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Education in Honduras Amanda Fox. History Education became national and public in the 1950’s. Private schools for the wealthy, the remainder were uneducated.

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Presentation on theme: "Education in Honduras Amanda Fox. History Education became national and public in the 1950’s. Private schools for the wealthy, the remainder were uneducated."— Presentation transcript:

1 Education in Honduras Amanda Fox

2 History Education became national and public in the 1950’s. Private schools for the wealthy, the remainder were uneducated Now compulsory (by law) and free for children 7-14 years of age

3 Typical Schools Primary School Grades 1-6 Secondary School Grades 7-9 Specialized Program Grades 9-12 Higher Education Vocational/Technical school or University

4 Typical Schools Bilingual in Spanish and English February to November school year Poor buildings/roofs etc Crowded: Up to 80 in a classroom Lack up-to-date: Books, materials, and teaching methods

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7 Typical Teachers Poorly trained Underpaid ($310/month) with little chance of increase Lack resources Lack strong unions School systems lack funds as well

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10 Typical Students Come from poor and illiterate families Malnourished (or near malnourished) Wake up at 5:00 to do chores and travel Lack resources School supplies, clothing, transportation Drop out

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14 Typical Honduran Family Extremely impoverished Rely on child labor Lack transportation Uneducated

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16 Surprising Statistics Illiteracy – 40%-80% (rural – urban) HIV/AIDS can affect up to 14% of pop. Lower middle income average: $1,400 175,000 children don’t receive formal education each year 97,0000 students drop out to work for family each year

17 Surprising Statistics Most children aren’t schooled past grade 9 (only 35%) 60% complete 6 th grade Between 1% - 8% go on to college Vocational, technical, or UNAH (30,000) 4.5% of GDP spent on education (5.2% of US GDP spent on education)

18 Improvements To improve poverty, illness, etc: IMPROVE EDUCATION! Canada: $20 million United States: $80 million New textbooks, teacher training, vocational programs, etc

19 Sources Canada Invests in Education in Honduras. Canada International Development Agency. Cordeau, Nicole. The Silent Killer.Honduras this Week: Online.. EDstats Summary Education Profile: Honduras. World Bank, Edstats.. Education. CountryStudies.us..

20 Sources Huyser, Abram. Honduras: Futile Strike?. Platinamerica Press, Article Archives.. Learning in Honduras.. The Improvement of Basic Education in Honduras through Teacher's Training at University level. German American Exchange Service.. USAID: Honduras. United States Agency for International Development..


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