Xpat Opinion: Teachers & Their Students: The Hungarian Situation
- 21 Jan 2013 7:59 AM
The HÖOK leaders seem to be satisfied with the offer the government made for tuition-free places in those sixteen majors that had been previously excluded. They seem to have given up on other very important demands, including the financing of universities and the question of free movement of graduates within the European Union.
My feeling is that even the HÖOK leaders will be mighty surprised when they hear about the new numbers that will determine student eligibility for entering university. If the government is clever, they will postpone that announcement until the summer when students are no longer in school.
There is no question that the newly formed HaHa is far more radical than the official student organization, the pro-Fidesz HÖOK. Without HaHa HÖOK would have crumbled under pressure long ago. The leaders of HaHa managed to move crowds while HÖOK has such a bad reputation among college students that I doubt that the old faces could arouse much enthusiasm. After all, they are the representatives of officialdom.
It looks to me as if Zoltán Balog, who leads the mega-ministry called Emberi Erőforrások Minisztériuma or Emmi, and Rózsa Hoffmann, undersecretary in charge of education within the ministry, no longer consider the “student revolt” dangerous from the Orbán government’s point of view. Rózsa Hoffmann had disappeared from the public eye for weeks, but now she has returned with a gusto, making the same mistakes she normally makes. Her latest was that if, because of the changes introduced by the government there is a shortage of school supplies, like no chalk in the classrooms, the teachers should go out and buy supplies at their own expense.
She also appeared at a yearly event called “Exhibition Educatio.” (Hungarians like using Latin words. The latest is that Nézőpont Institute, a think-tank slavishly serving Fidesz political interests, renamed itself “Bonum semen.” :D ) Unfortunately for her, HaHa activists also appeared, and after Hoffmann refused to answer their questions all hell broke loose. The student activists went up to the podium and delivered their opinions of the educational policies of the government, including the authorities’ “bullshitting.”
The pro-government teachers were outraged. Some of them whistled, an expression of disapproval in Hungary. Others said that the students, instead of getting involved in politics, should be quiet and attend their classes. One woman announced that she came to the event to listen “to the responsible leaders of the country.” A man suggested to one of the activists that he go home and slap his father around, since he didn’t teach him “how to behave.” These teachers are obviously not accustomed to having a dialogue, especially not with their “subordinates.” The video can be seen here.
And that brings me to something that may help us understand the attitude of the majority of teachers. The Hungarian school system, regardless of what Rózsa Hoffmann claims, is still based on nineteenth-century educational principles. Hoffmann may talk about those awful liberals who “ruined” the formerly perfect Hungarian school system, but it looks to me as if practically nothing has happened since my own school days, many years ago.
Let me add here the story of a young women who had the opportunity to visit one of the best Budapest high schools a few days ago. She reported that classes are still conducted in the old-fashioned way: the teacher talks, the students take notes. No discussion but a lot of dates in a history class. The students still have to get up when the teacher enters the room and I assume that if asked a question, he/she will have stand just as we had to. No interaction, no discussion.
Yet, she added, the students whom she met were “just like us,” and she predicted that one day there will be a rift between students and school authorities, especially if Hoffmann’s “reforms” take hold. For the time being student protests are being stifled. In a number of schools the more conservative principals are putting pressure on students to prevent them from expressing their dissatisfaction with the state of chaos caused by the abrupt nationalization of schools and their worries about getting into college.
The situation is particularly bad in parochial schools that are generously financed by the Hungarian state. In a Pécs parochial gymnasium (Nagy Lajos Gymnasium) the students were herded into a prayer session to seek a presumably divine solution to the present problem even as students in Leövey Klára Gymnasium (my alma mater) were striking and organizing student forums.
But parochial schools are not the only ones to repress student activism. Atlatszo.hu reported that students of the Xántus János Gymnasium (District V, Budapest) organized a Facebook page and managed to get 300 signatures but a student “loyal to the school authorities” removed the page. The organizers were called in by the principal who made it clear that “students have no right to protest.” The principal lied. Student governments do have the right to protest according to the constitution.
So, the question is how long the Orbán government can keep the lid on a boiling pot of water. These students are not like the ones Rózsa Hoffmann could frighten to death in the 1980s when she was a principal. This is a different breed. Or, at least I hope so.
Source: Hungarian Spectrum
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