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Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

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Page 1: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

Page 2: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

West x East (Capitalist x Communist).

Cold War - Iron Curtain.

Page 3: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

The fall of Berlin Wall.Solidarnosc.Velvet revolution.Yugoslav Wars.

Page 4: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

Truth and love must prevail over lies and hatred!

Page 5: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

Ideological tool.Served as a tool for

unification of individuals during the Communist era.

Ideology influenced the content and approach.

Page 6: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

Long time process.Changing of Curriculum.Changing of approaches.Changing of atmosphere.

All these changes require a time.

Page 7: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

Rapid changes in terms of the system are slow from the perspective of parents.

Parents who wish the change are looking for a shortcuts.

Private - alternative schools, church schools and home education.

Page 8: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

There is no common European legislation.In most countries, home schooling is legal.Form and conditions are different.Home education has a long tradition in some

countries.

Page 9: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

Homeschooling was legal before the rise of Nazism.

Homeschooling is not legal in Germany now.

Currently, about 300 children are educated at home.

Page 10: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

The dispute about home schooling is a dispute about the rights of parents and children.

“Obligatory education” x “Obligatory schooling”.

In many post-communist countries is education traditionally very closely connected with schools.

Page 11: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

The Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland, Hungary, and Slovenia – are linked not only by the geographic proximity but also by similar historical experiences.

Habsburg Monarchy. After the breakdown of Austria-Hungary at the end

of the WWI all five countries had to build (or restore) their status as independent national states.

After the WWII all countries found themselves on the wrong side of the Iron Curtain.

All countries experienced period of deep and simultaneous economic, social, and political transformations in the 1990’s.

Page 12: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

The legal possibility to educate children at home was set by the Education Act that was adopted by the first post-communist parliament in 1991 Act No. 425/1991.

Page 13: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

The country was divided between Nazi Germany and Soviet Union after a military defeat in 1939.

Polish schools and universities were closed.

More than million of young Poles were educated at home during the occupation.

Page 14: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

Polish Constitution:„Everybody has the right for education. Education

is obligatory till the age of eighteen. The way how the compulsory schooling is fulfilled is regulated by the law“

Education Act from 1991:Obligatory schooling can be fulfilled by „attendance

to elementary and secondary school, public and private “.

Paragraph 8 of the same article, however, mentions education „out of school“ as other form how obligatory schooling requirement could be fulfilled.

Page 15: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

The Education Act of 1993 introduced the status of a “private student” that can be educated individually, out of school.

„Every child is obliged to participate in education in the Republic of Hungary, as prescribed by this Act“.

„Compulsory education may be completed by school attendance or as a private student, on the basis of the choice of the parents“.

Page 16: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

Elementary School Act from 1996.

Parents have right to choose elementary education for their children either by means of public or private schools or by means of home education.

Page 17: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

The Czech Republic is the country with compulsory school attendance that is mentioned by the Charter of Fundamental Rights and Freedoms (part of Constitution).

Demand for home education started to form at the second half of 1990’s.

It was legally possible to educate children at home since September 1st 1998

“Educational experiment” allowed to children in lower elementary school age.

Page 18: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

Education Act of 2004 officially legalized home education for children of the younger elementary school age.

“Educational experiment 2007” allowed to children in secondary school age.

Page 19: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

The advocates of the home education in Slovakia sought to follow the example of their Czech counterparts.

Slovak Ministry refused to organize experiment.

Home education was made legal by the new Education Act 2008.

Page 20: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

Some parents are forced by circumstances to home education, most of them elect it voluntarily.

The reasons are pedagogical and ideological.A remarkable portion of parents trying to use

their experience from home education in the school system.

Page 21: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká

Swedish feminist writter on many subjects in the fields of family life, ethics and education.

She is best known for her book "The Century of the Child".

She was mostly educated at home, where her mother taught her grammar and arithmetic and her foreign born governess taught her foreign languages.

Page 22: Antonín Jančařík, Kateřina Jančaříková, Yvona Kostelecká