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Genoa. An open letter to parents and citizens to explain the reasons for the demonstrations and the school strike on September 24 and 25 and the demonstration on September 26. More than 130 teachers and public school workers in Genoa wrote and signed it.
The teachers will meet in the square on September 25 for the procession organized by the university community Comestudio Genova.
The pandemic situation of recent months has brought to the surface and brought to the breaking point the many criticalities and problems that have always existed in Italian public schools, at least in the last 25 years. The list of problems that were never addressed or solved is long and well known, if only by those who live and work in the school:
– the continuous and drastic funding cuts;
– inadequate school buildings, if not downright dilapidated in many situations (see the 17th Civic Observatory report on schools 2019)
– the so-called problem “chicken coop classes“We do not want to solve (for the year that has just started, the Regional School Offices have continued to train the future first upper classes using the divisor of 28 students per class);
– the plague of precarious (between 150,000 and 200,000 alternates per year, who stubbornly do not want to stabilize);
– the continuous pseudo-reforms and counter-reforms of the last 20 years, which have subjected the school to business and market logic;
– the drastic reduction of technical and administrative staff.
And this is only a partial list. In this already heavily compromised situation, stemming only from the resistance (though often too quiet and passive) of those who work and live in school, COVID-19 has collapsed.
It could have been an opportunity to initiate at least one change and begin a serious plan to revive the school. Instead, apart from the usual rhetorical discourse on the importance of education for the future of the country, nothing serious has been done. Indeed, the school has become the terrain of a very low-level political confrontation in light of the regional round of elections and the ongoing election campaign in the country, with often ludicrous, if not tragic effects. The Italian school in the last 25 years has been devastated by governments everywhere with continuous cuts in funds and jobs, with the continuous increase in the minimum number of students per class, with corporate-style reforms, with increasing funding for schools. schools. “Equality”, with the proliferation of a suffocating bureaucracy, etc.
As the icing on this poisoned cake, in recent days the preventive guilt has begun to the teachers who would not want to go back to school (how crazy! They claim to be able to work without risk of getting sick!) Work!) The fault will be ours.
Precisely for this reason, that is, in order not to play this painful game of slaughter on the shoulders of the school, we wanted to wait until the end of the elections to give our opinion.
However theand things to start doing It wouldn’t have been difficult to understand and we’ve been repeating them for months:
– definitive structural investments in terms of percentage of GDP invested in school and research, such that Italy rises from the last place in school drop-outs and school drop-outs among European countries (at least + 1% from 2020);
– massive investments in public school buildings;
– the drastic and definitive reduction of precarious work in schools and the improvement of working conditions in the school sector;
– Health facilities in schools, necessary to reactivate school medicine as a health practice and collective culture;
– reduction in the number of students per class.
On the other hand, contradictory, imaginative and also clearly damaging indications for the school and its quality have come (and continue to come) from those who govern us; everything was left to the initiative of administrators and individual schools: reduction of teaching hours to 45 minutes, classes divided into presence and distance, benches with wheels, staggered entrances, precarious disposable (the so-called COVID staff), mask mask no, distance between mouth lines (sic!), etc.
Well! Really bad! We are sick of all this. We want school to become, as it should be, a true priority of the country and public health must be.
For all these reasons, which we hope to have explained clearly, we intend to protest in all possible ways (strikes, demonstrations, demonstrations, etc.) and we intend to join all forms of mobilization that arise, starting from a strike called by various unions for the September 24/25, with a procession on the 25th morning at 9.30 from Piazza Fanti d’Italia in Genoa and the national demonstration on September 26 started by Priority at the school.
We know that many of you may think that this is not the time. We do so aware that, by remaining silent, the public school in Italy will receive a definite blow. Not only we are at stake, the quality of our work and the quality of the educational project that will be increasingly difficult to maintain. There is something bigger at stake and, if we do not mobilize, we will see the same old game in which education, health, transport and public welfare will be sacrificed again, running out of investments and fundamental resources for all. .
That is why we think that it is of fundamental importance that all of us, if you care about public school and the fact that education continues to be a right of all and especially of the weakest, we stand by our side as parents of our students and as citizens. . .
The signatures of teachers and school personnel of Ligurian schools follow.
