Since February 28, the bMinistry of Education (SEP) announced the announcement of an agreement to eliminate the curriculum b a href="https://www.infobae.com/tag/escuelas-de-tiempo-completo/"full-time education (PETC) at the federal level. The Chamber of Commerce has agreed to summon Secretary Delfina Gomez Alvarez to San Lazaro.
At a press conference, Luis Espinosa Cházaro, coordinator of the Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD), said that the proposal for the Minister of Education to come and explain the The program's disappearance was made on his desk and was approved by Morena and all politicians. party.
Peredit explained that the meeting will take place on March 22 at the workbench, which will be installed in the House of Representatives, and that the secretary will question the fate of 3.6 million of children and young people who have benefited from the program.
“We will question ourselves and wonder why the programs that are being developed that contain qualified standards, transparency and results disappear. They say they don't know where they'd allocated resources from the 2022 budget, which is an important resource for a school time, and we know that because she has a training on Texcoco, I know that Minister Delfina Gómez does not have the best reputation when it comes to asset management,” said Espinosa Chazaro.
He recalled that since the school year 2007-2008, a full-time school had been set up to “extend school hours in order to help improve learning opportunities for students basic education.”
Finally, Espinoza Cházaro said that the conference “will be essential to defining the future of the country, as well as the affected families. If we don't resume this plan, we can expect an increase in school drop-outs, a drop in performance, and an increase in social instability. At the expense of organized and illegal crime.”
Jorge Romero, leader of the National Action Party (PAN) in the House of Representatives, explained that full-time schools were closed. It affects almost 30,000 bschools and about 4 million students.
“More than half of them live in underserved areas,” Romero said. This government is, first of all, the poor, the most affected, and we are talking about almost 4 million miners.
Finally, Rubén Moreira, coordinator of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) bench and chairman of the San Lazaro Political Coordination Committee (Jucopo), regretted that the SEP abolished the programme in a 'unilateral' decision.
“They say it's a political problem. Well, because it is equal to the population of a greater number of states, such as Sonora or Sinaloa, it is possible to measure continuous damage, but the damage to the program is also increasing and affecting the remaining ones teachers: parents, girls, boys without pay,” he laughed.
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