UAE: Efforts to boost Islamic education as enrolment slips

By Afshan Ahmed, The National, Dec 6, 2011 

The only Islamic institute in Abu Dhabi emirate is working to revise its curriculum and obtain international accreditation in order to encourage more Emiratis to pursue religious education.

The Islamic Institute follows the Ministry of Education curriculum with advanced Islamic courses in the higher grades. But it is struggling to attract pupils because its syllabus is outdated, educators say.

"All the Islamic books have been written in the '80s and the material used to teach children has not progressed," said Dr Karima Matar Al Mazroui, head of Arabic-taught curricula at the Abu Dhabi Education Council (Adec).

"Also, even though pupils do advanced courses, they do not get recognised, so that is something we are working to change."

She said the institute is looking at other well-established Islamic institutes in the Arab world and beyond to determine what accreditation would be most suitable.

The authority organised a two-day workshop, ending today, with Islamic scholars from Egypt, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia and the US to look at ways of updating the subject.

Sheikh Zayed, the founder of the UAE, set up the Islamic Institute in Al Ain in 1967 to promote Islamic culture and values among youth. It currently has 241 pupils - Emiratis and other Arabs.

Pupils take standard classes until grade five, after which they take four or five advanced courses in religion as well. In grade 12, they revert to the ministry curriculum.

Adec hopes to have a system in place by next year that takes a consistent approach through all years of schooling.

"We need to enhance the institute to get more students and give it its prestige back," said Dr Mugheer Khamis Al Khaili, the director general of Adec. "We have to produce pupils with the right calibre who are open-minded, flexible and respect others."

The institute was important, he said, in guiding pupils towards the right religious sentiments. "We need to introduce them to the right Islamic values so that can be clear from the different movements that are not linked to our religion."

Dr Yousef Al Balooshi, the head of the institute, stressed the need for more modern teaching methods. "We need to change the way we teach Islam and give them the latest technology."


Source:

Salary hike for Arabic teachers

From "Stipend of Madrasah teachers hiked" By TONY PE. RIMANDO, Manila Bulletin, November 20, 2011, 3:56pm

PAGADIAN CITY, Philippines – Department of Education (DepEd) Secretary Armin A. Luistro has ordered the increase to P5,000 each the monthly allowance of teachers of Madrasah (Islamic institutions of learning) deployed in various areas of Mindanao, and other Muslim-populated regions of the country.

Luistro said the Madrasah mentors (known as Asatidz) – who handle the Arabic Language and Islamic Values Education (ALIVE) subjects in public elementary schools – were previously paid a monthly allowance of P3,000 on top of the honorarium granted to them by concerned local government units (LGUs) where they are assigned.

The DepEd chief explained through Dr. Manaros Boransing, DepEd consultant for Muslim Education, that close to 2,500 Asatidz who passed the initial Arabic Qualifying Examination prior to their completion of the 23-day Pre-Service Training on Language Enhancement and Pedagogy, have been teaching ALIVE subjects for the past five years in various public elementary schools with substantial number of Muslim pupils.

Boransing said these Muslim pupil-populated elementary schools are located mostly in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) provinces of Basilan, Sulu, Tawi-Tawi, Maguindanao, and Lanao del Sur, even as other regions in the Southern Philippines as well as Metro Manila, Southern Tagalog, Central Luzon, and the Visayas where many Muslim families, largely due to their innate trading business, have virtu-ally transferred residence.

Boransing, a former executive of the Mindanao State University (MSU), said majority of the DepEd-hired Asatidz were earlier professionalized after completing the required two-year Accelerated Teacher Education Program (ATEP) developed by the education department in partnership with the Australian Agency for In-ternational Development (AusAID)-funded Basic Education Assistance for Mindanao (BEAM) project based in Davao City.

The ATEP, through a Memorandum of Agreement (MoA) with the education department, was offered by Mindanao-based state and private universities, which later conferred on the graduates appropriate Certifi-cates of Completion.

According to Boransing, some of these ATEP graduates, later hurdled the Licensure Examination for Teach-ers (LET) prompting the DepEd to permanently employ them as regular public elementary school teachers with a monthly entrance salary of over P15,000 each, Boransing said, adding that these DepEd-hired LET passer Asatidz were later replaced by newly trained and qualified Asatidz who took over the former’s positions as ALIVE subject tutors.

Boransing explained that through the teaching of ALIVE subjects, many Filipino Muslim pupils have become more disciplined and nationalistic without neglecting their devotion to their indigenous traditions and prac-tices as Muslims.

The DepEd consultant for Muslim Education expressed optimism that the teaching of Asatidz to Muslim children will ultimately help solve the peace and order problem in Mindanao, as the native pupils will grow to be more law-abiding, more productive, and more useful members of their respective communities.

Russia: Education As Main Means To Fight Islamic Extremism

From "Education As Main Means To Fight Islamic Extremism" 
By Svetlana Andreyeva, for VOR, November 20, 2011.

Speaking to Muslim clerics in the Russian Urals city of Ufa on Saturday, President Dmitry Medvedev admonished attempts to spread racial hatred in Russia ahead of the important political events there. All such attempts should be severely punished, Medvedev warned, citing the country’s legislation that he said should be used with respect to all Russian regions, including the Caucasus and the Far East.

A multi-national and multi-confessional country, Russia brings together Christian, Muslim, Jewish and other communities which are now in the process of cultivating relations. The Russian experience of such multiculturalism may be of use to EU countries, where interethnic tensions are not uncommon. In modern-day world, the main focus, however, should be placed on efforts to tackle extremism and radical Muslim movements, Dmitry Medvedev said:

“Ideologically, traditional Islam-leaning clerics are able to combat radicalism and extremism,” Medvedev says. “Actually, being in the dark on the ABC of religious culture makes a young man vulnerable to extremist trends. Religious illiteracy is fraught with serious repercussions in a person’s mind and actions,” Medvedev warns.

Offering full-fledged religious education may well help resolve the problem. The Russian government will allocate nearly one billion rubles, or more than 300 million dollars, for the training of Islamic history and culture specialists over the next three years. Russia has already adopted state standards for education in the field of “Islamic theology”. This has allowed leading universities to open departments for training Islamic clerics. One of such department was recently opened in Ufa, known as one of Russia’s Muslim centers.

During the Saturday gathering, President Medvedev separately touched upon the latest developments in Egypt, Syria and Libya:

“People’s push for democracy is only natural,” Medvedev says, referring to the ouster of what he called “old and rotten regimes”. “But the question is what has been obtained as a result. On the one hand, the regime change may lead to the development which is good, of course. But on the other, it may result in civil war which is absolutely inadmissible,” Medvedev warns.

The Russian president expressed hope that civil peace and religious and inter-confessional accord will eventually be in place in these three countries – something that Medvedev said would take a lot of time. In this connection, he called for more efforts to maintain peace in Russia.

Pakistan: Madaris preaching peace, says US Ambassador

From "Madaris preaching peace in Pakistan, says Munter" The Nation, November 18, 2011

FAISALABAD - US Ambassador to Pakistan Cameron Munter on Thursday said that Pakistani madrasas are preaching peace, adding that he could do nothing regarding drone attacks and that only the US government could stop them. 

“The issues between Pakistan and America are combined. Both the countries should make collective efforts to solve them, respect each other and fulfil our respective responsibilities,” Munter said while addressing an interfaith seminar held in Jamia Salafia in Faisalabad. He added, “The new generation must observe tolerance as Pakistanis want peace.”

Stressing collecting efforts for rooting out the elements behind sectarianism, the ambassador said that the interfaith seminar was a beginning. Munter, who was accompanied by his wife Dr Marilyn Wyatt and US Consul General Nina Fite, also expressed the hope that the bilateral issues would resolve soon. He was of the view that the best way to solve bilateral issues is negotiations and both the nations should try to understand bilateral viewpoints by trusting each other. He termed the Jamia Salfia a model for other religious seminaries. 

Thanking Jamia Principal Muhammad Yaseen Zafar and President Bashir Ahmad and Qazi Abdul Qadeer, he termed the seminar exemplary and praised the Jamia’s curriculum and system. 

On the occasion, Maulana Masood Alam said that Islam is the religion of peace while Maulana Zahid Qasmi said that madrasas are forts of peace and are imparting education and nothing else. Also a Hindu leader praised the seminar. 

According to a statement issued by the US Embassy, Munter applauded the participants for their efforts to make Pakistan a safer place for worshippers of all faiths, and by doing so building a stronger, more secure and prosperous Pakistan. 

