NICARAGUA: EDUCATION FOR ALL !

At the heart of NSC's Education Campaign is solidarity with the Nicaraguan government and non-governmental organisations in their efforts to reduce adult illiteracy and to meet the Millennium Development Goal of a complete primary education for all by 2015. This goal, set by the United Nations in 1999, receded as successive governments were forced by the IMF and the World Bank to cut public spending. Read on for encouraging news.

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NICARAGUA FREE OF ILLITERACY !

Photo: Municipal tree nursery workers on a literacy course
Credit: Jenny Matthews

President Daniel Ortega declared on August 22 that Nicaragua is a "territory free of illiteracy" after reducing the level of illiteracy from 20.7% nationally to 3.56% with the help of Cuba and Venezuela. Minister of Education Miguel de Castilla presented Ortega with a certificate of national achievement resulting from implementation of the Cuban adult literacy plan "Yo Si Puedo" (Yes I Can). "Today the FSLN, again in power, comes to this plaza to definitively declare the nation free from illiteracy. That is the social justice project of Sandinismo in power," declared de Castilla.

The reduction of illiteracy to 3 per 100 residents "has made history," by achieving that level for the first time since independence from Spain in 1821, Ortega said in a celebration carried live on radio and television from the Plaza of the Revolution before hundreds of youth, students, and literacy teachers. "If the people have education and have culture, the people learn to defend their rights," said Ortega. Ortega said the government would not be satisfied until there is not "a single illiterate person" in the country. He pledged to teach literacy to the Miskito and the other original peoples, and said for them "we will continue with education plans until we eradicate illiteracy totally."

Ortega announced that the next objective of the National Literacy Campaign is to raise the population to the 6th grade level by 2015. He said the plan is to incorporate the newly literate into the education system and to raise the quality of primary, secondary, and university education as one of the pillars for future national development.

El Nuevo Diario reported that over one million Nicaraguans learned to read and write during the two literacy campaigns; that of 1980 and the current one. The current literacy campaign, named after Jose Marti and Fidel Castro, began in 2007 with help from Cuba. De Castilla stated that 75% of those taught to read and write were people between 15 and 30 years old who were excluded from the educational system under the neo-liberal governments from 1990-2007 which eliminated free education. The United Nations Education, Science and Culture Organization (UNESCO) has certified that Nicaragua is "illiteracy free."

The celebration was held on the 29th anniversary of the conclusion of the first literacy campaign during the revolutionary Sandinista government when illiteracy was reduced from 53% to 12%. Sandinista commitment to literacy began with Carlos Fonseca in Pancasan in 1967 when he instructed the guerrillas to teach peasants to read. Ortega noted that the Nicaraguan oligarchy and Somoza dictatorship were not interested in educating people. He said the oligarchy and dictatorship had an interest in keeping the people ignorant in order to have cheap labor.

Under the governments of Violeta Chamorro, Arnoldo Aleman and Enrique Bolaños, illiteracy rose again to 30%. Ortega asked rhetorically why, with peace, no international economic crisis, and all the foreign aid received by the neo-liberal governments, were poverty and illiteracy so high? Ortega also said Nicaragua's enemies have changed. "The enemies of Nicaragua are not the Liberal Party families, neither are they the families of the Nicaraguan resistance, nor the Conservative Party. If people live in poverty, demanding a dignified house, who then are the great enemies? Poverty and ignorance," Ortega said.
 
Nicaragua Network Hotline 25/8/09

UN Commission Declaration

An independent commission created by the UN Education, Science and Culture Organization (UNESCO) declared on June 22 that Nicaragua had achieved a nationwide illiteracy level of 4.73%, qualifying it as a country free of illiteracy and making it the fourth country in Latin America to achieve this distinction. The others are Cuba, Venezuela, and Bolivia, all members of the Bolivarian Alternative for Our Americas (ALBA) cooperative trade group. 5% illiteracy is the global standard for full literacy. Juan Bautista Arrien, UNESCO representative, said that the commission was composed of members of the Ibero-American Education Organization, universities and other academic and research centres.

The process included randomly surveying 12,538 people in 22 municipalities. The survey had a margin of error of 3%. Arrien said that Monday was a significant day because the independent commission certified as successful the efforts of President Daniel Ortega and the Ministry of Education.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
NICARAGUA: FROM LITERACY CRUSADE TO LITERACY CAMPAIGN
 

It’s all about the loss of fear…the fear of expressing oneself, the fear of learning. All that has gone.

Catalina Torres, Nicaraguan Minister of Education 1980.

Sandinista literacy crusade 1980

Photo: Fiona Macintosh


On July 19, 1979 the brutal, corrupt Somoza dictatorship, sustained in power for 44 years with US backing, was finally ousted by the Sandinistas. Victory came at an enormous cost: 40,000 - 50,000 people had been killed out of a population of less than three million, the country was in ruins, state structures had fallen apart - no judiciary, no police, no army, and no state institutions – and agricultural production was paralysed.

The provisional government set about rebuilding the country by creating a new social and economic system. Within this context education was crucial in promoting new social values and political awareness. One of the legacies of the Somoza dictatorship was that half the adult population was unable to read or write and one third of children never attended school. For this reason the eradication of illiteracy was one of the highest priorities.

The insurrection against the Somoza dictatorship had unleashed a comradeship through shared experience and a tremendous sense of creative energy that could be channelled into the construction of a new society. The five month literacy crusade that began on 23 March 1980 involved the mobilisation of more than 60,000 young people who were dispersed to every corner of the country to teach local people to read and write and to participate in the life of the communities. The literacy crusade was also important in building a new relationship between the countryside and the city. One literacy volunteer commented:  ‘I want to go into the countryside and learn what it means to be a peasant in Nicaragua, to get rid this stupid idea that here’s the town and there’s the countryside, that they’re two different things. We’re all in this revolution together.’

