjects as History, Physics and English.
When young people
completing senior high school decide to enroll in a teacher
training college, each one, as is only natural, expresses his or
her choice of subject. Some subjects are much more popular than
others. Perhaps only 30 out of 1000 will opt for Mathematics and
Computer Sciences, 140 for Geography, 55 for Spanish and
Literature, 35 for History and 110 for Biology. Naturally, no
one can be forced to become a teacher of one subject or another.
The choices made and the number of graduates will never coincide
exactly with number of teachers needed in every subject area at
all the junior high schools. A valiant and self-sacrificing
teacher once told me that for many years she had to teach
Ancient History to the 500 students at a junior high school all
on her own, because there were no other teachers who could give
this course.
This situation has
led to what has become the greatest difficulty facing this level
of education: the shortage of teachers for many subjects; the
desperate search for help from university students willing to
teach for an hour or more a week in courses lacking teachers
specialized in that subject; the almost permanent use of
students still attending teacher training college; the call for
university-educated professionals to lend a hand as volunteer
teachers; the adjustment or establishment of schedules adapted
to the shortage of teachers. Schools are forced to establish
schedules that are far from ideal in order to cope with the
shortage of specialized teachers for each subject. In such
circumstances, it is impossible to implement genuine and
efficient programs of training and education at an educational
level so vital to the professional capacity and the future of
the students who attend school at this level, which in our
country encompasses almost 100% of all adolescents.
In the concrete
case of our capital city, a detailed analysis of the state of
junior high school education revealed that the number of
classrooms is much lower than the number of classes at this
level, and the fact that the classrooms are used by different
classes in different grades makes scheduling even more
complicated. Some use the classrooms early in the morning and
others take them over after midday. When there are no classes
being held, the rooms are used as laboratories or for other
purposes. The fact is that of the eight hours the school day
should last, students are actually only in class for six.
There is another
factor that complicates the situation at this educational level.
Junior high school students, unlike the vast majority of primary
school students, apart from a few exceptions, do not have the
possibility of eating at a school cafeteria. They either have to
go home for lunch or buy something to eat elsewhere. Children
from homes with modest incomes, whose parents are not home at
this time of day because they are working, or for any other
reason, must therefore either heat or prepare their own lunches,
using gas stoves or liquid fuel burners, which pose the risk of
household accidents. Others go to the homes of friends who live
nearby. Sometimes they are late in getting back to school, and
quite often they do not go back for the afternoon activities at
all. Control over these students is lost, and this has a
detrimental influence on their education, discipline and
conduct. The number of students who do not show up for
supplementary activities can be as high as 30%. This does not
tend to be the case in small and medium-sized towns and cities
in the rest of the country.
There are also
hundreds of thousands of junior and senior high school level
students enrolled in different kinds of boarding schools
throughout the country, and they receive all services free of
charge. The difficulties are focused primarily in the city of
Havana, and so this became our starting point to confront the
state of junior high school education, in the midst of the
special period and the blockade.
We had reached
certain conclusions, including initiatives to be undertaken, but
first they needed to be subjected to rapid yet rigorous
experimentation. As an initial step, we asked to see the
textbooks used for the various subjects taught in the seventh,
eighth and ninth grades. We wanted to see if we ourselves could
understand them, and if we would be able to explain them,
despite the years that have passed since we studied and passed
these subjects. We also wanted to see the new elements that
undoubtedly would have been introduced since then by educational
specialists. The textbooks were excellent, aside from a few
possible and necessary improvements.
At one point I
asked a senior official from the Ministry of Education to tell
me in all honesty what percentage of the contents of
these textbooks was taught to students in the capital. And he
very frankly told me, “45%.” Others I approached about the
matter were openly skeptical, and said that they would judge it
to be a third of the total contents at most.
We reached the
conclusion that a student graduating from grade 12, who had been
prepared for entry to a university, could easily assimilate and
transmit this amount of knowledge.
