Welcome to the Virtual Education Wiki ~ Open Education Wiki

Chile: Difference between revisions

From Virtual Education Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(→‎References: added cat OECD - Chile has just joined)
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
== Partners situated in Chile ==
• 1
• 2 Uruguay in a nutshell
• 3 Education in Uruguay
• 4 Schools in Uruguay
• 5 Further and Higher education
o 5.1 Universities in Uruguay
o 5.2
• 6 Education reform
o 6.1 Schools
o 6.2 Post-secondary
• 7 Administration and finance
o 7.1 Schools
o 7.2 Post-secondary
• 8 Quality assurance, inspection and accreditation
o 8.1 Schools
o 8.2 Post-secondary
• 9 Information society
• 10 ICT in education initiatives
o 10.1 Virtual initiatives in schools
o 10.2 Virtual initiatives in post-secondary education
• 11 Lessons learnt
o 11.1 General lessons
o 11.2 Notable practices
• 12 References
 
 
== Partners and Experts in Chile ==


None.
None.
Line 12: Line 38:
'''Sourced''' from [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chile Wikipedia's page on Chile]
'''Sourced''' from [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chile Wikipedia's page on Chile]


== Country education policy ==
== Education in Chile ==


"At the beginning of the 1990s, a transcendental educational reform, the largest in the history of Chile, started, in which equality and quality have been the main objectives.
"At the beginning of the 1990s, a transcendental educational reform, the largest in the history of Chile, started, in which equality and quality have been the main objectives.
Line 36: Line 62:




== Country education system ==
== Schools in Chile ==
The education system in Chile encompasses public and private institutions, and includes the following schooling levels:
The education system in Chile encompasses public and private institutions, and includes the following schooling levels:


Line 55: Line 81:
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_Chile Wikipedia's page on Education in Chile]
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_Chile Wikipedia's page on Education in Chile]


== Higher education ==
== Further and Higher education ==
=== Universities in Chile ===
=== Universities in Chile ===
In Chile, the term '''''universidades tradicionales''''' ("traditional universities") is used to denote the group of universities founded before the 1980s. This term usually includes derivative universities, which are not really traditional but were derived from traditional ones. Therefore, a more precise term is ''[[Consejo de Rectores de las Universidades Chilenas‎]]'' or Universities of the Rectors' Council (of Chilean Universities).
In Chile, the term '''''universidades tradicionales''''' ("traditional universities") is used to denote the group of universities founded before the 1980s. This term usually includes derivative universities, which are not really traditional but were derived from traditional ones. Therefore, a more precise term is ''[[Consejo de Rectores de las Universidades Chilenas‎]]'' or Universities of the Rectors' Council (of Chilean Universities).
Line 163: Line 189:
* [http://www.ues.cl/universidades/universidades_en_chile Ues.cl page on Chilean traditional universities (Spanish)]
* [http://www.ues.cl/universidades/universidades_en_chile Ues.cl page on Chilean traditional universities (Spanish)]


=== Polytechnics in Chile ===


===5.3 Colleges in Uruguay
== Higher education reform ==
== Higher education reform ==
In 2006, student protests changed some elements in the higher education field. Amongst the students' short term demands were free travel passes on buses and the waiving of the university admissions test (PSU) fee, while the longer term demands included: the abolition of the Organic Constitutional Law on Teaching (LOCE), the end to municipalization of subsidized education, a reform to the Full-time School Day policy (JEC) and a quality education for all. Negotiations from that protest started in hopes to change these aspects of higher education.
In 2006, student protests changed some elements in the higher education field. Amongst the students' short term demands were free travel passes on buses and the waiving of the university admissions test (PSU) fee, while the longer term demands included: the abolition of the Organic Constitutional Law on Teaching (LOCE), the end to municipalization of subsidized education, a reform to the Full-time School Day policy (JEC) and a quality education for all. Negotiations from that protest started in hopes to change these aspects of higher education.

Revision as of 16:20, 12 August 2011

• 1 • 2 Uruguay in a nutshell • 3 Education in Uruguay • 4 Schools in Uruguay • 5 Further and Higher education o 5.1 Universities in Uruguay o 5.2 • 6 Education reform o 6.1 Schools o 6.2 Post-secondary • 7 Administration and finance o 7.1 Schools o 7.2 Post-secondary • 8 Quality assurance, inspection and accreditation o 8.1 Schools o 8.2 Post-secondary • 9 Information society • 10 ICT in education initiatives o 10.1 Virtual initiatives in schools o 10.2 Virtual initiatives in post-secondary education • 11 Lessons learnt o 11.1 General lessons o 11.2 Notable practices • 12 References


Partners and Experts in Chile

None.


