USAID/Macedonia
Primary Education Project
Macedonia is a republic
located in southeast Europe bounded by Yugoslavia, Bulgaria,
Greece and Albania. Skopje is the capital of this country
that gained its independence in 1991.
USAID’s
five-year Primary Education Project will
provide a portion of the funding needed to
renovate up to 100 primary schools to
upgrade their energy efficiency; boost the
use and maintenance of computers; improve
the teaching of mathematics and science; and
strengthen school-based assessment. The
project also supports the decentralization
process through which primary education will
increasingly become the responsibility of
municipalities.
For its part,
the Macedonian Ministry of Education and Science
(MoES) has committed to provide up to
$600,000 to renovate schools; adopt a strategic “maintenance
and sustainability plan” to maintain computers; and
collaboratively implement continuing math and science
training for teachers.
Indiana
University's Center for Social Studies and
International Education is taking the lead
to improve the teaching of mathematics and
science in Macedonian primary schools.
The goals for this project are to:
-
Build
networks of support through the national
mathematics, science, and information
technology associations to create
permanent capacity for ongoing
professional development;
-
Enhance
the curriculum and strengthen staff
capacity of the Bureau for Development
Education to implement standards;
-
Train
teachers to make the curriculum succeed
in the classroom through active,
inquiry-based teaching and learning; and
-
Develop
digital resources to improve teaching
and learning mathematics in association
with seminars and Web-based science
materials.
Dr. Terrence Mason, director of the Center for Social Studies and
International Education and Associate Professor of Education,
heads the Project. Faculty members from three Indiana University campuses
provide professional development training in Macedonia to improve teaching
and learning in mathematics and science.
Dr. Frank Lester and Dr. Diana Lambdin, professors of mathematics
education at Indiana University-Bloomington, presented seminars about mathematics
education. Dr. Charles Barman, professor of science and environmental
education, and Natalie Barman, clinical lecturer of science and environmental
education, directed seminars on science education.
Professor Barman and Mrs. Barman teach at
the Indianapolis campus. Dr. Robert Helfenbein,
assistant professor of teacher education at Indianapolis, lectured about
physical geography and demography education. Dr. Jeffery Nowak, assistant professor of
education at the Fort Wayne campus,
delivered presentations
about the use of technology in science and mathematics education.
URL for the
USAID Macedonian Project http://www.usaid.gov/locations/europe_eurasia/press/success/2007-06-01.html