He reiterated US support for religious freedom and the protection of religious minorities. He noted that Quaid-i-Azam Muhammed Ali Jinnah himself recognised the importance of freedom of worship for Pakistan’s growth and development.

Later, the delegation visited Ghosia Shrine. The seminar was attended by Bishop of the Church of Pakistan Samuel Azariah, Abdul Qadir Khomash from the Muslim-Christian Federation, All Pakistan Hindu Rights Movement leader Haroon Saryab-Dial, and Gauranat Narmak Gi Sikh Mission Chairman Dr Mampar Singh among others.

Nigeria: Almajiri Schools to receive school building support

From "FG to Disburse Funds for Construction of Almajiri Schools" by Favour Nnabugwu, 10 November 2011
__________________________________

The Federal Government will this week mobilise contractors for the immediate commencement of almajiri schools across states of the North and selected states of the South.

Minister of State for Education, Barrister Ezenwo Nyesom Wike in Yola recently after inspecting Girl Child Schools under construction by Universal Basic Education Commission, UBEC, in Adamawa State, said that funds for the construction of the Almajiri schools would be released to contractors this week.

Wike noted that President Goodluck Jonathan is committed to enhancing access to quality education amongst less privileged Nigerians.

For years now, the menace of idle children and youths roaming the streets begging all in the name of acquiring education has been a source of concern for policy makers in Nigeria.

Recent studies conducted by the Ministerial Committee on Madrasah Education puts the population of Almajari at about 10 million.

It therefore becomes obvious that for Nigeria to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and Education for All (EPA) goals, there is the need for an accelerated intervention by the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC).

The Integrated Almajari Education is essentially designed by the Federal Government under President Goodluck Jonathan to integrate the Islamic School system to provide quality education for these target population.

In order to achieve this, the Jonathan Goodluck administration put in place a policy framework which focuses on two critical levels.

The first is engagement with the rationalisation of the existing traditional system of Islamic education with a view to addressing existing problems and challenges, consolidating achievements and expanding opportunities for the growth and development of the system.

The commitment demonstrated by government in setting up an Implementation Committee on Almajari education is highly appreciated.

At various levels, stakeholders especially governments of the affected Northern States have devised various ways to deal with the social pandemic with little or no success inspite of their policy intervention.

The Minister said that the foundation laying ceremony for the construction of the Almajiri schools will be performed by President Jonathan in Sokoto in the coming weeks.

He said: "The funds for the construction of the Almajiri schools are available and the Federal Government is committed to completing these schools on schedule".

He commended UBEC for the progress made in the construction of Girl Child Education schools across Northern Nigeria.

At the Federal Government Girls College, Yola, the Minister expressed dissatisfaction with the environment of the school.

A Philippine Madrasah receives grant from IDB

Saudi Arabia (Jeddah) - The Islamic Development Bank (IDB) approved today the financing of US$ 511 Million for projects that included three mega projects namely, the US$ 222.70 Million Tirana-Elbasan Road in Albania, the US$ 107.81 Million Schools Development Program in Turkey and the US$ 95 Million Grain Steel Silos in Pakistan.

IDB statement said that the approved financing also included a package amounting to US$ 250 Million as grant dedicated to rendering the required technical assistance and supporting investments in IDB member countries for creating job opportunities for the youth, alleviating poverty, financing SME projects and capacity building.

The bank further approved a technical assistance grant for the preparation of non-oil export strategy for GCC member countries as well as grants from the WAQF Fund for different programs to be implemented for Muslim Communities in non-member countries including Ukraine, India, Tataristan and United States.

The projects approved included US$ 30.8 Million for Water Distribution Network Upgrading Project as well as construction of National Cardiac Center in Nouakchott, Mauritania; US$ 21 Million for Sana’a Water Supply Enhancement Project, Yemen, and US$ 500,000 for Establishment of phase I of a Children Care Center in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, (IDB Waqf Fund); US$ 219,000 for Expansion of Al-Munawwara Islamic School Building, Davao City, Philippines, (IDB Waqf Fund).

Source: http://www.english.globalarabnetwork.com/GCC-Business/saudi-arabia-islamic-development-bank-approves-511-million-for-mega-projects.html

Opinion: Islamic Schooling in Australia

By Siddiq Buckley for "In Retrospect", Islamic Foundation for Education & Welfare (IFEW) website.
__________________________________________

I have chosen the word schooling rather than the broad term education because in the Islamic view of the world there has been some form of Islamic education around since the time of Adam and Eve (peace be upon them both ). I would define Islamic Schooling to mean teaching the precepts of Islam in an institutional setting. This, especially in a country such as Australia, is a relatively modern phenomenon - as modern as the arrival of Muslims themselves.

My starting point is around 1860 C.E., when the first so-called Afghans came to Australia as camel- drivers for the ill-fated Burke and Wills expedition financed by the then Government of Victoria.

These hardy men (for there were virtually no women ever brought with them) helped pioneer the Outback and heralded a number of significant developments in Australia's history, of which the most famous and well remembered are the construction of 'The Ghan' - the railway line from Port Pirie in South Australia to Alice Springs - and the Overland Telegraph line from Adelaide to Port Darwin.

Great as their technological achievements were at that time, what we are concerned about is their spiritual development and legacy. A number of mosques (both large and small) were established by these Muslims, of which several still function to this day in capitals like Perth and Adelaide and some for other purposes, such as the local historical Museum in Broken Hill.

We can assume that even though the men intermarried predominantly with Aboriginal women. Attempts were made to educate their children in typical " Madrassahs " connected with, at least, some of those mosques. Sadly, however, a combination of isolation, harsh immigration policies and mechanisation dealt a severe, if not fatal, blow to those Muslims. Indeed, the spectre of the almost-complete disappearance of Afghan Muslims and early Islam in Australia is often cited and paraded before contemporary Muslims as an exhortation and warning not to let history repeat itself. Reminders occasionally bubble up to the surface of the present in the form of "Afghan anecdotes" - like that of an Australian Christian family whose surname is Mohammed or an advertisement in a national magazine for South Australian wine whose grower still bears a Muslim name.

The Albanians and others from the Balkan States who migrated here earlier this century after the collapse of the Ottoman empire fared just as poorly. These European Muslims were readily, if not actively, assimilated into the host society.

Undoubtedly, the biggest impact of Muslims in Australia has followed the civil war in Lebanon in the mid 1970s, when thousands of Arabic-speaking, quasi-refugees poured into urban centres such as Sydney and Melbourne within several years. Stereotypically, here in Australia, Islam is associated with Arabs and vice-versa (despite the fact that our nearest Asian neighbour, Indonesia, is in fact the most populous Muslim country in the world). Australian society paid scant attention to the thousands of Turks, Yugoslavs, Indians, Pakistanis, Malays and South Africans who settled here around the same time, because they were not so easily identified linguistically and culturally as Muslims.

In what ways did (and do ) these Muslims develop and extend Islamic schooling in Australia ?

Their efforts and activities can perhaps best be examined or observed at four distinct levels.

1. The Mosque
The traditional form of Islamic Schooling, incorporating the "Madrassah" style of education - learning the Quran by heart, sitting in study circles, listening to the Friday sermons and talks by visiting Muslims. This level of schooling puts a special emphasis on "religious" knowledge aimed at enabling the students to know some rights and duties as well as articles of faith relating to purpose in life and destiny.

2. The Ethnic School
A language "school" or class where the National language and culture of the specific ethnic group is taught. Generally this is for a few hours per week, usually held in a public school classroom after hours or on weekends. Because Islam is an inextricable part of the ethnic culture and ethos of the various Muslim communities, there is, in varying degrees, some form of Islamic schooling taking place. Naturally, it is predominant in Arabic language groups but also occurs in all other Muslim community languages. Outcomes for the children may range from increased Islamic awareness and native language acquisition, to little more than an appreciation of aspects of their parents' culture.

This type of schooling is regarded by the public school system as distinctly "second class", even though it attracts limited government funding and some pedagogical support from community- minded, multiculturally-inclined educators.
3. The Public School
In New South Wales, at least, there is in operation what is called "Special Religious Instruction" in public schools. Any religious group is entitled to conduct weekly lessons of about 30 - 45 minutes duration for children of their own denomination during regular school hours.

The Islamic Council of New South Wales runs such an "Islamic Scripture Teaching Program" and attempts to cater to the needs of thousands of Muslim students in approximately 200 public schools in the greater Sydney Metropolitan area. Some of these schools are predominantly Muslim - their student enrolment may be 70% Muslim or more.