Chile in a nutshell

200px] Source: CIA World Factbook

Chile, officially the Republic of Chile (Spanish: República de Chile), is a country in South America occupying a long and narrow coastal strip wedged between the Andes mountains and the Pacific Ocean. It borders Peru to the north, Bolivia to the northeast, Argentina to the east, and the Drake Passage at the country's southernmost tip. It is one of only two countries in South America that does not have a border with Brazil. The Pacific forms the country's entire western border, with a coastline that stretches over 6,435 kilometres. Chilean territory extends to the Pacific Ocean which includes the overseas territories of Juan Fernández Islands, the Salas y Gómez islands, the Desventuradas Islands and Easter Island located in Polynesia. Chile claims 1,250,000 square kilometres (480,000 sq mi) of territory in Antarctica.


Sourced from Wikipedia's page on Chile

Education in Chile

"At the beginning of the 1990s, a transcendental educational reform, the largest in the history of Chile, started, in which equality and quality have been the main objectives.

Students now study a new curriculum, they have 3.5 times more nutritional rations than in 1990; receive textbooks in all subsidized institutions; complete between 200 and 250 classroom hours more per year with the full school day; and have access to better conditions due to an increased investment in educational infrastructure, and 90% of them have access computer labs in primary and secondary schools.

The new phase in educational reform is centered on quality; the desire is to guarantee all students a quality education, regardless of their socioeconomic conditions.

An important milestone occurred in May of 2003, when the Constitutional Reform established and guaranteed twelve years of free, obligatory education. With this, all Chileans are assured access to high school until 21 years of age."

Adapted from Embassy of Chile in US


Councils:

The Consejo de Rectores de las Universidades Chilenas or Council of Rectors of Chilean Universities (CRUCH) is the body that brings together traditional twenty-five most prestigious public universities in the country.


CONIFOS is the Consejo Nacional de Instituciones Privadas de Educacion Superior (National Council of Private Institutions of Higher Education): "our vision is to transform the National Council of Private Institutions of Higher Education, Conifer, as the leader and the main reference of the institutions of private higher education within the framework of vocational training in Chile." Its web site is [http://www.conifos.cl/ (Spanish)


Corporación de Universidades Privadas (CUP) has Daniel Farcas as President and its web site is at http://www.universia.cl/portada/actualidad/noticia_actualidad.jsp?noticia=147094 (Spanish)


Schools in Chile

The education system in Chile encompasses public and private institutions, and includes the following schooling levels:

  • Preschool (educación parvularia), which is attended by children less than 6 years old;
  • Primary/Elementary school (educación básica), which consists of eight grades;
  • Secondary/High school (educación media), which consists of four grades and offers students a choice of two types of diplomas (the general science-liberal arts diploma, or the vocational-technical diploma (which combines the general studies program with preparation for a trade);
  • Higher education (educación superior), which is received at universities, professional institutes, or technical centers.


There are four types of schools:

  1. Public schools
  2. Private schools
  3. Delegated Administration schools, which are owned by the State but managed and financed by private corporations.
  4. the Escuela Villa Las Estrellas in Antártica, administered by the Ministry of Education and completely financed by the State

Adapted from:

Further and Higher education

Universities in Chile

In Chile, the term universidades tradicionales ("traditional universities") is used to denote the group of universities founded before the 1980s. This term usually includes derivative universities, which are not really traditional but were derived from traditional ones. Therefore, a more precise term is Consejo de Rectores de las Universidades Chilenas‎ or Universities of the Rectors' Council (of Chilean Universities).


These universities can be divided into two groups:

  • Properly traditional universities, the eight universities existing in 1981: Universidad de Chile, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso, Universidad Austral de Chile, Universidad Católica del Norte, Universidad de Concepción, Universidad de Santiago de Chile (formerly Universidad Técnica del Estado) and Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María.
  • Derivative universities: universities formed by separating a faculty or campus from a traditional one or by merging two campusses, one belonging to Universidad de Chile and the other, to Universidad Técnica del Estado. For example, what now is the Universidad Metropolitana de Ciencias de la Educación in 1981 was the Education Faculty of the University of Chile; the present-day Universidad de La Frontera in 1981 was the University of Chile, Temuco Campus, and the Technical University of the State, Temuco Campus; and the present Universidad Católica de la Santísima Concepción in 1991 was the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Talcahuano campus. The Universidad Tecnológica Metropolitana (known by its acronym, UTEM) was founded on August 30, 1993.

