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COUNCIL OF EUROPE
COMMITTEE OF MINISTERS |
Recommendation No R (2000) 4
of the Committee of Ministers to member states on the education of Roma/Gypsy
children in Europe
(Adopted by the Committee of
Ministers on 3 February 2000 at the 696th meeting of the Ministers'
Deputies)
The Committee of Ministers,
under the terms of Article 15.b of the Statute of the Council of Europe,
Considering that the aim of the
Council of Europe is to achieve greater unity between its members and that this
aim may be pursued, in particular, through common action in the field of
education;
Recognising that there is an
urgent need to build new foundations for future educational strategies toward
the Roma/Gypsy people in Europe, particularly in view of the high rates of
illiteracy or semi-literacy among them, their high drop-out rate, the low
percentage of students completing primary education and the persistence of
features such as low school attendance;
Noting that the problems faced
by Roma/Gypsies in the field of schooling are largely the result of
long-standing educational policies of the past, which led either to assimilation
or to segregation of Roma/Gypsy children at school on the grounds that they were
"socially and culturally handicapped";
Considering that the
disadvantaged position of Roma/Gypsies in European societies cannot be overcome
unless equality of opportunity in the field of education is guaranteed for Roma/Gypsy
children;
Considering that the education
of Roma/Gypsy children should be a priority in national policies in favour of
Roma/Gypsies;
Bearing in mind that policies
aimed at addressing the problems faced by Roma/Gypsies in the field of education
should be comprehensive, based on an acknowledgement that the issue of schooling
for Roma/Gypsy children is linked with a wide range of other factors and
pre-conditions, namely the economic, social and cultural aspects, and the fight
against racism and discrimination;
Bearing in mind that
educational policies in favour of Roma/Gypsy children should be backed up by an
active adult education and vocational education policy;
Considering that, as there is a
text concerning the education of Roma/Gypsy children for member states of the
European Union (Resolution of the Council and of the Ministers of Education
meeting with the Council on School Provision for Gypsy and Traveller Children,
of 22 May 1989; 89/C 153/02), it is urgently necessary to have a text covering
all of the member states of the Council of Europe;
Bearing in mind the Framework
Convention for the Protection of National Minorities and the European Charter
for Regional or Minority Languages;
Bearing in mind Recommendations
563 (1969) and 1203 (1993) of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
Europe in which mention is made of the educational needs of Roma/Gypsies in
Europe;
Bearing in mind Resolutions 125
(1981), 16 (1995) and 249 (1993) and Recommendation 11 (1995) of the Congress of
Local and Regional Authorities of Europe on the situation of Roma/Gypsies in
Europe;
Bearing in mind General Policy
Recommendation No. 3 of the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance
on "Combating racism and discrimination against Roma/Gypsies in Europe";
Bearing in mind the work
carried out by the Council for Cultural Co-operation (CDCC) to respond to
Resolution 125 (1981), and in particular, the publication of the report "Gypsies
and Travellers" (1985), updated in 1994 ("Roma, Gypsies, Travellers", Council of
Europe Publishing);
Having welcomed the memorandum
prepared by the Specialist Group on Roma/Gypsies entitled "Roma Children
Education Policy Paper: Strategic Elements of Education Policy for Roma Children
in Europe" (MG-S-ROM (97) 11),
Recommends that in implementing
their education policies the governments of the member states:
- be guided by the principles
set out in the appendix to this Recommendation;
- bring this Recommendation to
the attention of the relevant public bodies in their respective countries
through the appropriate national channels.
Appendix to
Recommendation No. R (2000) 4
Guiding principles of an
education policy
for Roma/Gypsy children in Europe
I. Structures
1. Educational policies for
Roma/Gypsy children should be accompanied by adequate resources and the flexible
structures necessary to meet the diversity of the Roma/Gypsy population in
Europe and which take into account the existence of Roma/Gypsy groups which lead
an itinerant or semi-itinerant lifestyle. In this respect, it might be envisaged
having recourse to distance education, based on new communication technologies.