The "teachers" are all volunteers - concerned parents and individuals - of whom only a handful are actually trained in the profession. The Council attempts to assist them by offering inservice courses and incentives such as travel expenses, and has even gone so far as to provide - through the personal efforts of a Muslim lady teacher - an "Islamic Syllabus" ( in Arabic and English ) to provide instruction and materials for them to use in the classroom. Despite all these good intentions and resources, the Program itself is unfortunately not a success. Many factors account for this.

Principal among them is the lack of suitably qualified and experienced teachers. Secondly, the environment in which the lessons are held is often not very conducive to successful learning outcomes. The pupils themselves are frequently embarrassed, reluctant or unwilling to participate in the classes, due to low self-esteem and lack of pride in Islam. This is caused by factors such as extreme peer group pressure to conform to the dominant, secular, hedonistic and materialistic mode of contemporary society, and the desire to be accepted or integrated uniformly into that society.

Australia is sometimes described as having a distinct cultural fringe vis-a-vis Anglo-Celtic or European culture, and it appears to me that within that fringe there exists a smaller Islamic religious or Muslim cultural fringe. There is some truth in the statement - reputed to have come from George Bernard Shaw - that Islam is the best religion but Muslims are the worst followers.

Muslims now constitute the largest religious minority in Australia. They are free - according to the Australian Constitution - to practise their religion : "The Commonwealth shall not make any law ... for imposing any religious observances, or for prohibiting the free exercise of any religion". But the States are not legally bound to either protect or enforce this. As a result, Muslims have encountered an array of problems in obtaining and practising their God-given rights, whether personal, human or religious.

Yet the difference between our struggle here and those of our brothers and sisters elsewhere is dramatically simple - we are not dying for the sake of Islam here. The battle here is not physical but mental. It is a battle for our hearts and minds. No-one is putting a gun to our heads. It is subtle and often subliminal. The 'enemy' creeps forward insidiously and ubiquitously.

We - especially our children - are being seduced, pushed, invited and fooled into surrendering to the glamorous, glittering, exciting hedonism of the 21st century.

Does this sound reactionary? Perhaps, even (to appropriate that Christian term) "Fundamentalist"? No-one denies the fact that Australia is still a lucky country; if we compare our relative peace and security, our standard of living, our goods and services, our democratic rights and freedoms with any other country in the world, we come out very much near the top.

Yet despite all these benefits there are drawbacks. A more critical observation of this country reveals a declining moral standard, and Islam is completely opposed to this. Islam is an ethical and moral system incorporated into a distinct way of life. Its worldly view is also other-worldly. It regards the present while considering the future. Tomorrow, rather than yesterday, underpins today.

We Muslims must look forward to the Afterlife and the inescapable accountability that awaits us there. This is undoubtedly the major factor that has contributed to the creation of the fourth area or level.
4. The Muslim School

If you were to ask the founders and principals of Muslim schools the reasons why such schools were established, the answers are invariably the same. They include very broad aims or goals such as :
  • to achieve the highest possible standard of moral behaviour and ethical attitudes.
  • to provide the children with an Islamic environment free from undesirable social values.
  • to develop and foster a complete Muslim identity and personality within the child.
  • to equip the Muslim children with the necessary knowledge, skills, attitudes and behaviours to enable them to contribute meaningfully to the general harmony, prosperity and good of their community and the overall society.
  • to develop Muslim Australian citizens who will be able to cope with the increasing demand and pressures of the global society and act as "Ambassadors of Islam" to the world.
Muslim schools in Australia are a newly-emerging part of the National education scene. They are part of the Independent (non-Government, non-systemic) schools system, and have been in existence for only the last 15 years.

Currently there are about 20 Muslim schools around Australia :
  • Sydney (New South Wales) :
  • Al-Noori Muslim Primary School (Greenacre)
  • Arkana College (Kingsgrove)
  • Malek Fahd Islamic School (Chullora)
  • Noor al-Houda Islamic College (Condell Park)
  • Suburban Islamic School (Minto)
  • Sule College (Prestons)
  • An-Nahaayan Islamic School (Chullora)
  • King Abdul Aziz Primary School (Rooty Hill)
  • Melbourne (Victoria) :
  • King Khalid Islamic College of Victoria (Coburg)
  • The Islamic Schools of Victoria (Werribee)
  • Islamic College of North Western Region (Broadmeadows)
  • Minaret College (Springvale)
  • Perth (Western Australia) :
  • Australian Islamic College (Booragoon)
  • Al-Hidayah Islamic School (Victoria Park)
  • Brisbane (Queensland):
  • Islamic School of Brisbane (Upper Mt Gravatt)

A handful of newly-established schools have also come into existence with the recent abolition of the previous Labor Government's "New Schools Policy".

At the moment, most of these schools are relatively small and overall student enrolments are statistically tiny. But the impact of such schools has been tremendous. National attention has been focussed on these schools on many occasions. Throughout the crisis of the Gulf War, media coverage of the schools, their staff, their students and their communities has been generally favourable and has even sometimes been managed (if not manipulated ) by the Muslims for their benefit.

A classic example involved Al-Noori Muslim Primary School in Sydney. In the late 1980s a long, costly struggle through two Land and Environment Court cases brought to the surface a surprising amount of racism, bigotry, religious intolerance and ill-feeling. "Nothing new!", you might say, given Australia's historical background: its parochialism, insularity and xenophobia; its shocking and inhumane treatment of the Aboriginal population; and the even older repugnance and fear of Islam and Muslims created and propagated for the last thousand years by a "Christian Europe". However, neighbourly relations were slowly ameliorated as the School was seen to be caring and concerned for everybody - not just Muslims. In particular, action was taken when it was revealed that an elderly neighbour's grandson (a civil airline pilot) was one of the Australian hostages in Kuwait. The children were mobilised into writing directly to President Saddam Hussain and their letters were personally taken to Bagdhad by former Minister, Mr Tom Uren. The media's attitude was completely positive, supportive and even mildly enthusiastic.

It was probably the first instance ever in Australia that Muslims were portrayed as both patriotically Australian and genuinely Muslim at the same time. It did a great deal of good at a very critical and precarious moment. It also had a happy ending. The Australian hostages were all released within about two weeks and the School's targeted "hostage" made a special visit to the School upon his return to Australia to give the students a very warm "Thank you".

It had a profound impact upon the children, by making them realise that even a small effort on their part for the sake of Islam can have a tremendous, beneficial outcome. It was truly an education in itself.

It is important for Muslims - if my argument about being future-oriented is to have any currency or legitimacy - to have vision and plan ahead, if possible. For too long we have been moving forward by looking backwards, like a car being driven by looking into the rear-vision mirror only, rather than though the windscreen to the road ahead.

Let me return to the impact of these schools on the Australian educational environment. As I said, they are statistically insignificant, catering for approximately 5000 Muslim students. If we accept a total figure of 300,000 Muslims in Australia, and we estimate that 70% of them are school-age students, then these Muslim schools are catering for less than 2.5% of the total Muslim student population.

Yet in terms of fostering community pride; its sense of establishment and development; in finding its niche or being accepted into the Australian society; in being seen to be part of the social, cultural and educational landscape; in short, in becoming part of the status quo, the Muslim school is a very important part of the community.

Indeed there is a growing body of opinion amongst the various Muslim ethnic groups that schools and not necessarily mosques should have top priority in their short and long-term plans. Given Local Government constraints with their planning, environmental and building ordinances, it would be theoretically easier and more practical to put a mosque within a school than a school within a mosque.

Despite the ever-present problems of lack of funding, bureaucratic obstruction and neglect, apparent lack of concern from some quarters of our own community, and so on, these schools are persevering in their own Jihad to establish Islam as a permanent part of the Australian environment.

Their founders have surveyed the educational landscape and have found it wanting. This does not mean to say that the State Education Departments have not moved with the times. We are all aware of the term "Multiculturalism", its implications and its efforts - even if only to a limited degree. These Departments have tried to be sensitive to Muslim needs, updating their curricula and teaching materials in attempts to boost the identity and morale of Muslim students, especially at the Secondary school level.

In 1991 NSW Muslims played their part in the development of a Curriculum Resources Project (in conjunction with the Department of School Education ) about Islam. Again, this is an example of how the Muslim schools are acting as resource and information centres for the broader school system.

Spin-offs such as these materials are a natural outcome of the development of Muslim schools. What these schools are doing for their own students can be modified and applied both to Muslim and non - Muslim students within the public sector. The community as a whole will then gain the benefit of appropriate and honest information about Islam. In the broadest context, then, it can been seen that Muslim schools are both potentially and actually having much wider educational effect than their numbers suggest.

