Autumn 2011

On Friday September 23, 2011, at 11h 5m Peninsular time, autumn  begins in the northern hemisphere, according to astronomical convention. This season will last 89 days and 20 hours.
This is when the length of day and night practically coincide, and therefore, this circumstance is also called “Autumn Equinox.”  This is the time of year when day length shortens faster. At latitudes of the Peninsula, the morning sun rises over a minute later than the day before and the evening becomes almost two minutes before, so that the shortening of days is especially noticeable in the evenings. In short, these days the time that the Sun is above the horizon is reduced by almost three minutes each day. Sunrise tomorrow is at 07:48 and sunset at 20:00

At the moment the maximum daytime temperature is still around 28ºc with the overnight minimum around 17ºc, a little warmer than is usual for the latter part of September.
On Sunday October 30 Daylight Saving Time will come to an end and we put the clocks back an hour to revert to standard  or winter time.

En Brazos del Otoño

To get you in the mood  here is the new spot “En Brazos del Otoño” from El Corte Inglés that has just been released on major television

More hours in class, worse grades

Something is wrong with this picture. A report on education released by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) describes a system where conditions do not seem as bad as student results would indicate. Spanish teachers spend more hours in the classroom than their counterparts in other countries – and so do students. Educators earn higher wages, and the teacher-to-student ratio is optimal compared with other member states. And yet every single Pisa report – the world reference in educational testing, conducted every three years – puts Spain near the bottom of the ranking: 26th out of 34 developed countries in 2009.

In you go... Grade school children in Pamplona-

What is it that’s failing? Coming as does is in the middle of a heated debate over the amount of public resources that should be spent on education in these times of crisis – teachers from various regions have already rebelled against announced cuts – the report introduces a new level of complexity: it’s not just about the number of teachers or how many courses the students take; it’s also about what is being taught, how, at what age and what kind of additional support students are getting.

Other countries with better results have teachers who spend less time in the classroom. The regional governments of Madrid, Navarre, Catalonia, Galicia and Castilla-La Mancha have angered their own educators by extending the number of teaching hours while reducing other activities like support groups or parent-teacher time, which teachers say is what really creates a quality education. What is the goal of this extension of classroom hours? Felipe José San Vicente, president of the National Association of High School Teachers, replies: “There is no educational goal in it, or anything like it. It’s an economic issue that saves money by not having to hire substitute teachers; everything else is hollow rhetoric.”

The OECD report shows that academic success does not necessarily imply subjecting schoolkids to endless schedules (1,050 hours a year for a Spanish 15-year-old, compared with 856 for a 15-year-old from Finland, the role model in the Pisa report. Spanish grade school teachers spend 880 hours every year teaching class, 101 more than the OECD average, while high school teachers spend 37 additional hours on top of that. Students also have more compulsory subjects than kids from other countries: 126 hours more in grade school and 148 more in high school.

In public schools, there are an average 19.8 students per class, lower than the OECD average of 21.4. The tables are turned at private schools, where there are 24.5 students per class, higher than the average of 20.5. Finally, Spanish teachers make more money: 8,300 euros a year more than the average for grade school teachers, and 10,500 euros more for high school teachers.

So why isn’t this working? “In education, you don’t see short-term results. All investments need time,” says Jesús María Sánchez, president of the Spanish Confederation of Parent-Teacher Associations (CEAPA). The secretary of state for education, Mario Bedera, also notes that Spain has had to make up in the last 30 years for an educational lag of many decades.

But that does not conceal the fact that there are probably other causes behind the poor results. Success requires a change in the system, holds María José Martín, president of the National Association of Movements for Educational Renovation. What is being taught, she says, is poorly conceived of. Her association has been meeting with hundreds of teachers for several decades, and everyone agrees that the curriculum is ill adapted to the maturity level of the students and that the contents are often useless for the 21st century.

“It is absurd for children six and under to be using textbooks. At that age they are exploring the world and they need creativity. They need to learn to do things on their own, including hygiene and basic norms of coexistence. But above all, they need to build self-confidence in their relationships with other children, and to create the right foundation for proper socialization,” she explains.

“At age eight, kids are being asked to put the right accents on words as they write. By age 10, they’re being asked to do square roots. Why would they want to do square roots at that age? It makes no sense. Then the Pisa examiners show up and find schoolkids who don’t understand what they’re reading and who hate language class and math. That’s what happens when you teach things to the wrong age groups.”

San Vicente also believes that the Spanish system has an irrational number of subjects: “Eleven subjects in one school year is too much.” And he blames the previous education law, known as LOGSE, for the most worrisome of all the figures that show up in the report: the dropout rate, which stands at 28.4 percent.

Now, high school students have three separate choices depending on whether they choose to pursue the humanities, the sciences or vocational training. “Until now, up to age 16, students had to stay together, and half of the classroom might have no interest whatsoever in what was being taught. By bringing the choice down to age 15, dropout rates will improve,” says San Vicente, whose association has asked the Education Ministry to rename vocational training (known as Formación Profesional in Spain) and call it “bachillerato profesional,” in an attempt to bring some luster to a widely reviled career choice. “It’s a tiny gesture, but maybe it will dignify non-university studies.”

J. PADRES / J. A. AUNIÓN 16/09/2011

via More hours in class, worse grades · ELPAÍS.com in English.

Castellón Airport to open April 2012

Aircraft will not be taxiing on the runway of Castellón airport, at least until April next year.  The announcement was made last week after the plenary meeting of the Valencian government  by spokesperson, Lola Johnson.  That is, a year after the opening fanfare by Francisco Camps as president of the Generalitat and Carlos Fabra as president of the Diputación de Castellón. This opening date is far from that intended by Juan García Salas, the president of Aerocas, who announced last July that the site would open in December or January 2012.

The airport collects 25 million loss without even being operational

Aerocas, the public society of Castellón Airport closed the year 2010 with accumulated losses of 25.2 million and a total debt of 95 million even before planes begin to operate in the Vilanova installation.  This is reflected in the General Accounts of the Generalitat Valenciana of 2010, which also warns in its external audit that the decline of the assets of the entity placed the company in a “legal course of dissolution.” According to that report, the entity has a negative net worth of -22.2 million euros, being below fifty percent of the share capital, so it is within one of the causes of dissolution listed in Article 363 of the Companies Act of capital.

The deputy EUPV, Marina Albiol, has criticized the data published in the General Account of the 2010. For Albiol, it is “completely absurd” that an “airport without planes nor permits maintain at December 31, 2010, bank borrowings of long-term credit worth almost 54 million euros and has spent seven million euros in advertising “. She considers “incredible and outrageous” that the CEO of Aerocas is paid  total remuneration of 84,200 euros per year given that it is an empty and useless infrastructure.  Albiol indicated that in total 382,215.66 euros has been spent on salaries, wages and social security.”

September

Harvesting almonds

September is a month of change.  The vacations are over and everybody is back to work and the children return to school.  For those in education, September is something akin to New Year and farmers consider autumn to be the first season of the year ,
The month is made up of thirty days, and during this time the days become equal to the nights, it being the autumnal equinox, after which the days begin to wane and the nights grow longer.  Right now the sun does not rise until seven thirty and sunset is at twenty past eight.
September is one of the nicest months in terms of weather, it being usually settled, but the sun is not quite as intense as summer with a refreshing coolness in the air in the mornings and evenings.  Maximum temperatures now are around 30ºc and by the end of the month will have fallen back to around 25ºc.
This is the time to harvest almonds and figs also ripen at this time of year.