Currently, there are two main types of universities, classified according to characteristics:

  1. State-owned universities (universidades estatales). These are the Universidad de Chile, Universidad de Santiago de Chile and derivative universities, which in the 1970s were constituted from the regional campuses of the former two.
  2. Private non-profit universities, of two types:
    • Universities of the Catholic Church. Similarly to the regional estatales, most of these were created from the regional campuses of the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile in the 1970s.
    • Three private universities, owned by non-profit foundations. These are the Universidad Austral de Chile, the Universidad de Concepción (founded by the citizens of Concepción), and the Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María, created by the last will and testament of Federico Santa María Carrera.

Twenty-five traditional universities are today grouped in the Consejo de Rectores (Rectors' Council). Since the 1970s, these universities have managed a common higher education admissions test known as the Prueba de Aptitud Académica ("scholastic-aptitude test") and, since 2003, as the Prueba de Selección Universitaria ("university-selection test").


TRADITIONAL UNIVERSITIES:

  1. Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
  2. Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso
  3. Universidad Arturo Prat
  4. Universidad Austral de Chile
  5. Universidad Católica de La Santísima Concepción
  6. Universidad Católica del Maule
  7. Universidad Católica del Norte
  8. Universidad Católica de Temuco
  9. Universidad de Antofagasta
  10. Universidad de Atacama
  11. Universidad de Chile
  12. Universidad de Concepción
  13. Universidad de La Frontera
  14. Universidad de La Serena
  15. Universidad del Bío-Bío
  16. Universidad de Los Lagos
  17. Universidad de Magallanes
  18. Universidad de Playa Ancha de Ciencias de la Educación
  19. Universidad de Santiago de Chile
  20. Universidad de Talca
  21. Universidad de Tarapacá
  22. Universidad de Valparaíso
  23. Universidad Metropolitana de Ciencias de la Educación UMCE
  24. Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María
  25. Universidad Tecnológica Metropolitana UTEM

PRIVATE UNIVERSITIES OF CHILE

  1. Universidad Academia de Humanismo Cristiano
  2. Adolfo Ibáñez
  3. Universidad Adventista de Chile
  4. Universidad Alberto Hurtado
  5. Universidad Autónoma de Chile
  6. Universidad Bernardo O Higgins
  7. Universidad Bolivariana
  8. Universidad Católica Cardenal Raúl Silva Henríquez
  9. Universidad Central de Chile
  10. Universidad Chileno - Británica de Cultura
  11. Universidad de Aconcagua
  12. Universidad de Artes, Ciencias y Comunicación, UNIACC
  13. Universidad de Arte y Ciencias Sociales, ARCIS
  14. Universidad de Ciencias de la Informática, UCINF
  15. Universidad de Las Américas
  16. Universidad del Desarrollo
  17. Universidad del Mar
  18. Universidad de Los Andes
  19. Universidad del Pacífico
  20. Universidad de Viña del Mar
  21. Universidad Diego Portales

ACCREDITED UNIVERSITIES CHILE

  1. Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
  2. Universidad Alberto Hurtado
  3. Universidad Arturo Prat
  4. Universidad Autónoma de Chile
  5. Universidad Bernardo O Higgins
  6. Universidad Católica Cardenal Raúl Silva Henríquez
  7. Universidad Católica de La Santísima Concepción
  8. Universidad Católica del Norte
  9. Universidad Católica de Temuco
  10. Universidad de Artes, Ciencias y Comunicación, UNIACC
  11. Universidad de Atacama
  12. Universidad de Chile
  13. Universidad de Concepción
  14. Universidad de Las Américas
  15. Universidad del Desarrollo
  16. Universidad de Los Andes
  17. Universidad de Los Lagos
  18. Universidad del Pacífico
  19. Universidad de Santiago de Chile
  20. Universidad de Tarapacá
  21. Universidad de Viña del Mar
  22. Universidad Diego Portales
  23. Universidad Finis Terrae
  24. Universidad Mayor
  25. Universidad Santo Tomás
  26. Universidad Técnica Federico Santa María
  27. Universidad Tecnológica de Chile - INACAP


Sourced from:

Polytechnics in Chile

===5.3 Colleges in Uruguay

Higher education reform

In 2006, student protests changed some elements in the higher education field. Amongst the students' short term demands were free travel passes on buses and the waiving of the university admissions test (PSU) fee, while the longer term demands included: the abolition of the Organic Constitutional Law on Teaching (LOCE), the end to municipalization of subsidized education, a reform to the Full-time School Day policy (JEC) and a quality education for all. Negotiations from that protest started in hopes to change these aspects of higher education.

