Tag Archives: teachers

Plan for Mexico’s Return to Class Leads to Confusion

By KELIN DILLON As Mexico fast approaches its Aug. 30 start date for in-person education for children, the implementation of its back-to-school plan has been fraught with confusion for Mexican families nationwide. Some parents have noted that their children who go to public and private schools have two different returns to class, with the public schools being completely in-person while

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Teachers Head Back to Schools in Five States

By ADRIANA GARCÍA VALDERRAMA Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) said that he foresees that as soon as all the nation’s education personnel gets  vaccinated against the covid-19 virus, classes will return to “normal” to conclude the 2020-2021 school year with live classes. According to Mexican Secretary of Public Education Delfina Gómez, vaccination is already underway in Aguascalientes, Baja

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Mexico’s Higher Death Toll and Fearful Future

By KELIN DILLON Mexico’s National Institute of Statistics and Geography (Inegi) reported on Wednesday, Jan. 27, that 44.9 percent more people died of covid-related issues from January through August of 2020 than initially reported by the Mexican government, adding another layer of discord to the nation’s dismal handling of the coronavirus pandemic. The government previously reported that deaths during the

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AMLO to Meet with Education Workers Unions

By RICARDO CASTILLO Mexican education workers nationwide commemorated Teachers’ Day (Día del Maestros) in many different manners on Wednesday, May15, not excluding expressing their dissatisfaction with President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s (AMLO) new education reform, which was fully approved by Congress during the day. AMLO said he’d sign the law immediately so it can be published on Thursday, May 16,

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Hallelujah! A Teachers’ Day without a CNTE Demonstration…Maybe…or Maybe Not

By RICARDO CASTILLO     Every May 15, Mexico commemorates Teachers’ Day. But the festivities – celebrated at every school – public or private – by the millions of students, parents, labor unions, communities and government branches, who pamper teachers that day (even if it is just once a year), may turn out in 2019 to be different from what we’ve had

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Abrogation of Mexico’s Education Reform Fails, For Now

By RICARDO CASTILLO     Both houses of the Mexican Congress folded on Tuesday, April 30, ending the first part of formal sessions for this year of 2019. There was one surprise as the Senate sent back to the Chamber of Deputies President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s (AMLO) much-touted new law abrogating former President Enrique Peña Nieto’s ill-fated Education Reform. The bill didn’t

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Bank of Mexico Lowers Forecast for Annual Growth

By THÉRÈSE MARGOLIS     The Bank of Mexico (Banxico) lowered it predicted 2019 GDP growth rate for Mexico on Wednesday, Feb. 27, from between respectable 1.7 and 2.7 percent to an unexceptional 1.1 to 1.2 percent on Wednesday, Feb. 27. Citing a variety of causes from a global economic slowdown to internal factors such as fuel shortages (due to a nationwide

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Strike Two for AMLO at the Bat

By RICARDO CASTILLO     Baseball aficionado President Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) was pitched two unrelated labor strikes in a row on the week of Jan. 21. One was in the state of Michoacán concerning teachers, and the other was in the border city of Matamoros launched by maquiladora (in-bond assembly) industry workers. Both strikes were swerving curves that smoked right past batting

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