It is hoped this effect will be multiplied by the recent formation of the Australian Council for Islamic Education in Schools (ACIES ), a joint, national body comprising membership from most of the Muslim schools. This Council looks forward to the day when Muslim schools will enjoy the same status and recognition as Christian schools (especially the Catholic, systemic ones ) and Jewish schools. The fact that the Council's application to the Australian Taxation Office to be granted tax deductibility for donations (Section 78 ) has been rejected seems to fly in the face of the Australian Education Council's recommendations about the goals for schooling in Australia. "Common and Agreed Goal" number 3 quite clearly states :
"To promote equality of education opportunities, and to provide for groups with special learning requirements".

The Tax Office is, practically speaking, creating a religious apartheid, and would appear to contradict all of its own Government's rhetoric on fostering multiculturalism, excellence, equity, and equality of opportunity.

Muslims have highlighted the importance of their religious and cultural identity through the creation of their own schools. They see these institutions as their best positive defence against the perceived threat of the undermining of their religious and cultural consciousness. The Muslims of the 21st century are not going to become like the Afghans of the 19th century, if Allah wills.

6 out of 216

Alhamdulillah! Sixe (6) more ATEP Grantees/ALIVE asatidz passed the September 2011 LET. Mabrook!
  • ABDULKARIM, WADIE ALIMAN; 
  • DAWAMI, MOHAMMAD ALI SAMLA; 
  • PADO, SALAM DISIMBAN; 
  • PAGABANGAN, CRIS QUIZADA; 
  • SAKIRAL, ALKASABI ABDILLA;
  • SANGCOPAN, NORBAISAH ALAPA
Source:

Manila Mayor Lim wants Muslim culture taught in schools

From Manila Bulletin and republished in Cathnewsphil in September 8, 2011

MANILA Mayor Alfredo Lim on Tuesday urged the city’s education sector to include a subject in Muslim culture in the high school curriculum to ensure better understanding between the Christian and Muslim communities.

He called on Division of City Schools Superintendent Ponciano Menguito, noting that students should also be educated on Muslim presence which pre-dated the occupation by Spanish, British, Japanese and American colonizers.

“For national unity, for lasting peace, there is a great need for Filipinos to study and analyze Muslim Filipino history since this has not been effectively achieved,” said Lim.

He expressed hope that the peace process in Mindanao would continue so that Christians and Muslims could live peacefully together.

Bae Bayolan Tamano Marohombsar, Lim’s consultant on Muslim Affairs, said the celebration of Eid’l Fitr in the capital alongside the Black Nazarene procession and other Christian festivities underscored coexistence of dominant faiths in a growing population.

Council of Ulamas of the Philippines President Aleem Sayd Bashr conveyed the Muslim community’s gratefulness to Allah for having Lim’s vision for Muslims and Christians to live together in peace and prosperity.

Report from Manila Standard Today

An Islamic school for learning dialogue and universal brotherhood in Zamboanga

Zamboanga City (Agenzia Fides) – A madrasa where alongside the teachings on the Koran, there will also be lessons on dialogue and brotherhood with all mankind and with believers of all religions. It is a school for learning the Koran that will become promoter of a moderate Islam that rejects hate, violence, war, death, and favors the education of young people in respecting life. The initiative has been organized by the Islamic-Christian Center “Sisilah” that has been working for 25 years in the southern Philippine Islands, on the island of Mindanao, in the city of Zamboanga.

The “Sisilah” (meaning “chain”) Movement was founded by PIME missionary Fr. Sebastiano D'Ambra and includes many members, including Muslim collaborators. It has always been an untiring promoter of dialogue among believers, of friendship and respect among Muslims and Christians, of universal brotherhood, uniting people of diverse cultures and religions, organizing concrete initiatives of peace and reconciliation among the different communities.

The Center works mainly in the formation of youth, holding encounters with Christian and Muslim school and university students, to encourage dialogue, reciprocal knowledge, and a culture of peace.
It is now working on a completely new initiative, the institution of a school for learning the Koran, approved by the Office for Muslim Affairs of the government, which will insert the dialogue style of Sisilah into the teachings on Islam.

The initiative has begun thanks to efforts from the Interfaith Council of Leaders, formed by Christian and Muslim leaders in the Zaboanga area. The school is near Pitogo, in the Sinunuc area, not far from Harmony Village, also founded by “Sisilah” in Zamboanga.

The various curriculum and teachings are given by renowned professors of Islam, contributing to the school's credibility and stability.

Present at the school's inauguration ceremony was Prof. Sharif Jullabbi and Abdul Haki, and Christians such as Fr. Sebastiano D'Ambra and Dr. Minda Sano, current President of the “Sisilah” Movement. “It is a dream come true,” members of “Sisilah” say, with the hope that the initiative will encourage dialogue and peace. 

“Sisilah,” the pioneer movement for Islamic-Christian relationships, has taken an important step and they hope to be followed by others. (PA) (Agenzia Fides 20/11/2008)

Australia: Malek Fahd Islamic School 'fees' funding Australian Federation of Islamic Councils

By Leo Shanahan, The Australian August 22, 2011 12:00 AM

THE nation's peak Muslim body is extracting millions of dollars in rent and fees from a successful Islamic school in Sydney that draws most of its funding from taxpayers.

Documents reveal the Malek Fahd Islamic School paid the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils $5.2 million last year alone, an amount equal to one-third of the school's educational funding from the federal and state governments.

An investigation by The Australian has uncovered millions of dollars in funds charged to the school, including unexplained "management fees".

The school has also been charged $2.59m in back rent after AFIC retrospectively altered a lease agreement in 2009.

Last year, it paid $3.15m in "management fees" to AFIC, which included $2.2m in "management fees back charge".

AFIC, also known as Muslims Australia, has not explained how the fees are being spent by the organisation, despite detailed questions from The Australian.

Malek Fahd, in Greenacre in Sydney's west, received $15.7m in educational funding from the commonwealth and NSW governments last year, accounting for 74 per cent of its overall income.

According to the school's financial statement, it received a total of $19.6m in government funding last year, with the figure boosted by cash from the federal government's Building the Education Revolution program.

The school of about 2000 students is widely considered a success story for Islamic education in Australia, rating 15th in NSW HSC system ratings last year and in the top 10 in 2007.

The school is listed as independent and is a separate legal entity from its landowner and founder AFIC. Government funds are given directly to the school, not to AFIC.

Both are not-for-profit organisations, with the school entitled to a range of tax concessions as a charitable institution.

In 2008, a lease was signed between the school and AFIC that set annual rent for the Greenacre property at $1.3m, but documents reveal that in 2009 the lease was changed to increase the rent to $1.5m a year. The agreement was backdated to January 2004, resulting in a one-off payment of $2.59m going to AFIC.

According to the school's last financial report, another deal saw the school hand over a lump sum of $2.2m in backdated management fees to AFIC, with another $959,800 handed over for management costs in that year.

Neither the school nor AFIC can explain what the management fees are charged for.

AFIC president Ikebal Patel, who has held the role since 2007, is also the chairman of directors of the school. He was briefly removed from the position of AFIC president by the AFIC congress in 2008, but was reinstated after a complex federal court challenge to the legitimacy of the vote.

When asked by The Australian how he explained the fees being charged to the school and where and how AFIC was spending the funds, Mr Patel said: "The financial statement is out there. If you want to discuss anything else I'm happy, but I'm not going to discuss any of this."

Mr Patel has not replied to questions in writing about how the large fees were justified or where the money was being spent.

Mr Patel would also not answer questions as to how much he or other members of the AFIC executive were personally drawing in income or any other payment from AFIC funds.

Intaj Ali, the school's principal, told The Australian that "all questions about the school's finances should be directed to the school's director, Ikebal Patel".

However, it is understood that Dr Ali - a respected educator who has been principal since the school's inception in 1990 - is privately furious over the manner in which AFIC has been using the school's funds.

Senior figures at the school and in the Islamic community are angry the school is being denied its funds to reinvest into the school, which has large classes and generally caters to students of non-English speaking backgrounds and of lower socioeconomic groups. The school receives proportionately larger government funding for this reason.

The Greenacre school site was purchased by AFIC in 1989 for about $2.2m with funds from the Saudi royal family. The school, which charges fees of about $1200 a year, has been responsible for funding the construction of its own buildings.

Along with Mr Patel as chairman of directors of the Malek Fahd, the school's board also has several other AFIC executives. These include AFIC vice-president Hafez Kassem, treasurer Mohamed Masood and assistant AFIC treasurer Ashraf Usman Ali.

