Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian educators head to university March 1

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian educators head to university March 1

    The Easterner, WA
    Feb 23 2005

    Armenian educators head to university March 1

    By Thomas Coghlan, News Assistant
    February 22, 2005


    Six Armenian educators will be coming to EWU in March to participate
    in a social science curriculum development program.

    `It is a new program for Eastern, previously housed at George Mason
    University,' said Earl Gibbons, junior executive director of
    Educational Outreach.

    EWU received the $63,900 grant from the Bureau of Educational and
    Cultural Affairs (ECA) in collaboration with the International
    Research and Exchange Board (IREX).

    The ECA, part of the State Department, is aimed at creating
    international education and training programs that help the U.S. and
    other countries promote a mutual understating of each, while
    presenting the historical, social and cultural aspects of America.

    The IREX, founded in 1968, is an international nonprofit organization
    that specializes in education, independent media, Internet
    development and civil society programs. The grant that EWU received
    was part of their educational outreach program designed to contribute
    to other countries.

    In May 2004, IREX won the 2004-2007 High School Social Science
    Development and Teacher Education Project for Armenia (HST). Their
    goal with this program is to provide professional development for
    educators and expose them to new ideas and programs that they can
    take home with them and apply to their school system.

    The Armenian school system has suffered since the fall of the Soviet
    Union. Since Armenia has not been an independent country for a long
    time, they lack the infrastructure and experience to provide the
    level of education that they need.

    The HST program is one of the ways in which they are trying to
    rebuild their education system.

    Although this program is specifically designed for the social studies
    program, which includes areas like history, government, global issues
    and others, it will have a reverberating effect on other aspects of
    the Armenian education system.

    The programs that these educators take back home will be piloted and
    adapted to fit the needs of their school system. These educators will
    then share what they have learned with other educators.

    Gibbons and Gary Varella, the principal investigators who have been
    working in Armenia for a number of years, traveled Feb. 1 to Armenia
    to meet with the candidates and then select the six-member team.

    They performed field assessments of the needs and priorities of the
    high schools then later gave a two-day workshop in Yerevan, Armenia,
    focusing on the results of what they discovered in their assessments.
    This initial meeting helps the American side of this program prepare
    the training program at EWU.

    The Armenian educators will arrive at EWU March 1 to begin the
    program. They will participate in a 12-week workshop focusing on
    researching and creating a Handbook for Training High School
    Teachers.

    The Armenians will also work on a new curriculum for their high
    school social studies program as well as beginning the preliminary
    training for the high school pilot representatives that will help
    other educators in Armenia benefit from the information learned at
    EWU.

    At the conclusion of the 12-week program there will be another
    workshop in Yerevan and the final scheduling of the pilot-testing
    program will begin.

    This program represents EWU's devotion to cultural diversity here on
    campus, as well as a continued support for the international
    community. Each program that EWU hosts opens doors for future
    developments and will be sure to attract similar programs and grants.
Working...
X