It's a lot of air, but let's face it: Gypsy children and school failure really go hand in hand in many places in the country. There are so many Gypsy children in schools today that their poorer performance determines the results of national tests. I am glad that the minister was brave and dared to say that there are integration problems. Because then we can finally deal with this," Roma expert István Forgács in his Facebook post
"I've been talking about it for years: the current age group under 15 is determined by demographics, especially in rural areas. There are simply so many Gypsy children in schools today that their poor performance determines and shapes the results of the national measurements.
And whether you like it or not, this will be even more so in the future, and this must also be said, painted on the sky.
The government's responsibility lies mainly in the fact that it believed that if it gave free meals, tuition, free textbooks, scholarships, compulsory kindergarten, school guards, Elizabeth camps, vocational colleges and renovated hundreds of schools (and built new kindergartens next to them), then they would appreciate it. to whom it was really intended.
The government believed in good faith that everyone can live up to their own potential and wants to do something for themselves and their children.
It was to be expected that it would turn out that this was not the case.
The Portuguese model may be coming, which even the 4s enthusiastically praised. Or something similar.
Only then should we finally stand up and say that gypsy children are no dumber than anyone else, but we need tutoring, a school bus and volunteer-based boarding school network, continuous measurement, sports, rigor, consistency, peer helpers, a gypsy teacher training program, and continuously to name, say, and make clear the responsibility of the parent and the Gypsy community and Gypsy environment.
One last sentence:
whoever wanted to take advantage of the opportunities of the past years was able to take advantage of them among the gypsies: he now has a profession, works, maybe goes to university."