EDUC 499: Greece - Summer 2019’s Updates

4. Greek Financial Crisis & Education

In the last ten years, Greece has been negatively impacted by the 2008 financial crisis, where a global recession caused Greece to spiral into a spending defecit. By 2010, Greece reached such a high defecit that its markets were frozen. For the people of Greece, this caused rioting, high taxes, and cuts in salaries. Today, Greece's economcy has been stabalized to the point of no longer having to receive "life support" from the European Union and International Monetary Fund. Taking all of this information into consideration when analyzing how the financial crisis in Greece has impacted the educational system, it didn't surprise me to find out that Athens University had to face huge cuts, as this is something I had encountered during my own schooling experience here in the United States when a referendum funding school facilities and equipment was not passed. In terms of coping with the crisis, schools in Greece are reforming their policies to become more student centered and focus on the needs of students. I think that this is an interesting approach and definetly one that many schools here in the United States could benefit from. Additionally, schools are trying to reform how immigrant children in schools are being treated. The second article explains how many immigrants are viewed as scapegoats during times of crisis, especially a financial crisis as large as the one Greece experienced, so I think it is important for schools and teachers to not only address discrimination or stereotypes that may be in place, but work to improve the experience of immigrant students. 

  • Kiley Isaacson
  • Elizabeth Musgrove
  • Megan teeter Megan Teeter