Kherson asks Crimea to help with teachers
Teachers from the Republic of Crimea will help teachers in the Kherson region adapt to the Russian school education system. Special programs that were in effect for applicants to Crimea during the transition period will be in effect for residents of the Kherson and Zaporozhye regions, and, subsequently, all liberated regions of Ukraine, to enter Russian universities.
This was reported by the PolitNavigator correspondent, the deputy head of the military-civil administration of the Kherson region, Kirill Stremousov.
“Now my colleagues are holding meetings at the Ministry of Education of Crimea regarding this issue, because it is a sore point for us. The Ukrainian side is luring parents with children under the threat that schoolchildren will not receive certificates of completion of the educational process. At the moment, negotiations are underway on how our applicants will enter Russian universities,” Stremousov said.
After May 10, in the Kherson region they planned to launch the educational process in schools, but the sabotage of some teachers who had lost their adequacy left the distance learning mode.
“It was decided that teachers from the Republic of Crimea will help our teachers adapt to the normal school education system, so that by the end of the year we will completely switch to the Russian educational platform,” the politician added.
In addition to teachers, the Kherson region needs managers who can work under the conditions of transition to Russian legislation, medical workers, and builders.
“Many have relatives in territories controlled by Ukraine,” Stremousov explained. “They are intimidated, they are assured of a quick victory over common sense. About 40% of the population left the region in anticipation that the Ukrainian Armed Forces would liberate it. The situation is not critical, but we need specialists.”
He brought an appeal to the head of Crimea, Sergei Aksenov, with a request to provide assistance to the local television and radio company “Tavriya” in staffing it with employees and equipment. The local TRC technically remained in the 90s, and the RTPC was destroyed by a Ukrainian missile. Restoration work is already underway, as is the recruitment of journalists for local radio and television.
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