Three Harvard professors will help the government of Venezuela develop an experimental program to improve the quality of Venezuelan schools.
Jorge I. Dominguez, professor of Government, David N. Perkins, lecturer on Education, and Richard J. Herrnstein, professor of Psychology, are developing the program as part of a proposal by the Venezuelan minister of state on human intelligence to encourage creative thinking and problem-solving skills in Venezuelan schools.
Dominguez, who visited schools in Barquisimeta, Venezuela, last April, said yesterday that Venezuelan educational quality is "very uneven," and added that "there was a very heavy emphasis on memorization." The experimental program is designed to stress instead language use, reading skills, writing ability, and creativity.
Ray Nickerson of Bolt, Baranek and Newman, a Cambridge consulting firm that will also work on the project, yesterday emphasized the experimental nature of the project, but also said he is optimistic. "The literacy rate in Venezuela is quite high, relative to other Latin American countries, and is rising quickly. This is a good sign," he said.
Dominguez said he is also optimistic about the project because Venezuela's oil wealth allows it to devote large sums to educational projects.
But Perkins said that preliminary signs do not guarantee success. "Literacy figures are unreliable," he said. "We don't know whether they are based on the ability to read signs or a magazine article," he added.
Dominguez, Perkins and Nickerson praised Luis A. Machado, the Venezuelan minister. "He is a visionary, essentially," Perkins said.
Read more in News
Saudi Arabia Backs Up Egyptian Position on Gulf of Aqaba Issue; Dulles Denies Promise to IsraelRecommended Articles
-
Intelligence ProjectLuis Alberto Machodo, a Venezuelan cabinet member, said last night he plans to use psychological techniques of "early intervention" in
-
Venezuela Offers Harvard-MIT Center $800,000 ContractThe Republic of Venezuela has offered the Harvard MIT Joint Center for Urban Studies an $800,000 contract designing a new
-
Urban Planning Center Accepts Venezuela PactThe Harvard-MIT Joint Center for Urban Studies will begin work in its contract with the Venezuelan government as soon as
-
Venezuela University: Bastion of RadicalsMore than three quarters of the students at the Central University of Venezuela live in or around the city of
-
Venezualans Constrain ChavezLatin American nationals and policy experts at Harvard said the results of Sunday’s referendum in Venezuela were encouraging for the
-
Maduro's Failure: Degrading Democratic Norms in VenezuelaMaduro's assertion that he'll use a hard hand against “intolerance” is ironic beyond words and speaks volumes about his ability to reason through the hard decisions he'll have to make as president.