Deutsche Welle
http://www.dw.de/education-falls-victim-to-greek-debt-crisis/a-16481846
As part of Greece 's
austerity policies, salaries for teachers and educational funding have dropped
rapidly. Students who can afford private tutoring may come to depend more
heavily on tutors than teachers.
Graffiti
covers the walls in the classrooms and hallways at the Fifth General Lyceum in
Petroupoli, a northwestern district of Athens. A letter "A" for
anarchism adorns the back of a classroom, and a tag on another wall reads,
"Beat up the fascists" - both reflect the mood in a country ravaged
by debt and its political consequences.
Children in
Greece
first attend an elementary school for six years before switching to a secondary
school for another three years. After that, they can either choose to continue
their education at a classical lyceum, a post-secondary school that allows them
to take nationwide entrance exams for college after three years, or a more
hands-on lyceum that leads to an apprenticeship.
Outdated
equipment
Many Greek
lyceums have changed little in the past 25 years. The furniture and equipment
is often straight out of the 1970s. One of the two chemistry labs at the Fifth
General Lyceum is equipped with nothing but a work bench, several instruments
and apparatuses, Bunsen burners and jars. Students sit on chairs or a work
surface while observing experiments.
"The
other lab is more modern," the school's director, Pavlos Perdikakis,
points out, adding that the school also has a library, a physics lab, a
computer room, a multi-purpose auditorium and basketball and volleyball courts.
The
principal says with a touch of pride that his lyceum has also planted trees and
set up benches on campus - signs that the school is better equipped than other
institutions in the working class suburb in which it is located.
Perdikakis
knows every one of his 240 students by name. With more than 30 years of
experience under his belt, he is friendly and easy-going, even when a group of
students bursts unannounced into his office during a break. Kindly yet firmly,
he shows the teenagers out. Perdikakis has headed the school for 13 years and
rarely finds time to teach these days, as he is too busy with school
administration.
The high
school has 30 teachers, and 25 of them are staff - not a bad average, says
Nikolaos Papachristos, president of the OLME teachers union that represents Greece 's 80,000
teachers at high schools and lyceums.
"We're
lacking about 2,000 teachers," Papachristos explained, noting that some
smaller towns even need teachers for core subjects such as Greek, physics,
chemistry and math.
A necessary
luxury
The
Petroupoli lyceum may not lack teachers, but it is affected by the crisis
nevertheless. Pavlos Perdikakis laments that the school budget has been cut
significantly. Families, too, have less money to spend. Day trips to give the
students a break from the Athens
urban jungle are a thing of the past. The bus ride out of the city costs three
euros ($3.9), a sum that now gives cash-strapped families pause. Students have
less money to buy snacks, too, causing revenue at the school's snack shop to
slip to a quarter of what it was two years ago.
A quirk of
the Greek school system: Many students take expensive, private tutoring classes
after school. The tutoring sessions are offered in schools known as
frontistiria. The children are taught individually or in groups, and some
frontistiria have built up a network of subsidiary institutions across the
country over the past decades.
Many
families see the schools as essential in getting ready for the country's
difficult college entrance exams. In the tutoring sessions, students repeat
material learned in previous grades, Papachristos and Perdikakis said - without
giving an explanation as to why the regular, cost-free school cannot offer
similar preparation.
Sinking
salaries
Teachers at
frontistiria have generally not been given positions at regular public schools.
They might have taught for years on a remote island, or are not well-connected
enough for a job at a regular school - so they find employment in a parallel
education system that has prospered in Greece for decades, similar to the
country's parallel economy.
Thousands
of teachers would be out of a job if the costly tutoring system were to be
abolished. Despite the teacher shortage in public schools, there's no money to
employ the tutors at regular schools, says the OLME president Papachristos.
Teachers' salaries have been slashed by about 40 percent: a starting salary
today is 629 euros, compared with what was earlier 1,000 euros per month. The
maximum salary a teacher can expect at a Greek lyceum equals about 1,500 euros.
"Education
expenses as a whole have been halved; those are the troika's policies,"
Papachristos said.
DW.DE
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