This led to the
ambitious idea of training comprehensive teachers for junior
high school education, and we decided to put the idea to the
test with the support of a select and enthusiastic group of
university professors and highly experienced educational
specialists.
At the beginning
of the summer of 2001, the Young Communist League and the
Federation of Middle-Level Education Students put out a call for
100 volunteers from among the recent senior high school
graduates. A few more had to be included because of their
overwhelming enthusiasm. After they were well informed as to
what their mission would be, on August 1 of that same year they
began a program of intensive study, boarding at the school
itself, with classes six days a week, morning, noon and night
and sometimes even into the early morning hours. The program was
carried out at the Social Workers School in CojÍmar, a
neighborhood in the municipality of Habana del Este. It was
summer vacation time, and the hottest month of the year. We were
so impressed by their dedication and determination that we took
to calling them “The Brave Ones”, and that is what the
thousands who are now following their example will be called as
well.
Essentially, what
they needed to do was to update and increase their knowledge
until they had a good command of the content of the subjects
taught during the three years of junior high school, with the
exception of English and Physical Education. They also had to
learn basic methodology and techniques for imparting knowledge
in those subjects, and to be prepared to teach classes to junior
high school students while continuing their university studies
as students themselves of teacher training colleges.
EACH COMPREHENSIVE
TEACHER WILL TEACH ONLY 15 YOUNGSTERS, AND WILL REMAIN WITH
THESE SAME STUDENTS ALL THROUGH GRADES SEVEN, EIGHT AND NINE
An unused building
at a senior high school institute in the countryside, near the
town of Caimito in the province of Havana, was repaired and
refurbished. In December of last year, 360 volunteer students
from junior high schools in the municipalities of La Lisa,
Marianao and Plaza, who were in seventh, eighth and ninth grade
and had their parents’ permission, enrolled in this school,
which carried and continues to carry with honor the name of Yuri
Gagarin.
They were divided
into groups of 15 students, with eight groups for each grade of
junior high school. Logically, the most difficult task facing
the “Brave Ones” was ninth grade, yet many of them
specifically asked to teach it. Their enthusiasm and spirit were
truly admirable.
Every “Brave
One” was put in charge of a group of 15 students -up to a
total of 24- leaving six as back-ups for these 24. The remaining
89 continued to study and acquire experience at Gagarin School,
where the experiment was taking place, under the observation of
the team of eminent educational experts who had trained them.
After a number of
weeks, these remaining students were sent to various secondary
schools in the municipalities of Marianao, La Lisa and Plaza.
They were put in charge of groups of 15 students in seventh,
eighth and ninth grades, who had been studying under the
traditional system of teachers specializing in certain subjects.
In every case, systematic contact was maintained with the
parents of the students participating in the experiment. The
changes in the students were visible, including increased
interest in and application to their studies, as well as
academic results considerably higher than the national average.
Also visible was the pleasure of these students’ families.
A full 98.2% of
the students at Gagarin School successfully passed the course.
Those teaching ninth grade stood out particularly, with a 100%
success rate. This proved that the training of comprehensive
teachers for junior high school was entirely possible. With
every year that passes, every one of these young people,
combining their daily teaching work with higher studies in
education, complemented in turn by their ongoing practical
experience, will reach ever-higher professional levels. In our
view, this is the only possible solution for the serious
shortage of teaching staff at the junior high school level.
According to this
new conception, each comprehensive teacher will teach only 15
youngsters, and will remain with these same students all through
grades seven, eight and nine. These teachers will be friends,
counselors and guides for all of their students; they will
maintain close and systematic contact with their parents,
keeping them informed and winning their cooperation. Audiovisual
resources and computer labs will help improve the current
situation, although the shortage of classrooms and teachers will
persist for a while, as new school facilities are created and
the teaching personnel needed for this new system are trained.
The success
achieved so far and the goal of perfecting this conception led
to the idea of converting this historic school, which was once
attended by Julio Antonio Mella and other outstanding Cuban
revolutionaries, and is located between the municipalities of
Old Havana and Centro Habana, two of the capital’s most humble
neighborhoods, into the José Martí Experimental School. Here
we can continue to study the various aspects involved and the
results obtained at Gagarin School and the junior high schools
in other parts of the capital.