Four hundred thousand people learned to read and write, reducing illiteracy from 50.3% to 12.9%. The crusade was internationally acclaimed, recognised by the UN when Nicaragua was awarded a prize by UNESCO in late 1980. Dr Juan Bautista Arríen, Permanent Secretary, UNESCO stated: ‘The Literacy Crusade impacted on everything that’s alive in a society. Nicaragua became a well-spring that attracted so many visitors, publications, information.  It became a kind of beacon, a symbol of what a country can do, above all through its young people.  It was extraordinary.’                                                                                          

Literacy campaign 2007 – 2009

Photo: Young people in Managua on a training course to become literacy campaign facilitators

Credit:
Jenny Matthews

 

For successive neo-liberal governments between 1990 and 2006 adult literacy was never a priority but literacy programmes continued in some parts of the country through the Carlos Fonseca Amador Association. When the FSLN returned to power at the beginning of 2007 illiteracy had once again risen to 25% of the adult population. For this reason, in July 2007 the new government launched a national literacy campaign to be administered through local councils with the aim of eradicating literacy by July 2009. ‘ Capitalism creates poverty, creates a few rich people and many, and a fundamental characteristic of poverty is illiteracy.  So our government must struggle not only with illiteracy, but with the ills created by poverty, of which illiteracy is just one – it’s a social consequence and a cause of poverty.’ Miguel de Castilla, Minister of Education

The literacy campaign, as with the literacy crusade of 1980, has involved the mobilisation of thousands of university students to work with community leaders to carry out surveys and to act as literacy facilitators. The method being used – Yo si puedo (Yes, I can) - was developed in Cuba and has been used successfully in more than 30 countries including Venezuela and Bolivia.

The method takes into account the socio-economic reality of the students  including street sellers, women, indigenous people and low-paid workers who missed out on school because they had little time to devote to education. The method is flexible and based on self-teaching. The students are assisted by a  facilitator who provides materials, equipment, logistical support, advice and  encouragement. Students are provided with a textbook and a workbook in their own language. In Nicaragua, this means the textbooks are in Spanish, English, Miskitu and Braille. Students and facilitators are supported by the Ministry of Education or NGOs who provide supervision and training while local councils give logistical support.  Eighty Cuban educationalists have also been involved in providing overall technical support and advice.

Implementing the literacy campaign in Managua

Photo: Literacy point 43 in Managua district 6

Credit: Jenny Matthews

 ' Illiteracy has become a pejorative term so we talk about people without letters, the newly literate or new readers.’ Susana Morales, coordinator of the literacy campaign in Managua

The programme started with the enormous task of  finding out how many  people were unable to read. This was carried out by the Autonomous University of Nicaragua (UNAN),  the National Engineering Institute and the National Agricultural University.  The universities  provided the students, transport and food and the lecturers supervised the students who carried out a census together with the literacy commission of the Managua Council and community  leaders in six districts. The students then analysed the data on the number of people in each neighbourhood unable to read and write.  After pilot projects to tailor the programme to local needs, the campaign was implemented at 600 literacy points in  six districts of Managua culminating in parties to celebrate  liberation from illiteracy.  

The government’s target is to reduce illiteracy to below 5% by this July so that Nicaragua can be declared a country free of illiteracy to coincide with the celebration on the 19th July of the 30th anniversary of the Sandinista Revolution. The  Ministry of Education plans to develop a programme to sustain the achievements of the literacy campaign through ongoing community education. 


INTERVIEW WITH SUSANA MORALES,
COORDINATOR OF THE LITERACY CAMPAIGN IN MANAGUA
NB. The full interview can be read in the new issue of our magazine, Central America Report.

Q:  How far has the Managua campaign reduced illiteracy?        

A:
When we began (four years ago), the rate was more than 8 percent. Last year, we closed with 1.7 percent. So I think this is a very successful project because we represent almost 32 percent of the population.

Q: What method do you use?

A: This project works in the neighbourhoods – unlike the national literacy campaign in the 1980s when people from urban areas  went to the rural areas.
In each neighbourhood, we identify how many people are illiterate and if they want to learn. We talk to local leaders and they promote the campaign and help us identify youngsters to work as facilitators and adults as supervisors. Then we train everyone in the methods. We work across the whole city, so we can free a lot of neighbourhoods from illiteracy in each eight to ten week cycle of instruction. Our people are in constant contact with the leaders, facilitators and the supervisors.

Q: What has been the reaction among communities?

A: People are very enthusiastic... we tell them we are just an engine because they are the ones doing the job. The young facilitators are also convinced of the importance of their work. We tell them they are the heroes of the community because they are helping their neighbours to be better and to improve the conditions in which people live. They don’t get paid. Instead, they have the satisfaction of promoting solidarity between people.

Q: Have there been any difficulties?

A: Sometimes there are people who don’t want to go to the literacy point. We have found this attitude in some old men, because they are machista. The facilitators have to go to their house and convince them to continue. We say that, to work in this project, you have to be in love with what you’re doing, and enthusiastic enough to convince  other people .

Q: Have you had enough funding for your work?

A: So far yes, because we are the capital city, but that’s not the situation of the rest of the 153 municipalities. Now we have a new challenge – those people who have become literate need to continue studying. We are doing an adult education pilot project so they can go through primary school in an accelerated way. But our Ministry of Education doesn’t have the budget, so we are in trouble.
Nicaragua Solidarity Campaign, June 2009

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