Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Karabakh Rebuilds Schools

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

  • Karabakh Rebuilds Schools

    Karabakh Rebuilds Schools
    Diaspora charities are helping in the reconstruction of the education system.
    By Ashot Beglarian in Nigi (CRS No. 382 08-Mar-07)

    IWPR

    Nagorny Karabakh has always been proud of its education system, with
    many Karabakhis from humble backgrounds going on to achieve
    intellectual excellence in other places.

    Schools managed to continue working during the war of 1991-94 but the
    conflict severely damaged the schools of Karabakh, with many destroyed
    in the fighting.

    In the last year both the government of the unrecognised republic and
    Armenian charitable organisations have stepped up efforts to help the
    struggling school system. The government increased its education
    budget by around a fifth for this year to five billion drams [around
    14 million US dollars], while far-flung Diaspora charities have made a
    crucial difference.

    And the money is badly needed, especially in the villages outside the
    capital, Stepanakert, where the situation is particularly hard. A
    total of206 of the republic's 238 schools lie in the regions, but only
    half the 21,000 pupils study there, with the other half going to
    schools in Stepanakert.

    The small village of Nigi, with a population of just 327, is an
    ancient settlement in the south of the republic. The village is
    surrounded by wooded hills on three sides and has a fine healthy
    climate. But the local secondary school is in bad shape.

    It's a two-storey structure that looks like a temporary shelter, but
    was actually built in 1931. On the first floor is a gym that does not
    function, because the floors are rotten and the plaster is peeling off
    the walls =80` meaning that the children play chess or drafts instead
    of doing physical education. There is no science laboratory, no
    library, a lack of textbooks and only one working computer.

    `Just about every year we make running repairs,' said headmistress
    Nelli Grigorian. `But the building needs a complete overhaul. In fact
    weneed a whole new school building.'

    There are 54 pupils, with the largest class having just 12 children in
    it and the first and second classes studying together. There are 17
    teachers,many of them part-time, but a lack of qualified
    specialists. English teacher Nanar Gasparian comes from Stepanakert,
    20 kilometres away, to give lessons and gets paid 50,000 drams [about
    140 dollars] a month, of which she spends 10,000 drams on transport.

    Given the situation, there are no outstanding students in
    Nigi. Grigorian said that the state of the school had a negative
    impact on its pupils and on the village as a whole, which already
    lives under the threat of landslidesthat threaten all its buildings
    and could mean Nigi will have to be relocated.

    The secondary school in Khramort in eastern Karabakh is in a much
    better situation, in large part thanks to charitable support from the
    Armenians of far-off Argentina.

    Most of the buildings in the village, including its school, were
    destroyed by artillery shells fired from the Azerbaijani town of
    Aghdam during the war, but a lot of rebuilding work has been done
    since then.

    `After the war the pupil's section of the school was restored, thanks
    to money collected by the Armenian community in Argentina,' said
    headmaster Armo Mkrtchian. `This year the rest of the school and the
    gym will be restored with state funding.'

    Khramort has a much larger younger population than Nigi and also has a
    kindergarten with 25 children in it. There are jobs here and little
    emigration - in fact people are returning to the village - something
    Karabakh president Arkady Gukasian is actively encouraging. `We have
    two objectives- for Karabakhis to live in Karabakh and for villagers
    to live in the villages,' he said. ` Because the best traditions are
    preserved in the villages,' he said on a visit to the village of
    Norashen last year.

    To encourage villagers home, several dozen schools throughout Karabakh
    have been rebuilt in recent years, and schools have been re-equipped,
    though more expensive items such as lab equipment and computers are
    still a luxury for most schools.

    Charitable support is helping a mass re-equipment programme. More than
    five thousand students from four Armenian universities are involved in
    a programme which has equipped the villages of Karabakh with more than
    12,000 books. The French charity Shen plans to supply 400 computers to
    villages in Karabakh.

    Shen is also involved in perhaps the most important work - giving
    support and training to Karabakh's hard-pressed teachers.

    More than 82 per cent of schoolteachers of Karabakh are women. The
    profession is still low-paid, with teachers getting around 150-160
    dollars a month. This means that there is still a constant deficit of
    people willing to go into the profession.

    The education ministry is embarking on its own reform programme to
    re-train teachers in line with international standards and to overhaul
    the structure of the school system. That includes the transition of
    schools to a 12-class system, with children starting at six rather
    than seven in a preparatory year.

    `Any closed system is doomed to die out,' education minister Kamo
    Atayan told a press conference last year.

    Ashot Beglarian is an IWPR contributor and freelance journalist in
    Nagorny Karabakh.
Working...
X