1) Ugo Gabaldi (Lss Leonardo da Vinci) [email protected] 010.2476278
2) Roberto Pardini (IT Nautico San Giorgio) [email protected]
3) Emanuela Bottini (IISEMontale – New IPC) Prof
4) Nicola Pepe (IC Borzoli)
5) Enrica Olivieri (municipal kindergarten educator)
6) Isidora Vitale (Lss Leonardo da Vinci)
7) Giovanna Bringiotti (Lss Leonardo da Vinci)
8) Albertina Caligaris (Lss Leonardo da Vinci)
9) Massimiliano Cabella (precarious)
10) Sabrina Tamilia (L. li Grazia Deledda)
11) Sonia Filippini (Lss Leonardo da Vinci)
12) Antonella Fennino (precarious)
13) Rosaria Elia (Lss Leonardo da Vinci)
14) Giovanna Firone (Lss Leonardo da Vinci)
15) Giulia Bausano (Ls Piero Gobetti)
16) Stefania Director (University of Genoa)
17) Ana Pardo Solano (IISEMontale – New IPC)
18) Lisa Dell’Utri Vizzini (SMS Don Milani – Colombo)
19) Massimo Puglisi (IIS Ruffini – Imperia)
20) Stefano Rocca (Lss Leonardo Da Vinci)
21) Cesarina Gosio (IISE Montale)
22) Patrizia Lazzari (CPIA Centro Levante)
23) Marina Bigatto (Lss Leonardo da Vinci)
24) Patrizia Dellepiane (Lss Leonardo da Vinci)
25 Maurizia Andreoli
26) Stefano Gabrieli (ITIS Giorgi)
27) Riccardo Aprile (ITIS Giorgi)
28) Andrea Bertonasco (ITIS Giorgi)
29) Stefano Cavo (ITIS Giorgi)
30) Emanuele Falcone (ITIS Giorgi)
31) Elisa Oppedisano (ITIS Giorgi)
32) Francesca Bancheri (IC Bolzaneto)
33) Massimo Milella (IC Pontedecimo)
34) Alessandro Esposito (Luzzati School of Art, Chiavari)
35) Sara Urgeghe (SMS Don Milani – Colombo)
36) Antonio Caporilli (IC Teglia)
37) SimonaBortolotto (IISE Montale)
38) Maurizia Andreoli (IC Borzoli)
39) Carla Bianchi (IC Bolzaneto)
40) Sara Carbone (IT Giorgi)
41) Michele De Lullo (SMS Don Milani – Colombo)
42) Anna Emanuela Brusco (temporary workers waiting for the chair)
43) Carla Bertorello
44) Richard Jacob
45) Roberta Piombo
46) Andrea Ignazio Daddi
47) Andrea Martinetti
48) Francesca Cervellini
49) Elena Cellerino
50) Silvia Ierardi
51) Mariagrazia D’Anna
52) Claudia Tomasini
53) Palmeri free
54) Michela Bellingeri
55) Ilaria Poggio
56) Laura Palmeri
57) Lucia Moretti
58 Laura Rossi
59) Manuela Roggero
60) Cristina Andrei
61) Nicolò Bruzzone
62) Marie Antoinette Valence
63) Ilaria Franzese
64) Maura Bregante
65) Mara Forest
66) Loredana Genco
67) Marina April
68) Nasti Sabrina
69) Francesca Casagrande
70) Elisabetta Romeo (Lss Convitto Colombo)
71) Marisa Marangone (ISS Caboto)
72) Claudia Boni (IC Cicagna)
73) Silvia Conte (ITIS Gastaldi – Abba)
74) Carla Lusenti (retired teacher)
75) Elena Vignati (precarious waiting for the chair)
76) Viola Salvatorelli (IT Vittorio Emanuele II)
77) Guido Schiozzi (retired teacher)
78) Lucio Maccarone (Duchess of Galliera)
79) Monica Ghiotto (ITN San Giorgio)
80) Chiara Lanini (pedagogue)
81) Laura Spierto (Primary X December)
82) Gina Pepe (IC Cornigliano)
83) Elisabetta Bianchi (IPS Bergese)
84) Monica Bianchi (precarious waiting for the chair)
85) Flavia Allavena (Daneo Elementary School)
86) Donatella Alù (Daneo primary school)
87) Cristina Amadio (Daneo elementary school)
88) Daniele Andreazzo (Daneo primary school) “
89) Emi Audifreddi (Daneo Elementary School) “
90) Clelia Benedetto “
91) Monica Beghello
92) Paola Calzia
93) Luciana Cocurullo
94) Francesca Colao
95) Mara Dedola (Daneo Elementary School)
96) Simona Dimitri
97) Alessandro Fontana
98) Milena Galliano
99) Paola Guidi
100) Enrica Lusetti
101) Federica Marullo
102) Giulia Nebbione
103) Anna Maria Oliva
104) Cinzia Pennati
105) Daniela Pesce
106) Alice Raimondo
107) Monica Ricci
108) Marco Scanavini
109) Maria Lucia Soldi
110) Daniela Sugliano
111) Cristina Testa
112) Chiara Vallebona
113) Francesca Bandini (IISE Montale)
114) Emanuela Busetti (IISE Montale)
115) Fulvia De Feo (Iise Montale)
116) Anna Sartori (IISE Montale)
117) Sara Stoppino (Daneo Elementary School)
118) Raffaella Maggiolo (Daneo primary school)
119) Michela Chiari (SMS Don Milani – Colombo)
120) Eleonora Ingrassia (precarious waiting for the chair)
121) Francesca Solinas (ISE Montale)
122) Emanuela Massa (precarious waiting for the chair)
123) Sara Salvi (precarious waiting for the chair)
124) Patrizia Canepa (precarious waiting for the chair)
125) Giulia Frezza (precarious waiting for the chair)
126) Marina Aprile (precarious waiting for the chair)
127) Ilaria Franzese (precarious waiting for the chair)
128) Francesca Barbieri (precarious waiting for the chair)
129) Gabriele Monte (precarious waiting for the chair)
130) Sabina Basti (precarious waiting for the chair)
131) Loredana Genova (precarious waiting for the chair)
132) Simona Lanzu (precarious waiting for the chair)
133) Annalisa Massa (precarious waiting for the chair)
134) Federica Chisalè (ISE Montale)
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