Cuba’s revolution in education
While the forces of imperialism lead the world into
ever-greater barbarism, socialist Cuba is working to create the most cultured,
educated and humane society that has ever existed: a pathway of hope for a
better world. JIM CRAVEN examines the steps Cuba is taking to deepen the
revolution through socialist education.
A better socialism is possible
In recent years
Cuban revolutionaries have admitted they could have done much more to advance
their socialist society, even with the limited resources available during the
Special Period. In particular, they have come to understand the central
importance of raising the educational and cultural level of all the Cuban
people, even beyond the outstanding levels already achieved. Only when the
people have knowledge and ideas can they fully participate in solving their
problems and building a better socialist society. Education is crucial: for
better child care and family life; for handling the difficult transition from
childhood to teenager; for improving health, diet and hygiene; to satisfy
cultural needs and make people whole, rounded, fully human beings; for
political understanding to withstand imperialist cultural domination and
brainwashing; for reducing privilege and relative poverty and hence the social
exclusion, crime and anti-social behaviour that stems from them.
Of
course, bourgeois liberals and academics also often talk about transforming
the world and ending poverty through education. There have been countless such
national and international programmes. The fact they get nowhere is not simply
due to the necessary resources not being made available, but that the social
relationships and economic class interests in capitalist societies run counter
to any egalitarian, universal advanced education system. In a socialist
society such as Cuba, working to eradicate class distinctions, the possibility
of success exists.
Education to transform society
The Cuban vision is spectacular. In a recent
speech to an international conference on pedagogy, Fidel Castro put it this
way: ‘In the last three years, life has led us to a great Battle of Ideas and
the need to instil a critical rather than a self-complacent view of our work
and our historical objectives.
‘There are new and higher challenges and
an important lesson. We are currently undertaking programmes that we could
never have dreamed of in our early years as revolutionary young
radicals.
‘It is a fact that eradicating total illiteracy within one
year constituted a feat; doing so with functional illiteracy took far longer.
Now, with a large human and ethical capital, a great internationalist spirit
and an elevated political culture, any objective in education and culture,
both artistic and political, is within our reach. These compact words merely
synthesise the essence of the educational revolution.
‘With fabulous
means of transmitting knowledge and culture, linked to the introduction of new
concepts in the organisation and improvement of the educational system, there
is nothing unusual in increasing three, four or even five-fold, the knowledge
that our children, our adolescents and our students are
receiving.
‘Future developments in our education will have notable
political, social and human connotations.
‘Today, ideas are the
essential instrument in the battle of our species for its own survival. And
ideas are born from education. The fundamental values, including ethical ones,
are sown in this way.
‘As education is the instrument par excellence in
the search for equality, well-being and social justice, you can better
understand why I qualify what is currently taking place in Cuban education in
search of higher objectives as a profound revolution. It is the total
transformation of society itself, one of whose fruits will be a general
integrated culture accessible to all citizens.
The very material future
of our people is to be based on knowledge and culture.’
100+ programmes
Over 100 programmes are underway as part of
this educational revolution. They include extending higher education to the
whole population through the televised University for All and intensive
courses for those who would not previously have had the opportunity. Over
85,000 high school graduates training as social workers, 80,000 unemployed
young people and thousands of redundant sugar workers are already benefiting
from this programme. New municipal universities are planned and the number of
university students is set to rise by 50% in the next five years. The amazing
aim within ten years is to raise the average educational standard to graduate
level.
Improvements in the school system include reducing primary class
sizes to 20 and junior high school classes to 15. Within two years an extra
4,500 extra primary teachers will be trained. A major programme of classroom
construction and school refurbishment was completed in record time last
September, thanks to the voluntary help and participation of parents and the
community. Every school now has access to IT facilities and 70,000 teachers
have been trained in their use. In a radical change to educating those in the
difficult 12 to 15 years age group, a less specialised, more student-based
approach has been adopted and 30,000 high school students have been recruited
as classroom assistants for their younger comrades.
To ensure an
all-round, cultural education every university must now offer arts and
humanities courses. Seven new arts schools are to be opened in the
municipalities and 4,000 new art teachers are to be trained so as to ensure
everyone has the opportunity to pursue their talents and interests. Every
village and neighbourhood now has a cultural centre where video films are
screened and discussed.
In socialist Cuba no-one is to be
excluded
But if these
educational programmes are to achieve a qualitative change in Cuban socialism,
we must remember they are only a means to a more important end. The very
concept of what it means to be a member of society is to be transformed. In
capitalist society those who own the means of production and their associates
– the ruling class – are society, and the rest of us merely bystanders,
servants, scapegoats. In Cuba, as Fidel said, knowledge and culture are to be
the material basis of society and no-one (so far as is possible before a
communist society can be established) is to be excluded from that process.
From Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! 172 April/May 2003
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