Sourced from Wikipedia's page on the 2006 student protest in Chile

The Bologna Process

Administration and finance

Quality assurance

Chile enforced the National System for Quality Assurance in Higher Education (Sistema Nacional de Aseguramiento de la Calidad de la Educación Superior), better known as the Accreditation Act. It is aimed at achieving effective equality of opportunities for personal and professional development for all our young.

It also states that "quality assurance must be the result of a shared effort in which the State participate actively in its role of regulator and guarantor of equity, together with institutions of higher education and, within them, its various segments".


Sourced from: Sistema Nacional de Aseguramiento de la Calidad de la Educación Superior (Spanish)


The Council of Rectors (Consejo de Rectores) help implement a single, transparant admission system to all state universities and to several of the oldest private universities. The system, Universitary Selection Test or Prueba de Selección Universitaria (PSU), is very similar to the US SAT Reasoning Test. The design and the correction of the test is performed by the Universidad de Chile (University of Chile), while the system itself is managed by the Ministerio de Educación (Ministry of Education).

The test consists in two mandatory exams, mathematics and language, plus several other specific exams, like chemistry, physics, biology, history, etc., depending on what career the student wishes to apply. The cumulative grade point average achieved during secondary school is also taken into account in the final admission score. Every university assigns different weightings to the results of the various exams.


Adapted from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_Chile Wikipedia's page on Education in Chile]

Chile's HEIs in the information society

Towards the information society

Information society strategy

Virtual Campuses in HE

Interesting Virtual Campus Initiatives

Only one university appears to have significant e-learning, UNIACC (Universidad de las Artes, Ciencias, y Comunicaciones).

The Universidad de Playa Ancha stated that in 2009 it would take on e-learning at a different level.


Virtual Campus

Campus Virtual, Universidad de las Americas (Spanish)

Capus Virtual, Universidad Santiago de Cali(Spanish)

Distance Learning

Universidad Católica del Norte Centro de Educación a Distancia (Spanish) or Distance Education Center of the Catholic University of the North: its methods are:

  1. E-Learning: Using digital or computer technology to produce, transmit, distribute and organize knowledge. Requires use of knowledge manager platform.
  2. Mixed: Using Self-Learning Text and administering the platform using E-learning knowledge
  3. B-learning: Using the platform administrator of e-learning and face-to-face work.


The Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso (Pontifical Catholic University of Chile): Campus virtual e-Teleduc (Spanish)* or Campus Virtual TELEDUC (also http://www.uc.cl/teleduc/ and http://www.teleduc.cl/ - both in Spanish): in the Campus E-Teleduc students get news about the course, along with information to supplement training process for students. Through forums, they interact with other students and different teachers. They do B-learning with Moodle.

  • Not to be mistaken for TELEDUC (Spanish) itself, which is an institution in the country capable of deploying throughout Chile and a diversity of audiences multimedia educational proposals, incorporating virtually every available media: We have trained more than 450 thousand students through more than 100 courses we have developed over many different disciplines and areas of learning. It is involved in the university's virtual campus, but keeps other activities as well of course.


The Universidad de Valparaíso (Spanish) (University of Valparaíso)

Universidad Tecnológica de Chile > Instituto Profesional, Centro de Información Técnica (INACAP) (Spanish) or the Professional Institute, Technical Information Center of the Technological University of Chile (English). INACAP has incorporated teaching methodologies e & b-Learning courses for those considering careers in higher education, as well as training courses, for which features a frontline technology platform. The [http://www.inacap.cl/tportalvp/index.php?t=98 English Corner has recently had a face lift in order to provide a more attractive and better service as a digital resource for learning and teaching at INACAP, as well as providing cultural and general links of interest to the wider community.


Universidad de Playa Ancha (University of Educational Sciences "Playa Ancha") which uses Moodle


Universidad Austral de Chile (Southern University of Chile), which uses Moodle. Its UVirtual uses Software MOT and Padi, and Video conferencing.


Universidad de Concepción (Spanish) (Conception University), which develops educational programs, e / b-learning: electronic and blended learning. It offers training programs, graduates or postgraduates courses. EDUC program has the technical capacity to design and build technology platforms to deliver Internet-based educational content, tasks, forums, interactive discussions, reviews, etc. Other resource is http://www.udec.cl/pexterno/


SED, Universidad de Antofagasta (Spanish) (Antofagasta University): its System of Distance Education (SED) was certified Vocational Training and Distance Learning Award by IRAM and the International Certification Network for Professional formation, blended learning and e-learning education, granted by IQNet and IRAM. Its technology is based on the use of learning technology platform that provides its students communication tools such as forums, email, chat, and online assessments, among others.