Neither the commonwealth nor the NSW education department has provided comment on the matter, but The Australian understands the school's funding issue has been brought to the attention of NSW Premier Barry O'Farrell's office.

Source: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/malek-fahd-islamic-school-fees-funding-australian-federation-of-islamic-councils/story-fn59niix-1226119264022

Becoming an MI-inspired teacher

By HENRY S. TENEDERO, Manila Bulletin Online, August 18, 2011

Henry S. Tenedero, AIM MDM President, Center for Learning and Teaching Styles, Philippinesand MINDful Ideas Executive Vice President, Philippine Marketing Association (PMA) Executive Board Director, International Learning Styles Network, US and Scandinavia Founder, Communities Honoring Individual Learning Diversity (CHILD) President, Thomasian Alumni Leaders Association, Inc. (UST TALA)Email: htenedero@yahoo.com cp # 0917-473-0307

To me, the concept of Multiple intelligence (MI)theory transcend what its description. As a Muslim engaged in the education sector, MI aligns itself with the quest for justice. Being just to each student and developing the child based on personal and potential capacity rather than treating all like an 'assembly line'. And this sense of justice echoes the education philosophy articulated by the likes of Al-Ghazzali.
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MANILA, Philippines — Multiple intelligence (MI) teaching is not different from what many teachers have been doing. It does however challenged the purely lecture-then-test approach procedures and be replaced with enhanced activities catering to diverse, authentic and meaningful programs and activities.

There is not one correct way to teach MI but instead there are ranges of options that one may consider as starting points. The art of MI teaching is a personal activity that requires careful thought regarding individual growth and professional effectiveness.

HOW TO EXPAND YOUR STRENGTHS. Add one intelligence at a time to your teaching in a way that is comfortable for you but still stretches your teaching repertoire. Develop a year long personal development plan to add one or several different MI teaching activities. Gather like-minded colleagues and brainstorm MI strategies.

HOW TO DEVELOP AND USE THE POWER OF THE MI LANGUAGE. Use MI language to unpack your thinking to describe how you solve problems, create things and provide valuable projects. Bring in expert guests (engineers, architects, social workers, clergy, musicians, etc) to teach students the language used by people in the filed. Connect MI to the school's curricular and extra-curricular activities.

HOW TO HIGHLIGHT AN MI DAY/WEEK/MONTH. Make one minute MI news flash! Bring in expert guest who exemplifies the assigned intelligence. Teach alternative strategies using each intelligence. Have student expert volunteers speak briefly on the daily MI and how it is used in their career paths.

HOW TO INTEGRATE MI INTO LESSON PLANS. Put the development of student self-awareness on the front burner of your curriculum. Give a range of MI choices for projects and learning activities. Provide forms for student self-assessment. Have students use goal setting, project planning, self-monitoring and evaluation forms. Provide opportunities for feedback and evaluation to the students.

HOW TO HIGHLIGHT STUDENT STRENGTHS. Make careful observations of your students and create assessment of their MI. Recognize and value students who are strong in non-academic area and link it to the curriculum. Make strong efforts to connect student strengths and the curriculum material. Avoid making comments about student abilities that create paralyzing negative experiences.

A MANY-SPLENDORED THING

Howard Garder introduced MI in his groundbreaking book "Frames of Mind’’ in 1983. Since then intelligence has been redefined as a "many-splendored" thing. Dr. Gardner's contribution has been hailed by educationists around the world and indeed it has totally changed our perceptions about education, and about life in general.

Dr. Brandon Shearer, in his presentation during our Multiple Intelligences, Learning Styles and Assessments International Conference has creatively put the transition steps from IQ to MI - Awareness - Acceptance - Integration - Community Connections - Lifelong Learning and service.

There is indeed a felt need within the Philippine education community for a renewal of the education system so that it can better serve the developmental needs of our nation and of our people.

In place of the tradItional IQ-based theory and learning processes limiting human intelligence to linguistic and logical-math spheres, Gardner's MI is a more accurate and dynamic description of the vast and varied intellectual potentials of each individual learner.

After all we keep on saying that between hope and despair, education is the great equalizer!

BETWEEN HOPE AND DESPAIR, EDUCATION IS STILL THE GREAT EQUALIZER

Source: http://www.mb.com.ph/articles/331115/becoming-miinspired-teacher


Holistic learning and the learning atmosphere

By HENRY S. TENEDERO, Manila Bulletin Online, August 11, 2011, 8:00am. The author is the president of the Center for Learning and Teaching Styles and MINDful IDEAS, an affiliate of the International Learning Styles Network, based at St. John’s University in New York.

Why patronize holistic learning? Isn't Islamic education about "dunya" and "akhirat" together?
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MANILA, Philipppines — All learning involves our body, mind, emotions, attitudes and others. All of our feelings, beliefs, personal problems, and attitudes affect our learning capacity. Teachers need to consider the emotional disposition of students because those who are not emotionally disposed will not achieve optimal learning.

Holistic learning recognizes the body-mind-feeling linkage.

Negative emotions need to be processed while the positive ones need to be drawn out. Engaging the total human person - body, mind, spirit - with emotionally provoking activities improve learning and retention.

The classroom learning environment involves design, seating arrangement, temperature, color, sound, light, and peripheral learning materials. Generally, the seating arrangement is linear for easeon the part of the teacher to check
attendance.

The sitting posture is so formal that students endure sitting with only four square inches of the bones to support the upper body weight. Because of the resulting discomfort, students become fidgety and uneasy and are misconstrued to be misbehaving.

Perhaps it is time that students are allowed to sit in a manner convenient to them. Where environment is also concerned, perhaps classical music or different kinds of light that the students prefer might be used. Both factors have been proven to increase learning retention.

Peripheral learning like posters, charts, graphs and quotations allow the students to peripherally intensify and enforce their learning and memory retention unconsciously.


The teacher factor

Teacher-factor is very important. A highly motivated teacher excites and emotionally provokes students to learn. Almost always, a boring teacher produces a boring class. There are no boring subjects.

How subjects come across depends on the presentation and modality emPloyed by the teacher. Teachers need to enhance and update their facilitation skills. Authority in the realm of teaching and training implies being a person who is worth listening to.

The culture or habit of affirming a student instead of laughing at his mistakes need to be developed.

Laughing at a student's mistakes damages his self-esteem. Students attain optimal learning and memory retention given a meaningful and positive learning climate, whether at home or in school, like positive comments, joyfulness, childlikeness, social acceptance, enthusiasm, and stimulating challenges.

Source: http://www.mb.com.ph/articles/330189/holistic-learning-and-learning-atmosphere

Education and religion

By Amina Rasul, Surveil at Business World, posted on July 21, 2011

BEIJING -- It is wet here in Beijing and I am glad that I am spending three days indoors, with 20 experts on religion, education, and social development.

We are participating in a small conference focusing on Islam and security, hosted by the Institute for Global Engagement (IGE) of Washington DC and the Chinese government’s think tank, the Institute of Ethnic Minority Groups.

While listening to Chris Seiple of the IGE focus our attention on the role that religion can play in helping communities grow stronger in a rapidly modernizing and globalizing world or its role to create societal instability, I could not help but think of President Benigno Simeon Aquino III’s forthcoming State of the Nation Address (SONA) on Monday. What will PNoy announce on the peace processes that affect Mindanao? What will he announce as part of the agenda to reform the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao, now that he has approved the law postponing the ARMM elections?

Certainly, many groups espousing a variety of issues are expecting the President to mention their advocacies. And typical of post-SONA discourses, some sectors will probably criticize the President’s speech for lack of details and specific plans.

For Muslims in the Philippines, there is an expectation that the SONA will go beyond the obligatory call for peace and development in Mindanao. To my mind, investment in education is clearly required to lay a strong foundation for peace and development in Mindanao, especially Muslim Mindanao. For instance, why isn’t government investing more in literacy for adults? If a mother is illiterate, can you expect her to raise educated children? The Magbassa Kita Foundation Inc. (MKFI) supported by the USAID is implementing the Literacy for Peace and Development (LIPAD) to help our communities find their wings to fly out of an oppressive situation. No-brainers.

Islamic Education and Peace
However, let me devote this column to an aspect of education not as well discussed or supported by government’s policymakers: the role of the madrasah or Islamic schools. First, Muslims thank the Aquino administration and the Department of Education for releasing over P250 million last week to pay for the salaries and strengthening of the madrasah and the Arabic Language and Islamic Values Education (ALIVE) program of the public schools in Muslim communities.