Although the ideal
would be groups of no more than 15 students, the reality is that
some of the school’s classrooms are quite large and can fit 30
or even 45 students, and there are not enough classrooms in all.
This has forced us to look for alternatives and to experiment
with groups of 30 or 45 students with two or three teachers,
depending on the specific case, yet always maintaining the
principle that one teacher will be specifically responsible for
15 students within these larger groups. In addition, there are
the standard principles that all teachers must be able to teach
any subject, and that they must do so in an essentially
integrated manner. No student will ever be left without a class.
The José Martí
Experimental School will begin the school year with the
following groups:
· 6 groups of 15
seventh-grade students per classroom, with one “Brave One”
per group.
· 10 groups of 30
seventh-grade students per classroom, with two “Brave Ones”
per group.
· 7 groups of 45
eighth-grade students per classroom, with three “Brave Ones”
per group.
· 1 group of 15
ninth-grade students with one “Brave One”.
· 10 groups of 45
ninth-grade students with 10 teachers already working at the
school, who will teach four or more subjects.
It is highly
gratifying to note that 95.9% of the country’s junior high
school teachers who teach classes as specialists in a certain
subject have offered to teach two or more subjects. Others have
stated their willingness to teach all subjects, something
perfectly possible given the knowledge, experience and high
cultural level of our dedicated junior high school teachers.
This in itself would practically eliminate the shortage within
the current system and improve the situation in all of the
junior high schools.
One of the
problems with the system of highly specialized teaching is that
the teachers, after working with successive large groups of 30
to 40 students per class, tend to finish the day visibly
exhausted. Therefore, the system we are proposing would
objectively benefit those currently teaching at this level,
freeing them from a heavy burden. In addition, many of them
could move up to teaching at the senior high or even the
university level, since facilities for the latter will be
increasing in number throughout the country, as we have
explained on other occasions.
This school, which
bears the glorious name of José Martí, already has an
additional advantage: 100% of the students will eat lunch at the
school. Moreover, the food they are served will be of the same
quality as the food at the schools for the special intensive
training programs recently created by the Revolution, given this
school’s role as an important center for experimentation.
Convinced of the
wisdom of intensively training new junior high school teachers,
given the results of the experiment already carried out, and the
enormous and disturbing shortage caused by the system copied
from the West, on the evening of September 9 we will be
inaugurating a course at Salvador Allende School for the
intensive training of junior high school teachers. For this
first course, 4500 students have been selected from among the
young people who recently graduated from senior high school
throughout the entire country. Every year, thousands more young
senior high school graduates will enroll there, to study this
noble profession under the guidance of more than 400 eminent
educational specialists, who also hail from throughout the
entire country.
At the same time,
the country’s teacher training colleges will train around 3000
new junior high school teachers each year. The junior high
school teaching will undergo radical changes at an accelerated
pace. While there will be 20 students per classroom in primary
schools, there will be a teacher directly responsible for every
15 students in secondary school.
Nevertheless, the
total number of teachers will barely increase, since they will
take on the teaching of almost all subjects. Just 30,000
teachers could attend to over 350,000 students, which would even
leave a number in reserve as substitute teachers. It should be
kept in mind that, in addition, the Educational Channel is
already playing an important and growing role in support of all
levels of education.
The problems
facing senior high school education still need to by studied in
depth. At this level, specialization seems to be essential. At
this age, as well, young people’s personalities and characters
are already more fully formed. Yet it will still be necessary to
seek the highest quality and look for new ways to ensure the
building of an awareness, of a comprehensive general culture, of
a school-family relationship and personalized attention for each
and every student.
Nothing can come
in the way of the Cuban people’s unstoppable progress towards
a comprehensive general culture and the highest rank in
education and culture among all the nations of the world!
Long live
socialism, which has made this great dream possible in a Third
World country!
Patria o muerte!
Venceremos!