Dr. Reda Heghazi, the Minister of Education and Technical Education, confirmed in Egypt that a committee will be formed from subject advisers, curriculum experts and teachers from the faculties of education to make what he sees as amendments to the primary fourth grade curriculum. school to fit the schedule for the school year without compromising learning outcomes.
He emphasized that the amendments would include the fifth grade courses to avoid all the remarks revealed by the opinions of all parties last year regarding the fourth grades.
Hegazy also made it clear to high school students that the school year will not begin until all questions such as the exam date, its form and grading mechanism have been calculated, and that the tablet will provide study materials and various sources of knowledge, but a framework will be developed for this so that students sang about private lessons, using a tablet for tests every month.
Dr. Hassan Shehata, professor of curricula and teaching methods at Ain Shams University, said the ministry has adopted a trend that allows for a balance between being aware of the desires of an educational street on the one hand, and the state’s focus on building a new man for a new republic, and, accordingly , the facilitation of curricula was adopted in the context of retaining core concepts in curricular subjects.
For its part, Dr. Majid Abdel Salam, an expert in education, said that the ministry has changed its mind, listening more to the sides of the educational process, and that it has benefited from the comments made by all parties involved in the educational process (specialists, students, teachers, parents and members of the parliamentary committee on education).
Abir Ahmed, founder of the Egyptian Mothers Union for the Development of Education, said that we as parents were pleased that the ministry began to work in an educational and scientific manner, and Dalia El-Khazawi, founder of the Egyptian Parents Coalition, said that we demanded a lot of changes into fourth grade curricula last year, and Dr. Reda Hegazy made sure parents diluted those curricula.