Friday, September 4, 2009

Summer holidays are over

and 1.5 million Israeli children are back in school. Some of them have been looking forward to it while to others it means “endless humiliation”. Israeli schools offer small class rooms with up to forty children per teacher. In most schools the parents have to buy all the books as well as pencils, rubber, rulers, note books and t-shirts with school emblem. School fees of various kinds and school trips have to be paid for in advance and all these expenses are a heavy burden on many families. Some parents seem to try to avoid as long as possible to pay for these things which makes going to school a “heavy walk” for their children as the teacher will remind them every day of “who have still not paid” in front of the rest of their class mates.

I grew up under very different circumstances. Our school was “all paid for” even down to pencils and note books. We had no more than 30 children in a spacious class room equipped with shelves and drawers for every child as well as for the teacher. Biology, chemistry, physics, gymnastics, handcrafts and cooking were taught in special class rooms equipped for those particular subjects. We had a nurse working every day in her office at school as well as a dentist with an assistance who would check on all the childrens teeth twice a year from age 7 and nine years on. The dentist had her own fully equipped dental care office within the school building.

But Israel is far from Norway both in kilometres and standard of living.

I was surprised this year that school started without any threats of strikes lurking in the corridors……… but only to find in todays new paper that there is a possibility for a strike as soon as next week as the annual education budget has been cut rather than increased. An increase was promised last year following a several weeks long strike covering the entire country. Some teachers won’t get paid the two first months of the school year as there is no money on the budget for them….

---This is happening because the State had to coop with a war in the middle of last school year. The promise was made before the outbrake of the war. It seems like this is just another way we will have to continue paying for the right to survive…

Elin Elkouby.

No comments:

Post a Comment