2. Emphasis should be put on
the need to better co-ordinate the international, national, regional and local
levels in order to avoid dispersion of efforts and to promote synergies.
3. To this end member states
should make the Ministries of Education sensitive to the question of education
of Roma/Gypsy children.
4. In order to secure access to
school for Roma/Gypsy children, pre-school education schemes should be widely
developed and made accessible to them.
5. Particular attention should
also be paid to the need to ensure better communication with parents, where
necessary using mediators from the Roma/Gypsy community which could then lead to
specific carreer possibilities. Special information and advice should be given
to parents about the necessity of education and about the support mechanisms
that municipalities can offer families. There has to be mutual understanding
between parents and schools. The parents’ exclusion and lack of knowledge and
education (even illiteracy) also prevent children from benefiting from the
education system.
6. Appropriate support
structures should be set up in order to enable Roma/Gypsy children to benefit,
in particular through positive action, from equal opportunities at school.
7. The member states are
invited to provide the necessary means to implement the above-mentioned policies
and arrangements in order to close the gap between Roma/Gypsy pupils and
majority pupils.
II. Curriculum and teaching
material
8. Educational policies in
favour of Roma/Gypsy children should be implemented in the framework of broader
intercultural policies, taking into account the particular features of the
Romani culture and the disadvantaged position of many Roma/Gypsies in the member
states.
9. The curriculum, on the whole,
and the teaching material should therefore be designed so as to take into
account the cultural identity of Roma/Gypsy children. Romani history and culture
should be introduced in the teaching material in order to reflect the cultural
identity of Roma/Gypsy children. The participation of representatives of the
Roma/Gypsy community should be encouraged in the development of teaching
material on the history, culture or language of the Roma/Gypsies.
10. However, the member states
should ensure that this does not lead to the establishment of separate
curricula, which might lead to the setting up of separate classes.
11. The member states should
also encourage the development of teaching material based on good practices in
order to assist teachers in their daily work with Roma/Gypsy pupils.
12. In the countries where the
Romani language is spoken, opportunities to learn in the mother tongue should be
offered at school to Roma/Gypsy children.
III. Recruitment and training
of teachers
13. It is important that future
teachers should be provided with specific knowledge and training to help them
understand better their Roma/Gypsy pupils. The education of Roma/Gypsy pupils
should however remain an integral part of the general educational system.
14. The Roma/Gypsy community
should be involved in the designing of such curricula and should be directly
involved in the delivery of information to future teachers.
15. Support should also be
given to the training and recruitment of teachers from within the Roma/Gypsy
community.
IV. Information research and
assessment
16. The member states should
encourage innovative research/small-scale action projects in order to find local
responses to local needs. The results of such projects should be disseminated.
17. The results of educational
policies for Roma/Gypsy pupils should be carefully monitored. All the
participants involved in the education of Roma/Gypsy children (school
authorities, teachers, parents, non-governmental organisations) should be
invited to take part in the monitoring process.
18. The evaluation of the
results of educational policies towards Roma/Gypsy children should take account
of many criteria, including personal and social development, and not be limited
to estimates of school attendance and drop-out rates.
V. Consultation and
co-ordination
19. The involvement of all
parties concerned (ministry of education, school authorities, Roma families and
organisations) in the design, implementation and monitoring of education
policies for Roma/Gypsies should be promoted by the state.
20. Use should also be made of
mediators from within the Roma/Gypsy community, in particular to ease the
contacts between Roma/Gypsies, the majority population and schools and to avoid
conflicts at school; this should apply to all levels of schooling.
21. The Ministries of Education,
in the framework of the awareness-raising action mentioned in point I, paragraph
3, above should facilitate the co-ordination of the efforts of the different
parties involved and permit the channelling of information between the different
levels of education authorities.
22. Member states should
further encourage and support the exchange of experience and good practice