Jump to content

Draft decree pushes reforms in education


webfact

Recommended Posts

Draft decree pushes reforms in education

By CHULARAT SAENGPASSA 
THE NATION

 

ab6dbefc9ad6be8bc245281721cc26c6.jpeg

File photo

 

Major changes coming into effect soon

 

VERY SOON students will no longer have to take entrance exams until Matthayom 3, thanks to the draft decree on national education, which has sailed through. 

 

The decree will also make many other changes in the educational sector, affecting teachers, education officials, schools, tutorial schools and educational agencies. 

 

“The Council of State has cleared the draft decree,” Charas Suwanwela said yesterday in his capacity as president of the Independent Committee for Education Reform (ICER). He added that the decree would be presented for royal endorsement very soon. 

 

“Once it receives royal endorsement, it will bring about real reforms, particularly in relation to the establishment of the National Educational Policy Committee [NEPC], which will be chaired by the prime minister,” Charas said. 

 

He added that the Office of the Education Council was working on changing itself into the secretariat for the NEPC. “In its new role, it will compile information for the efficient formulation of appropriate educational policies. There will not be too much red-tape,” he said. 

 

Charas added that ICER would continue working until the NEPC is established. 

 

Over the past many months, several educators, teachers and school directors had criticised the content of the National Education Bill, which is now the draft Executive Decree on National Education. 

 

Among the controversial points were: punishment for agencies failing to provide integrated educational services and leaving goals unmet, school directors to be referred to as headmasters/headmistresses, teaching licences to be replaced by certificates and the establishment of a new curriculum institute. 

 

Chulalongkorn University’s lecturer, Asst Professor Athapol Anunthavorasakul, said the draft decree was too flawed to sail through, and in a Facebook comment yesterday he said everybody involved was forced to adopt this reform. 

 

“This is how educational reform is done through the collaboration of a dictatorship, technocrats and interest groups,” the comment read. 

 

When asked if the draft decree had been changed while being reviewed by the Council of State, Charas firmly said “no”. Instead, he praised the government for being brave enough to push ahead with educational reform, despite the opposition. 

 

“All this opposition is imaginary. The essence of the draft law aims to make real reform,” he said. 

 

In a bid to ensure that reforms do go ahead, the government has resolved to write up a draft executive decree – instead of sticking to the original plan of preparing a National Education Bill. The legislation of a bill normally takes longer. 

 

Assoc Professor Daranee Utairatanakit, a member of the ICER, said yesterday that the Institute for the Promotion of Teaching Science and Technology (IPTST) would become a curriculum institute once the law is enforced. 

 

Critics, however, insist that since the institute is only familiar with science and technology, it may not be fit to handle a curriculum covering all fields. As for the ban on exams for children, Daranee said this was in line with the Childhood Bill. 

 

Jiruth Sriratanaban, who chairs a panel drafting the law, separately said that the Education Ministry would have to comply with new legal stipulations once the decree goes into effect. 

 

“But I think full compliance will not be possible in the current academic year,” Jiruth said. “I think we will only see solid action and tangible effect next year.”

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/national/30368647

 

thenation_logo.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, webfact said:

The decree will also make many other changes in the educational sector, affecting teachers, education officials, schools, tutorial schools and educational agencies.

Great Decree! Only one thing missing...the students. No doubt the mushroom system will remain in place, keep them in the dark and feed them BS.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 hours ago, webfact said:

Instead, he praised the government for being brave enough to push ahead with educational reform, despite the opposition. 

Its reform might instead be called "screw" the opposition.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Compared to the other 24 Asian countries, most of Thailand's top universities ranking plunged in 2018. http://www.en.moe.go.th/enMoe2017/index.php/articles/93-thai-university-rankings-plummet

 

In the 2019 World University Ranking no Thai institutes have even made it to the list of 500 best universities, let alone top 100. The best that can be said is that Chiang Mai University remained in the 801-1000 band, while King Mongkut’s University of Technology North Bangkok stayed in the 1001+ group.1http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/national/30355280 .

And THIS government believes it can effect education reform?

 

1 Note that the next to lowest ranked group is the 801-1000 band and the lowest is the 1001+ group. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The article doesn't comment on why the caretaker government is still passing laws that are not of an emergency nature after the elections, rather than leave it to the next government.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.










×
×
  • Create New...