Primary Education in Indonesia
Indonesians are
required to attend twelve years of school. They can choose between state-run,
nonsectarian public schools supervised by the Department of National Education
(Depdiknas) or private or semi-private religious (usually Islamic) schools
supervised and financed by the Department of Religious Affairs. Students can
also choose to participate in extracurricular activities provided by the school
such as sports, arts, or religious studies.
A central goal
of the national education system is not merely to impart secular wisdom about
the world but also to instruct children in the principles of participation in
the modern nation-state, its bureaucracies, and its moral and ideological
foundations. Beginning under Guided Democracy (1959–65) and
strengthened in the New Order after 1975, a key feature of the national
curriculum—as was the case for other national institutions—has been instruction
in the pancasila. But with the
end of the New Order in 1998 and the beginning of the campaign to decentralize
the national government, provincial and district-level administrators obtained
increasing autonomy in determining the content of schooling, and Pancasila
began to play a diminishing role in the curriculum.
Children aged
6–11 attend primary school, called Sekolah Dasar (SD). Most elementary
schools are government-operated public schools, accounting for nearly 93% of
all elementary schools in Indonesia. Students spend six years in primary
school, though some schools offer an accelerated learning program in which
students who perform well can complete the level in five years.
Students with
disabilities/special needs may alternately opt to be enrolled in a separate
school from the mainstream called Sekolah Luar Biasa (lit. Extraordinary
School
By 2008, the
staff shortage in Indonesia's schools was no longer as acute as in the 1980s,
but serious difficulties remain, particularly in the areas of teacher salaries,
teacher certification, and finding qualified personnel. In many remote areas of
the Outer Islands, in particular, there is a severe shortage of qualified
teachers, and some villages have school buildings but no teachers, books, or
supplies. Providing textbooks and other school equipment to Indonesia’s 37
million schoolchildren throughout the far-flung archipelago continues to be a
significant problem as well, especially in more remote areas.
Primary
Education In America
In comparing elementary schools in the United States with those of
other countries, some distinctions in terminology are necessary. In the United
States, elementary education refers to children's first formal schooling
prior to secondary school. (Although kindergartens, enrolling children at age
five, are part of public schools, attendance is not compulsory.) In school
systems in many other countries, the term primary covers what in the
United States is designated as elementary schooling. In American elementary
schools, the term primary refers to the first level, namely kindergarten
through grades one, two, and three.
The elementary school curriculum provides work in the educational
basics - reading, writing, arithmetic, an introduction to natural and social
sciences, health, arts and crafts, and physical education. An important part of
elementary schooling is socialization with peers and the creating of an
identification of the child with the community and nation.
Goals of Elementary Schools
Elementary schools in the United States, as in other countries, have
the goals of providing children with fundamental academic skills, basic
knowledge, and socialization strategies. They are key institutions in
instilling a sense of national identity and citizenship in children.
In the United States, elementary schools prepare children to use
language by teaching reading, writing, comprehension, and computation.
Elementary schools worldwide devote considerable time and resources to teaching
reading, decoding, and comprehending the written and spoken word. The stories
and narratives children learn to read are key elements in political and
cultural socialization, the forming of civic character, and the shaping of
civility and behavior. Throughout the history of American education, the
materials used to teach reading exemplified the nation's dominant values. For
example, the New England Primer, used in colonial schools, stressed Puritanism's
religious and ethical values. Noah Webster's spelling books and readers
emphasized American national identity and patriotism. The McGuffey Readers,
widely used in late nineteenth century schools, portrayed boys and girls who
always told the truth, who worked diligently, and who honored their fathers and
mothers and their country. McGuffey values were reinforced by the American
flag, which hung at the front of elementary classrooms, flanked by portraits of
Presidents Washington and Lincoln. The "Dick and Jane" readers of the
1930s and 1940s depicted the lifestyle and behaviors of the dominant white
middle class. Contemporary reading books and materials portray a much more multicultural view of life
and society.
The language of instruction in elementary or primary schools is often
highly controversial in many countries, especially in multilingual ones. The
ability to use the "official" language provides access to secondary
and higher education and entry into professions. In such multilanguage nations
as India, Canada, and Belgium, protracted controversies have occurred over
which language should be the official one. In the United States, the dominant
language of instruction in public schools has been English. The children of
non-English-speaking immigrants were assimilated into American culture by the
imposition of English through the elementary school curriculum. The later entry
of bilingual education in the United States was an often controversial
educational development, and remains so in the early twenty-first century.
Along with the development of language competencies, elementary
education prepares children in the fundamental mathematical skills - in
counting, using number systems, measuring, and performing the basic operations
of adding, subtracting, multiplying,
and dividing. Further, the foundations of science, social science, health, art,
music, and physical education are also taught.
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