It is estimated that there are between 600 and 1,000 madaris (plural of madrasah) in Mindanao with a total student population of between 60,000 and 100,000. Aside from the madaris, the DepEd has 459 public schools nationwide now offering ALIVE to Muslim students as part of their civic education.
A lot has been written about the conflict in Mindanao and how to bring about peace and development to the millions of Muslims, Christians, and Lumads who continue to suffer from poverty and powerlessness. For conflict-affected communities, the centerpiece of any administration’s strategy has been, and continues to be, the formal peace process. It is an attempt to bring about a politically negotiated settlement to the conflict in Mindanao.

We, at the Philippine Center for Islam and Democracy (PCID), continue to support the peace talks. We are, in fact, one of the local civil society organizations that are involved with the International Contact Group. But based on our experience, we know that there are complementary initiatives that can potentially bring about peace in Mindanao without waiting for the signing of a peace agreement. For instance, the strengthening of madrasah education is one of the ways to ensure that a culture of peace can be established that can support the gains of the peace process.

Education in the traditional madrasah focuses on Islamic values, Islamic religion, and the Arabic language. The madrasah system is a highly valued tradition that is instrumental in the preservation of Islamic religion and culture. The madrasah tradition is considered vital for the Muslim community. It is both an educational and socio-political institution that has, since its founding, kept the Muslim community united in their faith.

Its significance is highlighted by the fact that the 1996 Final Peace Agreement between the government and the Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) guaranteed state support for Islamic education.

There are several types of madaris. Traditional or Weekend Madrasah refers to classes that are held on weekends (Saturdays and Sundays) only or on days agreed upon by the teachers and students. There is no formal curriculum, hence it is non-graded and may have multi-age groupings. The students in this type of madrasah are also likely the students enrolled in public schools.

The formal madrasah offers hierarchically structured education and sequential learning generally attuned with the formal education system and offers kindergarten, primary, and secondary education. As former Education Undersecretary Monaros Boransing noted, most traditional and formal madaris are not recognized by the Department of Education (DepEd) if their curriculum is not compliant with the government’s national educational system. As such they are outside the formal system of national education, and not subject to government supervision and control.

Thankfully, government (national and ARMM) and the madaris administrators have been collaborating on the development of the Integrated Madrasah, which offers the public school curriculum as add-on to Islamic religious subjects and Arabic.

Despite the initial steps taken to encourage development of the madrasah system in the country, many challenges remain. The madaris continue to grapple with poor curriculum and quality of instruction, inadequate facilities and inadequate funding. Financial support for the madaris has been largely non-existent and there is also minimal coordination and networking among the different groups involved in madrasah projects. Better linking between and among the different groups would avoid duplication of projects and allow organizations to build on the success of others. This has the potential of maximizing the impact of the various programs and focusing efforts, not to mention resources, on areas that require greater support.

Apart from upgrading its capabilities so that it can become part of the national education system, the madrasah can also become the heart of the community and be the center for community outreach. PCID has been working since 2004 with Muslim religious leaders to this end. We are working on capacity building for the aleemat of the Noorus Salam (Light of Peace) who teach in the madrasah to provide services to the community: health, literacy, livelihood training, peace education, civic education and interfaith dialogue.

We have worked with our aleemat to utilize the Islamic peace education module we had developed, which draws on the Qur’an and the hadith to teach about peace and rights, and responsibilities. (If a religious school does not teach about peace and responsibilities and rights, who can?)

The initiative of the PCID to engage the Muslim religious leaders allows us to build their capacity and the madrasah to help our Muslim communities find the will and the ability to deal with the many problems that confront us, to include poverty, marginalization, armed conflict, and the lure of lawlessness.

And so as President Aquino III enters the second year of his presidency, we hope that his administration can support the development and institutionalization of Madrasah education. (Under the previous administration, there was a DepEd Road Map for Upgrading Muslim Basic Education: A Comprehensive Program for the Educational Development of Filipino Muslims.)

We believe that this is an important part of any efforts to bring peace in Mindanao. It is a program that respects the cultural and religious identity of the Muslims and provides a platform for the development of a culture of peace in the region.

DepEd to strengthen Madrasah education

By INA HERNANDO-MALIPOT
July 16, 2011

MANILA, Philippines — The Department of Education (DepEd) is strengthening Madrasah education to put Muslim students on equal footing with students from regular schools in finding employment after graduation.

According to Education Secretary Armin Luistro, strengthening the education of Muslim students will give them “an equal chance of being employed as their counterparts in sectarian and non-sectarian schools because they have been properly prepared.”

Luistro said Madrasah education is one of President Benigno S. Aquino III’s priorities in his 10-point education agenda. “For 2011, he approved the allocation of P300 million—from P200 million in 2010—to fund various initiatives to ensure that the education the Muslims get is culturally-sensitive, Islam-friendly and able to respond to their learning needs,” he said.

When Luistro assumed office last year, one of the first things he did was create the Office of Madrasah Education under the Undersecretary for Programs and Projects, Dr. Yolanda Quijano. It replaced the Office of Muslim Affairs which used to be headed by an undersecretary. “Since DepEd is allowed only four undersecretaries, the former undersecretary was retained as consultant,” Luistro said.

He acknowledged the need to have an undersecretary and a separate office when Madrasah education was on its development stage. “But now that it is on its seventh year and the foundations have been laid, its operations have been integrated under the undersecretary for programs and project,” he said.

Early this year, the DepEd chief also signed a memorandum of agreement with Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM) Governor Ansarrudin Alonto-Adiong for the implementation of Arabic Language and Islamic Values Education (ALIVE) curricula in the region.

“Because of concerns in the past, no education secretary in previous administrations was able to implement ALIVE in the ARMM where it is critically needed,” Luistro said. And, to get things started, he ordered the release of R75 million for preparatory activities such as the orientation and training of Muslim teachers or “asatidz.”

“This is the first time it is going to be implemented in ARMM even as ALIVE is already taught in public schools and private Muslim schools (madaris) nationwide,” Luistro said.

ALIVE’s curriculum for the elementary level, which was first implemented in school year 2005-2006, was reviewed and refined last year with SEAMEO-INNOTECH as service provider.

The outcome was the Refined Elementary Curriculum (REMC) which was jointly revisited by curriculum experts from DepEd’s Bureau of Elementary Education and Ulama (Muslim educators).

Indonesia: Police arrest head of Islamic school

From:AAP, July 16, 2011 12:01AM

POLICE say they have arrested the headmaster of an Islamic boarding school where a man died earlier this week, reportedly while trying to teach students how to make homemade bombs.

National Police spokesman Brig Gen Ketut Untung Yoga said yesterday that authorities believe the school - set up nearly a decade ago in Sumba island town of Bima - was actually a militant training camp.

He says explosives, dozens of machetes, air riffles, molotov cocktails and jihadi books and videos were found in the building.

Yoga said Abrori Ali, the headmaster, fled the scene after the explosion but was arrested on Friday in his parents' house about 30km away.

Seven other people are in police custody for questioning.

June or September? The issue on school opening sked is on

From Manila Bulletin online, August 2, 2011, 4:35am

The Philippines use the solar Gregorian calendar. So this issue of class opening in June and September. Muslims in the Philippines follow this for daily non-religious matters and that of the lunar Hijrah calendar for religious functions.

The question about school opening is deeper than just moving from one month to another. The same is true with class opening for Madaris.
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MANILA, Philippines — Responding to the call of some sectors to move the June school opening to September, the Department of Education reiterates that it is open to any proposal that will help improve the learning conditions of students and that it continues to look thoroughly into the advantages and disadvantages should school opening be moved to September.

“The very aim of the department is to provide quality education to all our students. As much as possible, we do not want any disruption that will affect our students’ learning. Thus, we are open to any proposal that will help us achieve our goal. But whether or not to move the opening of classes to September, one of the major considerations should be the comfort of our schoolchildren while they are in school,” said Education Secretary Armin Luistro.

Luistro shared that the proposal to move the opening of classes to September has been studied in 2009.

In a survey conducted by the department between August to September 2009, 13 of 16 regions are not in favor of moving classes to September. Only Region III (Central Luzon) with 54 percent, Region VI (Western Visayas) with 68 percent, and Region IX (Western Mindanao) with 51 percent were in favor.

Of the respondents, 66 percent were against the move while 34% were in favor.

The study revealed that those who opposed said that the high temperature during summer months (April to May) will not be conducive to students’ learning during these months, classrooms will need additional ventilation which in turn will increase the schools’ electricity bills.

