The Jerusalem Post

Gov’t to expand education curriculum in east Jerusalem

- • By LIDAR GRAVÉ-LAZI (Mohamad Torokman/Reuters)

The cabinet this week approved a plan submitted by Education Minister Naftali Bennett and Jerusalem Affairs Minister Ze’ev Elkin to encourage schools in east Jerusalem to teach an Israeli curriculum as opposed to the Palestinia­n school curriculum.

“The time has come that also in east Jerusalem [pupils] will learn the Israeli curriculum from first grade,” Bennett said.

“Jerusalem must be united in actions and not [just in] words,” he said. “The deeper the learning based on the Israeli curriculum, the more we will continue to strengthen the education system in east Jerusalem, because this is how we build a future.”

According to the Education Ministry, the five-year plan seeks to “improve the quality of education in east Jerusalem, with an emphasis on encouragin­g the study of the Israeli curriculum in schools.”

“The aim is to improve the quality of life and the environmen­t of the residents of Arab neighborho­ods of Jerusalem and to strengthen the integratio­n of east Jerusalem residents into Israeli society and economy, thus strengthen­ing the economic and social resilience of the entire capital,” the ministry said.

The education plans for east Jerusalem include a gradual increase in first-grade classes that will study the Israeli curriculum, with a focus on English and math. Only 7% of first-grade students in east Jerusalem currently study it, as the majority study the Palestinia­n curriculum. Fifteen classes will be added in the first year, 18 in the second, 21 in the third, 24 in the fourth and 27 classes in the fifth year.

Additional­ly, the plan aims to increase the number of highschool classes studying the Israeli curriculum by 20 classes every year over the same period.

The ministry hopes to increase the number of students eligible for the matriculat­ion certificat­e from 12% to 26% of 12th-grade students studying the Israeli curriculum, as well as to increase those earning a technologi­cal certificat­e from 11% to 33%.

The plan also calls to reduce the number of high-school dropouts among 9th to 12th graders from 28% to 25.5%.

Elkin praised the proposal as “significan­t” and “dramatic,” adding that it would “influence the future of youth in the Arab neighborho­ods in Jerusalem and their integratio­n into Israeli society in the long term.”

“If today only 7% of [Arab] first graders study the Israeli curriculum, we’ve set goals that in five years 36% of [Arab] first graders will study THE FIVE-YEAR plan seeks to ‘improve the quality of education in east Jerusalem, with an emphasis on encouragin­g the study of the Israeli curriculum in schools,’ according to the Education Ministry. the Israeli curriculum,” he said. “At the same time, the plan sets a two-fold increase in those eligible for matriculat­ion [certificat­es] in the Israeli curriculum. I believe that sovereignt­y is equal to governabil­ity and responsibi­lity, and this should be expressed in the field of education.”

To accomplish these goals, the cabinet approved the establishm­ent of an interminis­terial committee to present a working plan within 30 days, which will focus on economic integratio­n and include specific goals, central tasks and timetables for meeting the targets laid out in the five-year plan.

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