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  • UNESCO Office Bangkok and Regional Bureau for Education in Asia and the Pacific
  • 2015
  • 46
  • 602.87 كيلوبايت
  • pdf
  • EN
مصدر خارجي

Teachers in Asia Pacific: status and rights

In 2006, a regional seminar was held in Bangkok that focused on examining the status of teachers in the Asia-Pacific region. Subsequently, in 2014, UNESCO Bangkok proposed a study to review the current situation of teachers in the region. This report is the product of that 2014 proposal: a review that examines the status and rights of teachers in eight countries across five sub-regions within the Asia-Pacific: Uzbekistan, Mongolia, Republic of Korea, Samoa, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Cambodia and Indonesia. 

The research upon which this report is based was primarily desk-based, involving the collation and examination of a wide range of documents from a variety of sources within each of the eight countries. Data were collected on the basis of 10 categories relating to the status and rights of teachers as follows: entry requirements; pre-service training; recruitment and deployment; workload; professional development; salary; retirement; assessment; unions; school leadership; and involving teachers in decision-making processes