Not saying no

“We are not saying no to the proposal but we recommend that the current weather conditions and the effects of climate change as well as the frequency of typhoons hitting specific parts of the country be considered when we talk of moving the school opening to September,” Luistro expressed.

DepEd cited that during typhoons, floods, and other calamities, only some parts of the country are affected and only involve a number of schools and a small part of the entire student population nationwide.

On the contrary, during summer season, the entire country experiences the discomfort hot temperature brings. And this is what the students in the public schools will have to endure for more than two months.

Other reasons cited for not favoring the proposal include the usual practice where summer months are spent for family bonding and other activities such as traditional celebrations like Holy Week, town fiestas, and Flores de Mayo. These celebrations held during summer would affect the attendance of children in school.

Also, students usually work during summer for extra income for their school expenses.

Of 197 school divisions, 145 or 74 percent participated in the survey. The respondents came from schools in divisions nationwide and included teachers, parents, local government officials and other stakeholders.

Luistro said that DepEd has been exploring various means to still allow affected students catch up with their lessons.“Right now, we have alternative delivery modes that allow us to continue holding classes even if classrooms are used as evacuation centers. Our school heads and field officials also employ several strategies such as holding of make-up classes to ensure continuity of learning.”

Source: http://www.mb.com.ph/articles/329216/june-or-september

DepEd RO 2 hires Madrasah teachers

By Oliver T. Baccay and Floyd Hontiveros

TUGUEGARAO CITY, August 4 (PIA) -- To respond to the education needs of the Muslim students in the region, the Department of Education (DepEd) region 2 has hired and trained two (2) Madrasah assigned in schools near the Muslim communities in the cities of Tuguegarao and Cauayan.

Romel Costales, education program supervisor, said the hundreds of Muslim students are enrolled in different schools in the region that is why they need to hire teachers who are also Muslim to fit the education needed by the students.

Costales explained that they are supposed to hire a Madrasah (teachers in the Islamic schools) in each school that has Muslim students; however, only 2 have passed the qualifying examination conducted by DepEd as of this moment.

The two have also undergone trainings on language enhancing program and education ethics which is one of the requirements to qualify for the said position.

Costales said the Madrasah are mandated to teach arabic language and values education for Muslim students. Because the education department is now implementing religious and culture sensitive teaching, Muslims can now attend the arabic language and values education subjects taught by the Madrasah instead of English and the Good Moral and Right Conduct (GMRC) subjects.

He also cleared that, though the Madrasah are still supervised by the DepEd, the sources of their compensation are Local Government Unit (LGUs) to where they are assigned and the office of the Muslim Affairs.

As of now, DepEd is encouraging Muslims who are graduates of education courses to take the qualifying examination to be able to be employed as Madrasah teacher in other schools in the region that have hundreds of Muslim pupils. (TCB/OTB/FO/PIA-2)

Source: http://www.pia.gov.ph/?m=1&t=1&id=47112

Tajikistan: Madrasah closed in northern region

August 08, 2011, KHUJAND, Tajikistan -- Tajik authorities have suspended teaching at four higher education Islamic schools in the northern part of the country, RFE/RL's Tajik Service reports.

On August 8, an official from the Directorate of Religious Affairs in Sughd Province told RFE/RL on condition of anonymity that the management at the madrasahs failed to reregister their schools as required by a new law on religion.

He added that the teachers at the madrasahs in the Asht, Jabbor Rasulov, Maschoh, and Maschohi Kuhi districts do not provide the requisite religious education and the madrasah buildings also do not conform to state standards.

Students at the four schools were admitted after studying for nine or 11 years at state schools. After a three-year course of study they obtain a bachelor's degree in Islamic theology.

Sadullo Mirahmadov, the chairman of the Asht madrasah, said on August 8 that he was ordered to close the school because the building is too old.

He said he hopes to find new premises soon so his 75 students can continue their studies.

Some experts, however, said closing madrasahs is a further step in the government's policy to curtail religious activities.

They recall that last year authorities brought home hundreds of Tajik students studying at Islamic universities and madrasahs in various countries.

In addition, the law on parental responsibilities signed last week by President Emomali Rahmon bans most people under the age of 18 from praying in mosques.

Muhammadrahim Abdumannonov, a Khujand-based expert on Tajik social issues, said he does not think that policy will yield positive results because Islam teaches young people ethical and moral norms.

He said if young people do not receive such a basic education in morality, they may end up joining extremist or terrorist groups.

Authorities in Sughd Province closed down three illegal madrasahs earlier this year and launched an administrative investigation into personnel at the schools.

Source: http://www.rferl.org/content/madrasahs_closed_in_northern_tajikistan/24290795.html

India: Crisis of duality at higher education gives Muslims a schizoid mind

By TCN New

New Delhi: A thought-provoking presentation on “Towards Muslim Educational Excellence: Epistemological and Quality Dimensions” was made here by Prof. Omar Hasan Kasule, professor of epidemolgy and bioethics, faculty of medicine, King Fahad Medical City; university of Malaya; University of Brunei; chairman of the Institutional Review Board KFMC, and head of Knowledge Exchange and International Collaboration, faculty of medicine, KFMC.

Dr. Kasule said that for Muslims all over the world there was a “crisis of duality” at the heart of higher education that gives Muslim a schizoid mind as this education frequently contradicts what they have learnt at the mosques and madarsas.

This duality has to be reconciled before the issue of quality is taken up. He wanted a single epistemological framework covering all knowledge – “secular and religious” – to overcome the problem. He called for “an integrated curriculum that fits in with the tawhidic paradigm”.

By tawhidic he meant a unified perspective that took in both secular and religious knowledge. He said good minds in different natural and social sciences that are well-versed in Islamic tradition should work on the idea.

The second aspect, he said, would be improving the quality of our knowledge. The search for knowledge should also be a search for excellence, which he translated as ihsan, a highly regarded value in Islam.

Ihsan, he elaborated, is the highest point of perfection of iman (faith). Excellence must be the hallmark of everything that a Muslim does, including the pursuit of knowledge.

Premier universities already have quality assurance departments, but new institutions also need to have them. His paper contained the details of a quality assurance system prepared on the basis of his 15-year experience in a South-East Asian university.

He said the issues of epistemology and unification of perspective on knowledge must be addressed for the ummah to revive. “Revival of Islam is already visible but it will take generations to carry it to the highest point of perfection”. A single lifetime would not be enough, and the reconstruction of the ummah requires immense patience and fortitude, he concluded.

The program titled "Crisis of Quality of Knowledge Systems" was organized on 6th August by Institute of Objective Studies.

Source: http://twocircles.net/2011aug09/%E2%80%9Ccrisis_duality_higher_education_gives_muslims_schizoid_mind.html

India: Joining the Missing Links - Towards Shaping a Better Indian Muslim Community

By Shahidur Rashid Talukdar

Over 700 years of Muslim rule in India developed a sense of superiority among the Indian Muslims as the ruler class, only to be washed away later by the British imperialism. The independence of India came along with a whole episode of bloody memory of communal disharmony and the ultimate partition. This added salt to the sores of Indian Muslims. The loss of family members, relatives, friends and neighbors added to the loss of sultanate. And worst of all, the partition left a void in the intellectual circle of Indian Muslims. As most of the academicians, scientists and intellectuals left the country for the newly formed Pakistan, the Muslims became an orphaned community in India with only a few to provide direction, a representation and advocate for them.

The remaining Muslims, thus, developed around them a fortress of protection by psychologically, socially, educationally, and to some extent, linguistically alienating themselves from the rest of India. The weak and isolated community faced many problems, and one problem induced another. For instance, illiteracy and mediocrity affected job prospects. That turn of events induced poverty, resulting in another cycle of lack of proper education, and, hence, more poverty. Lack of proper and deliberate initiatives to alter the situation facilitated the process of deterioration and helped create an everlasting pessimism in the community. This, again, contributed to the alienation.

Consequently, the community started to regress constantly towards mediocrity, only to realize it later" much later. This realization of laggardness has come at a time when the Indian Muslim community is already far behind nearly all other communities, and, across the boundaries of classes, in nearly all spheres of progress. Immersed in frustration and hopelessness, the community soothes itself by resorting to the memories of the past.

But for a reality check: Does the past glory conform to the present situation? Can the Muslim community see itself anywhere close to the mainstream India? The Sachar Committee Report clearly shows that the vast majority of the community stands nowhere close to the other communities -- not even the backward and scheduled castes! It doesn't even need a Sachar Committee Report to know this. Just a glance at a typical Muslim neighborhood, at any government or private office, or even a typical community college or university will tell the story. Muslims everywhere in the public domain have a scarce presence, except the courts, where they often go seeking justice.

