Private schools are booming in poor countries. Governments should either help them or get out of their way
This pattern is repeated across Africa, the Middle East and South Asia. The failure of the state to provide children with a decent education is leading to a burgeoning of private places, which can cost as little as $1 a week (see article).
Mais
- Artigo Da The Economist Sobre A Educação No Brasil
Um trecho do artigo e o link para o texto na íntegra: "No longer bottom of the class: weak and wasteful schools hold Brazil back. But at least they are getting less bad. IN 2000 the OECD, a group of mostly rich countries, decided to find out how much...
- Direto Do The New York Times Editorial Board: Brazil’s Next Steps.
After a decade of fast growth and rising incomes,
Brazil has hit a rough patch that is testing its government’s ability to manage
the economy and satisfy the growing aspirations of its people. President Dilma
Rousseff, who faces elections next year,...
- O Neoliberalismo é Uma Ficçaõ
This is not a neoliberal age. This is an age of hyper-statism, where the state has far more control over our lives than it should do. Think that by buying yet another anti-capitalist tome means you're somehow "thinking outside the box"?...
- Potencial De Crescimento Econômico Do Brasil Em Dúvida
Brazil, Country of the Future No More?Andrés VelascoSANTIAGO – During a visit to Rio de Janeiro last year, US President Barack Obama told a cheering crowd that Brazil is the country of the future no more. “For so long, you were...told to wait for...
-
Exclusivo: Inclusão pode estar excluindo
Falando em educação privada complementado a pública, o autor do artigo Private organizations now supplement public schooling diz que:
Ironically, the exclusion may have been fomented by inclusion. Teachers...