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DC News launches a very difficult Romanian test for Monica Anisie, Minister of Education. But it should be very straightforward considering it teaches this topic. Let’s see what we find out.
In a “Communication in Romanian” textbook we are communicated in everything, but not only in Romanian. We are talking about a textbook produced by the Ministry of Education and Research, by the Editorial Didactic and Pedagogical, a textbook that first-grade students should learn from.
The bomb in the textbook is this: children are taught to write by hand. It’s hard to believe that Monica Anisie, Minister of Education, Romanian language and literature teacher, can read the words below.
Let’s see together what appears in a first grade textbook:
In the image above it says: morovi? Carrot? oartofi? potatoes?
On the page below it says: “La tailor” or “La oroitor?” / “Do you have bones?” or “Now sew?” As you can see, it is very difficult for a first grader to decipher the handwriting taught in this textbook. Why? Because the lyrics are written very closely and absolutely nothing is understood. You have to understand what he writes from the context, otherwise you have no chance to understand.
And the examples continue:
It seems difficult to believe that any official of the Ministry of Education reads the manual approved by this institution. And it seems equally hard to believe that Monica Anisie, the Minister of Education, teacher of Romanian language and literature, has no difficulty reading the writing that is taught to students. Should illiteracy still surprise us? We don’t have much of a reason since handwriting is taught to first graders, which is very confusing.
If you have ever found errors in student textbooks, please let us know [email protected]
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