What are the reasons for our under-representation nearly everywhere from a community college to the parliament? The reasons are partly because of the Muslim community's incapability to participate in and isolation from the pursuit of worldly progress, and partly because of the inadequacy and indifference of the government initiatives which failed to drag the community to the mainstream.

This vicious circle of alienation and poverty has embittered the situation to its worst, and has pulled the community to the nadir from where an immediate recovery seems not only a mere dream, but also an illusion. However, the question is this: How long can the Muslim community afford to live by the glory of the long past? How long can the community keep crying over what has been lost? How long can the community keep itself aloof from the developments around? How long can the Muslims of India suffer from poverty and indignity and continue to deteriorate? The answer is: Too long has been the nap of complacency. We need to cut it short. Everyone has been running fast. We need to rush to catch up to others.

Muslims must accept the fact that we, the Indian Muslims, are responsible for a large part of our plight and need to make active efforts to ameliorate the situation. Else, there can be no way out. We have to take the initiative to break the vicious circle and come out of the constant state of decline and deprivation. Once we take the onus of responsibility on our shoulders to improve our lot, we have to figure out how we can bridge the huge gap between the Muslim community and others.

First of all, in my opinion, the community needs to cross the psychological barrier of aloofness and reaffirm the fact that we belong to India, not because of any accident or as a result of some historical process, but because of a conscious choice. We need to remind ourselves that we belong to this land, that we were born here and we want to live here and enjoy and share its bounties with all others who have the same feelings, and enrich this land with our efforts by making valuable contributions towards its progress. At the same time, we need to build the confidence that we can make a difference in our lives as well as in the lives of others by way of our contributions.

I stress this point because I feel that there are circumstances in which this confidence seems to wane before disruptive, communal and discriminating forces. But it is very important that we don't lose faith in ourselves and in the capacity of the democratic processes that together we can achieve a better state of not merely existing, but of flourishing. In this sojourn, we might have to face difficulties, we might have to fight with disruptive forces, but we can't afford to lose heart.

Since our very survival and progress is in question, we are at the stake. Expecting too much from outside, at this juncture, does not seem a good enough idea. A community paralyzed between the past glory and present indifference can very well go down towards the abyss. More than a century ago, the great visionary and educationalist Sir Syed Ahmad Khan noted: "Muslims are plunging in, and no one is there to take them out." But to our dismay, the situation does not seem very different even now. We can't wait and repeat the same mistake for centuries. We have to take the responsibility to pull ourselves out. We have to take the initiative to change our plight, improve our lot and carry our mission ahead.

Overcoming the psychological barrier is just one step. The next, and most important, step is to convert ourselves into indispensable assets. Education has to play a pivotal role in this transformation process. Only education can liberate us from the vicious circle of poverty and isolation. We must acquire quality education -- not only to expand the horizon of our knowledge, but also to equip ourselves with the skills required for newer innovations, the changing industry and an ever-evolving market.

We need a momentous drive to spread education among ourselves as well as to each corner of society. We must identify why the Muslim community is behind all others in education. We need to figure out why the literacy rate and the level of higher education among us is below the national average. We have to find out the reason for Muslim children's falling participation in higher education. In order to reduce the gap between our performance and that of the majority of Indians, we need to make the best use of all available infrastructure and resources. We need to demand adequate infrastructure from the government as well as take our own initiative to set up our educational infrastructure. We can't be totally dependent upon the public initiatives; we must make our own efforts to garner funds, gather academicians and develop infrastructure to disseminate education among the poor Muslim masses.

The process, not an easy one indeed, might be very cumbersome. A community which has been dormant for centuries cannot be awakened overnight. It will take its time, but the need of the hour is that simply this: the initiative needs to be taken. We often grudge about a lack of higher education among Muslims, inadequate representation of Muslims in government services and in industry. But in order to reach those arenas, we need to have quality students coming out from schools. We need to ensure access to quality education to the poor Muslim children.

For this, we can adopt at least three measures. First, providing scholarships to the deserving students, based on both merit and financial need. This is likely to have a strong, sustainable long-term impact. Another such initiative would be to set up primary and secondary schools of high standard in underserved Muslim-concentrated areas, particularly addressing children from poor families. Finally, we need to set up special coaching and guidance centers in other areas where a school is not needed.

Such a center can address the deficiency need by providing focused coaching, career-oriented guidance and the motivation to excel. In such cases, the initial level of success might appear low. Regardless, there needs to be a determined and persistent effort.

Success or failure of an endeavor depends on the kind of efforts made. In order for us to succeed, the schools must, first of all, maintain a high academic standard like those of ICSE or CBSE schools. The coaching centers need to maintain the highest professional approach, emulating those of the best in the country. It is quite obvious that initially, in an underserved community, the parents might not be very much enthusiastic about their children's education. For them, helping in the family affairs or contributing to the narrow supply of income might appear more important. We have to create an environment wherein parents, even though they might be illiterate, develop a positive attitude towards education and ultimately own the responsibility to educate their children.

Doing this might be difficult, but it is not impossible. We need to identify interest groups, motivated individuals, clubs, associations or groups of progressive-minded elders from the community itself who can mobilize the community to carry out the work at the local level. Muslim NGOs or any other organization with a track record of transparency and efficiency and an interest in helping the community, can be instrumental in such an effort.

Lack of credible NGOs may be an issue, however, to start with on a pilot basis; identifying a few NGOs won't be a problem. Once a few organizations take the initiative and come up with a viable proposal, the government or non-government funding agencies can evaluate the same and grant a project. For monitoring the implementing agency, the NGO itself will primarily be responsible. In addition, the local interest group will provide necessary inputs, in terms of community relations, cooperation and community mobilization. In the absence of such interested parties, at the grassroots level, we will need to have implementing and monitoring agencies.

Another important aspect of this movement will be to ensure funding. In this age, nothing happens without money. Although sincerity of intention and seriousness of will is absolutely essential to carry on the mission, money is quite instrumental. Money can provide solutions to many of our problems. We need to pay for our infrastructure, for the teachers, and above all, for scholarships given to needy students. So we need a constant stream of money. Raising funds for specific occasions is fine, but in order to plan and implement projects on a large scale, and to ensure their sustainability, we need to have accumulated funds at hand. For this, we need to mobilize the institutional resources like government funding, the Waqf boards, other non-government funding agencies, and individual contributors. Of equal importance is the need to make sure that the money is in safe hands and reaches its destination (i.e. the end user) on time. For this, we need a viable institutional mechanism -- a funding agency.

Along with our integration to the mainstream and ensuring our educational progress, we must also ensure that we are contributing to the economy also -- not merely as consumers and labor force, but also as entrepreneurs. Compared to the booming Indian industry, the contribution of the Muslim industry is nearly insignificant, except for a few. The true development of any community comes from its industry, which is an outcome of strong entrepreneurship. We can't always look towards others to provide opportunities for us. We have to create our own opportunities. Only then can we choose what we like rather than meekly accepting what others leave for us. High educational achievements will make us worthy as individuals, and a strong industrial and entrepreneurial presence will make us worthy as a community.

And last but not the least, contributing to the Indian social fabric is an essential task before Indian Muslims. We need to engage ourselves in meaningful social interactions outside the Muslim community, leaving the ghettos that we have created around us. We need to involve ourselves in the cultural and developmental affairs, not just of our own, but of all, in general. We need to contribute to the social progress and focus on promoting harmony, not divisions. We need to diversify our interests and aspirations. We need to speak for justice, for empowerment, for environmental protection, for cultural, and for ethnic diversity. We need to learn to appreciate the composite culture rather than exclusively advocating for ours. This will help us form better links with others around us.

We need to make a positive contribution to the secular character -- not only for the interest of the Muslims, but for all. We need to speak out for other communities when there is a need for advocacy. We need to work for the underprivileged of any community. We need to develop a better understanding of the role of women in society. We need to promote their education and welfare. We need to learn to respect women. We need to ensure that Muslim women are not subjugated. We need to demonstrate, by our actions, that Muslim women have a better social status, as opposed to quoting religious scriptures to prove it.

If we can succeed in doing all or at least some of the aforesaid, we will establish ourselves as better Muslims, better Indians, and better human beings.

Source: http://www.opednews.com/articles/Joining-the-Missing-Links-by-Shahidur-Rashid-Ta-110804-792.html