Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

Bulgarian education and "Good practices in focus"‎

The second edition of the national forum is on April 29 and 30 in Sofia

Photo: BGNES

Bulgarian students are seriously lagging behind their European peers, it became ‎clear from a European study at the end of last year. Nearly 50% of young people ‎in Bulgaria aged 16-19 do not have the basic skills to cope in a digital ‎environment, according to the latest EC report on education and training in the ‎member states. This is one of the lowest indicators in the EU (69% on average). ‎The pandemic and the mass transition to online learning have had a bad impact ‎on the motivation and results of nearly half of Bulgarian students, according to a ‎study by the Institute for Education Research. ‎

Fortunately, there is light, and it is in “Good Practices in Focus”. This is the ‎name of one of the biggest events in Bulgarian education, which collects and ‎promotes good examples from school and the classroom. On April 29 and 30, ‎the second edition of the National Education Forum will take place in Sofia, ‎organized by the Zaedno v Chas Foundation and the website prepodavame.bg. ‎More than 400 teachers, school principals, representatives of educational ‎institutions and experts from all over the country will share experiences, ‎inspiration and engage in practical workshops in search of new approaches to ‎engaging students in the 21st century. ‎

Good practices also exist on Bulgarian soil, Borislava Daneva, senior expert at ‎Zaedno v Chas Foundation tells Radio Bulgaria:‎
Borislava Daneva

"We have known for many years, thanks to our work, that they are somewhere ‎out there and they are happening. There are an awful lot of colleagues who ‎create, innovate, experiment and really prove their work with results. And the ‎idea of this whole process and the event is actually to collect this experience and ‎make it visible and accessible to more and more teachers and especially to more ‎and more students.‎

Good practices are numerous and varied this year, Borislava tells us. The best of ‎them which participated in the national competition at the forum will also be ‎distinguished weekend with prizes. But the greatest reward for all of us is the ‎dialogue and the building of a network for communication and dissemination of ‎the acquired experience, Danova believes.‎

In general, in the classical education system, changes still happen on the basis of ‎the personal initiative of individual school principals and teachers. They are not ‎few and are trying to get out of the fragmented classrooms, literally and ‎figuratively, says the expert. ‎

Rima Shore
Specially for the event in Sofia, the long-time supporter of Zaedno v chas ‎Foundation, Dr. Rima Shore, scientist and analyst with numerous publications ‎and books related to early childhood development and secondary education, is ‎arriving in Sofia. She is the head of the Department of Educational Leadership at ‎Bank Street College of Education in New York, USA. Rima Shore attends ‎schools all over the world, including in Bulgaria. It is this view from the inside ‎of the Bulgarian educational reality and the knowledge of the challenges and ‎needs of the teachers here, according to Borislava, that will make the meeting ‎very useful for her colleagues in Bulgaria

However, is the integration of Western models in education so easily achievable ‎in Bulgaria?‎

‎"A lot depends on the practices and the context of the specific children," ‎Borislava Daneva answers. “It is very important that a teacher first thinks ‎specifically about the student's needs, because every child is different and ‎sometimes needs an individual approach. And the second thing is when we talk ‎about adaptation - and this is one of the themes of the forum this year - we have ‎to have an experimental mindset, try to understand the principle and the goals of ‎a practice, then change it as needed, so that it can actually work for us." ‎

There is no lack of desire for change. This change comes from the bottom up, ‎believes Borislava Daneva.‎

‎"There is always hope, and it lies in the colleagues, the people who work with ‎the students. For this reason, we always emphasize on hearing their opinion, ‎seeing their efforts, hearing their needs, and all this must be said when we all sit ‎down at the same table - teachers, institutions, experts. We see that this is ‎happening and there lies the hope for change in the Bulgarian school system."‎


Photos: BGNES, zaednovchas.bg

Translated and published by Rositsa Petkova


Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Associate Professor Spas Tashev

There is a need for administrative autonomy of the regions in Albania inhabited by Bulgarians

The Bulgarian national minority in Albania is one of the largest in the country, according to data from the latest official population census. A total of 7,057 individuals identified as Bulgarians. For comparison, 23,000 people identified as Greeks,..

published on 11/18/24 2:20 PM

Starting today: Send your letter to Santa Claus in Stara Zagora

From today, residents of Stara Zagora, young and old, can send their letter to Santa Claus.  A letterbox has been set up in the foyer of the city's State Puppet Theatre to collect messages for Father Christmas. The cultural institution guarantees that..

published on 11/16/24 8:30 AM

A beautiful Bulgarian Christmas tree shines again at the Griffin Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago

A Christmas tree with Bulgarian decorations has been placed in a central location at the Griffin Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. For the fifth consecutive year, Bulgarians living in Chicago crafted the lavish decoration of the Bulgarian..

updated on 11/16/24 7:10 AM