H15873
The Crisis in Israel's Classrooms
An overlooked vignette from the business press. While it has been dispensing imperial brutality to the West Bank and turning the Gaza Strip into a concentration camp, the Israeli elite has also been presiding over some of the most incompetent social policies in the world. The uncritical adoption of neoliberal dogma has meant that:
At Israel’s seven universities, funding has dropped 20% in four years. So even as the student population has climbed 50% since 1997, the number of teachers has remained steady at about 5,000. And as many as 3,000 university lecturers have decamped for jobs overseas.
While:
Class sizes average 38 to 40 students, and the Organization for Economic Cooperation & Development says teachers’ wages in Israel are the lowest in the industrialized world, with starting educators earning just $600 per month—less than the rent on a modest one-bedroom apartment in Tel Aviv.
And the teachers have been on strike for a month.
[Posted By Szamko]Republished from Business Week
It sounds like a teenager’s dream: Sleep late, hang out at the mall, and go to the beach. Yet 15-year-old Barak Rivkind is sick of that easy life. At noon on a school day, instead of sitting in class, Rivkind and his buddies are sipping milk shakes at the Aroma café in Jerusalem’s Malha Mall. That’s because Israel’s high school teachers have been on strike since Oct. 9 seeking higher wages and improved working conditions. “I’ve had enough of loafing,” says the 10th grader. “We’re missing a lot of material, and it will be very difficult to make it up.”
Israeli education is in crisis—and many fear the country’s tech industry will suffer unless something is done to fix it. The technology sector represents 12% of Israel’s gross domestic product and more than a third of all exports, and has been growing at a double-digit clip for most of the past two decades. Fueling that boom have been Israel’s top-notch schools. “Unless the government wakes up, Israel will quickly lose its edge in high tech,” says Giora Yaron, a serial entrepreneur who has sold two companies to Cisco Systems (CSCO) and is now involved in four other tech ventures.
Posted by Szamko
Just tries to tell the truth.









