ERIC Number: EJ1274215
Record Type: Journal
Publication Date: 2019
Pages: 11
Abstractor: As Provided
ISBN: N/A
ISSN: ISSN-2657-215X
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Available Date: N/A
Employing the Subsequent Four Years of the Libyan Education Reform Strategy: Administrations and Contributors
Elabbar, Ageila Ali
Education Quarterly Reviews, v2 n3 p487-496 2019
This paper is the third continuation of the previously published paper "National Libyan Public Education Reform: Entire Transformative Strategies, 2020-2026" (November 2017), which proposes a complete framework for reforming Libyan public education and reflects on the difficulties that educators and learners have faced due to existing confusing conditions. It divides the entire reform plan into six years of gradual reform actions to overcome their complications; these complications stem from the discouraged forms of education, changeable curricula, bureaucratic schools and university administrations, the conservative community, and uncertain education strategies. Another factor is the way that learners acquire information (that is, their learning styles). In addition, upheavals all over Libya have affected the overall stability of education in Libya and led to there being two ministries of education (East and West Libya). Thus, six years of gradual reform stages were proposed so that a new generation of students would start with pre-kindergarten in the academic year 2026 or the equivalent. This paper also is subsequent to the prior published paper (16 May 2018) on the same reverence project, "Contextualizing the First Two Years of the Libyan Education Reform Proposed Strategies (2020-2026): Targeted Candidates and Reflective Activities," which explains in depth the suggested Phase I of the first two years (2020-2022) of the proposal for reforming Libyan education (2020-2026 or equivalent years). The purpose of this paper is to explain in depth the suggested subsequent four years (2022-2026 or equivalent years) of the proposed strategy of a six-year reform and come out with clearly constructed strategy without conflicting laws or regulations in the country.
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Change, Public Education, Educational Strategies, Educational Policy, Curriculum Design, Social Work, Caseworkers, Educational Finance, Budgets, Teacher Education, Schools of Education
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Publication Type: Journal Articles; Reports - Descriptive
Education Level: Higher Education; Postsecondary Education
Audience: N/A
Language: English
Sponsor: N/A
Authoring Institution: N/A
Identifiers - Location: Libya
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