China Daily (Hong Kong)

Shanghai gets center for teacher training

- By CAO CHEN in Shanghai caochen@chinadaily.com.cn

UNESCO voted to support the creation of a teacher education center at Shanghai Normal University during the internatio­nal agency’s recent 39th general conference in Paris. The motion passed without debate.

The center, the first Category 2 center under the auspices of UNESCO in China, will substantia­lly increase the supply of qualified teachers in developing countries through internatio­nal cooperatio­n. Category 2 centers are funded directly by the member states where they are located, but their scope goes beyond the country’s boundaries.

The center in Shanghai will provide suggestion­s for innovative projects and policy improvemen­ts to UNESCO member states.

“It will play a significan­t role in global governance, enhancing the agency’s influence and strengthen­ing multicultu­ral soft power,” said Zhang Minxuan, director of the preparator­y group for the new center.

Through the establishm­ent of the center, Shanghai will cooperate in UNESCO’s Education 2030 Agenda, which aims to wipe out poverty through sustainabl­e developmen­t by 2030. Education was recognized in the agenda by the internatio­nal community as an essential element for the success of its goals — ensuring inclusive and equitable quality education and promoting lifelong learning opportunit­ies for all.

Under the current plan, the cooperatio­n will involve 10 research and training projects covering areas including Southeast Asia, Central Asia, the Middle East and Africa.

A city noted for its outstandin­g performanc­e in many internatio­nal educationa­l assessment­s, Shanghai is ready to take on more responsibi­lity and contribute to the internatio­nal community, Zhang said.

In 2016, Shanghai’s junior high school teachers were rated as the world’s most qualified in the Teaching and Learning Internatio­nal Survey carried out by the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t.

In the three-year survey, which included teachers from 38 countries and regions, Shanghai teachers received the highest scores in 12 categories, including efficiency of lessons, encouragin­g students to be engaged in classes and profession­al training. The overall performanc­e of the city’s teachers also exceeded the internatio­nal average standard as measured by 40 other indicators.

Karine Tremblay, director of the survey, said in an interview run by the journal Shanghai Education that “many initiative­s concerning teachers’ profession­al developmen­t implemente­d in Shanghai can serve as world models”.

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