Universidad de Chile (Spanish) (Chile University) uses the "WebCT" type software platform LMS (Learning Management System) that allows the administration of students (profile manager) and educational materials (teacher profile) via Internet, providing access to students enrolled (student profile) to one or more courses for them to navigate the educational content, teaching activities, assessments on line, communicate with teachers and peers through the various tools offered by the system.


Universidad Tecnológica Metropolitana (Spanish) (Metropolitan Technological University): Utemvirtual uses the Internet for distribution of synchronous and asynchronous formal content of each program of study conducted in Chile and abroad.


Universidad de La Frontera 's Teaching Team is composed of professionals specializing in the areas of distance learning mediated by technology, and has the responsibility to create policies and guidelines for Teaching at the Institute of Educational Informatics. It's links is http://iie.lazos.cl/docencia/ (Spanish) (Temuco-Chile)

e-Learning

UNIACC, La Universidad de las Comunicaciones University Communications]: http://elearning2.uniacc.cl/

Other

Universidad de La Frontera. Temuco-Chile (Spanish)
Teaching Team is composed of professionals specializing in the areas of distance learning mediated by technology, and has the responsibility to create policies and guidelines for Teaching at the Institute of Educational Informatics.

TELEDUC (Spanish)
With 30 years of experience, nowadays Teleduc is the only institution in the country capable of deploying throughout Chile and to a great number and diversity of audiences, multimedia educational proposals, incorporating virtually every available media. We have trained more than 450 thousand students through more than 100 courses we have developed over many different disciplines and areas of learning.

Interesting Programmes

DOUC UC

Founded in 1968, DUOC UC (DuocUC, Instituto Profesional y Centro de Formación Técnica DuocUC) is the technical education branch of the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile (UC), Chile. It is one of the largest private technical education providers in the country, with multiple campuses and enrolment of roughly 42,000 students in 2007.

Many technology training certificates are available online. For example, as reported in a "Sun Academic Initiative" newsletter in October 2007 (http://www.sun.com/featured-articles/2007-1023/feature/index.jsp?intcmp=hp2007oct23_edu_read):

At Fundacion Instituto Profesional DuocUC, a technical and vocational school in Chile, 1500 students use the "Fundamentals of the Java Programming Language" course materials. The DUOC UC web site is at http://www.duoc.cl/ (Spanish only)


UNIACC

UNIACC has over 3000 students in three Campuses interconnected by multimedia technology. It grants diverse academic degrees, and teaches thirty one Academic Programs, Diplomas and Masters.

Communication is the heart and articulated axis of its educational project. Over 5000 students, with diverse specialties have graduated from UNIACC. Its institutional educational strength has been recognized on national and international level not only by European and Latin American Universities, but also by international organizations which, knowing its academic and executive capacity, support and cooperate with UNIACC in the areas of different Undergraduate and Postgraduate Academic Programs, and Continuous Training in the areas of Art, Communication, and New Multimedia Technologies.

UNIACC has its own Radio and TV Station (channel 34 on VHF band), that broadcasts educational and recreational programmes. It offers a Virtual Campus with a Modern Technological Platform of Distance Learning called eCampus, through which a complete university training is provided. In order to do so, on-line interactive mechanisms of study, evaluation, and self-learning through the Internet, with the most demanding educational quality standards is used. Nowadays 6 majors and 18 on-line courses are provided.


Re.ViCa Case-study

None.

Lessons learnt

None so far.

References

  1. Reviews of National Policies for Education: Tertiary Education in Chile, OECD, 2009, http://browse.oecdbookshop.org/oecd/pdfs/browseit/9109011E.PDF
  2. Wikipedia's page on Chile
  3. Embassy of Chile in US
  4. Consejo de Rectores de las Universidades Chilenas or Council of Rectors of Chilean Universities (CRUCH)
  5. Wikipedia's page on Chilean traditional universities (English)
  6. Ues.cl page on Chilean traditional universities (Spanish)
  7. Wikipedia's page on the 2006 student protest in Chile
  8. Sistema Nacional de Aseguramiento de la Calidad de la Educación Superior (Spanish)
  9. UNIACC (Universidad de las Artes, Ciencias, y Comunicaciones).
  10. Campus Virtual, Universidad de las Americas (Spanish)
  11. Capus Virtual, Universidad Santiago de Cali(Spanish)



> Countries
>> Main Page