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Viewing cable 08MONTERREY194, NUEVO LEON'S AMBITIOUS PLAN FOR EDUCATIONAL REFORM LIKELY TO

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
08MONTERREY194 2008-04-21 23:32 2011-08-30 01:44 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Consulate Monterrey
VZCZCXRO3979
PP RUEHCD RUEHGD RUEHHO RUEHNG RUEHNL RUEHRD RUEHRS RUEHTM
DE RUEHMC #0194/01 1122332
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 212332Z APR 08
FM AMCONSUL MONTERREY
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 2849
INFO RUEHXC/ALL US CONSULATES IN MEXICO COLLECTIVE
RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHINGTON DC
RUEHMC/AMCONSUL MONTERREY 8294
RUEHME/AMEMBASSY MEXICO PRIORITY 3811
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 04 MONTERREY 000194 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SENSITIVE 
 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: ECON ELAB PGOV MX
SUBJECT: NUEVO LEON'S AMBITIOUS PLAN FOR EDUCATIONAL REFORM LIKELY TO 
FALL SHORT 
 
REF: A) 2006 MEXICO 5854; B) MEXICO 1150; C) MEXICO 1133 
 
MONTERREY 00000194  001.2 OF 004 
 
 
1.  (SBU)  Summary.  Despite statements by President Calderon on 
down that Mexico needs to fundamentally reform its educational 
system, to date no reform proposals have been forthcoming at the 
federal level.  While Mexico has achieved nearly universal 
coverage in primary school education, international test results 
indicate that Mexican students still lag in critical thinking 
skills.  Nuevo Leon should be an ideal location for educational 
reform, given its relatively high per capita income and levels 
of education.  Indeed, the state government has an ambitious 
plan to transform its state educational system through 
certifying current teachers, selecting new teachers via tests 
rather than patronage, changing the teaching method, increasing 
the role of parents and introducing technology to empower 
students.  However, based on interviews of academics, teachers, 
and school and union officials, although Nuevo Leon has 
incrementally advanced the ball on teacher selection, the 
prospects for fundamental educational reform seem doubtful.  End 
Summary. 
 
The Challenge: Mexican Schools teach Literacy, not Comprehension 
 
2.  (SBU)  Mexico has substantially increased its educational 
spending and has achieved nearly universal literacy and primary 
school attendance.  According to the Organization for Economic 
Cooperation and Development (OECD), Mexican spending on primary 
and secondary education increased 47% from 1995 to 2004, and 23% 
of public spending is invested in education, the highest 
percentage in the OECD.  Over 90% of educational spending is for 
wages (80% for teachers and 10% for other staff).  Mexico only 
spends 3.1% on capital spending (OECD average is 9%), and 5% on 
other current expenditures, such as instructional materials 
(OECD average 19.9%).  (See also reftel A).  According to the 
Mexican national statistical service INEGI, 91.6% of Mexican 
ages 15 and older are literate (up 4% since 1990), and 96% of 
Mexican children age 6-12 attend school.  However, children 
begin to drop out in high school, as school attendance declines 
to 82.5% (ages13-to 15), 47.8% (ages 16-19) and 20.8% (ages 
20-24).  Nuevo Leon is slightly better, with a 97.2% literacy 
rate, and Nuevo Leon school attendance is 96.9% (ages 6-12), 
85.5% (ages 13-15), 45.8% (ages 16-18) and 20.7% (ages 20-24). 
 
3.  (SBU)  Mexico has embraced student testing with enthusiasm, 
but Mexican students perform poorly by international standards. 
The PISA test is organized by the OECD and given to 15 year olds 
in all 30 OECD countries, evaluating mathematics, reading 
ability and comprehension and science.  Mexican students took 
the PISA test in 2000, 2003 and 2006, but the results have not 
shown consistent improvement.  In the 2006 PISA test Mexican 
students improved 19 points in mathematics compared to 2000, but 
fell 12 points each in reading and science.  Mexico still ranked 
last in the OECD in mathematics, reading and science in 2006, 
often by a significant margin.  The OECD briefing notes indicate 
that Mexican students can identify scientific issues, but have 
difficulty analyzing data and experiments.  The OECD commented 
that memorization of scientific facts is insufficient in today's 
job market. 
 
4.  (SBU)  The 2006 PISA test results indicate that while Mexico 
stagnated, Nuevo Leon improved.  The 2006 results demonstrate 
that Nuevo Leon students have registered significant gains since 
2003, increasing their reading scores by 39 points to jump from 
the eighth place Mexican state to the first, gaining 24 points 
in mathematics to rise from seventh among Mexican states to 
third.  Meanwhile, science scores rose 15 points as Nuevo Leon 
moved from seventh to fourth.  However, Nuevo Leon's academic 
achievements are still low.  In reading, for example, 29% of 
students score at levels 0 to 1 (insufficient to advance in 
school and work in a knowledge society), 32% were at level 2 
(the minimum adequate in contemporary society), 37% were in 
levels 3 to 4 (good but below the highest cognitive level) and 
only 1.5% at the highest level 5.  Similarly, in math 45% of 
Nuevo Leon students were in levels 0-1, 29% in level 2, 25% in 
levels 3-4, and only .8% in level 5.  The scores were much the 
same in science, where 37% of students were in level 0-1, 37% in 
level 2, 26% in level 3-4, and only .3% in the highest level 5. 
 
Mexico's Traditional School System 
 
5.  (SBU)  President Calderon has just called for major reforms 
of the Mexican educational system, although real reform could be 
blocked by the powerful Mexican SNTE teachers union (see reftel 
B). The Mexican school system is still quite centralized, with 
the national government providing the lion's share of the 
funding and the national Secretary of Education determining 
curriculum and books.  The SNTE teachers union has 1.4 million 
members nationally, and it is very powerful politically.  The 
SNTE was a pillar in the PRI alliance when PRI controlled the 
 
MONTERREY 00000194  002.2 OF 004 
 
 
Mexican political system for decades, but the SNTE sagely 
switched its support to PAN President Fox in 2000, and assisted 
President Calderon in the 2006 election.  In addition the SNTE 
union serves as the base for the Nuevo Alliance party, which 
controls critical seats in the Congress (see reftel B).  Despite 
increases in education funding, there is still little or no 
budget for school maintenance, so according to several teachers 
and academics, the parents either informally pay additional fees 
or they volunteer to clean up the school.  The teachers also say 
that they often must pay for school essentials, such as paper or 
chalk, and class sizes are large.  According to the OECD, an 
average Mexican secondary school classroom has 32 students (the 
OECD average is 14 students).  Principals have limited control 
over their schools, because all of our contacts agree that it is 
virtually impossible to fire a teacher for any reason, and 
principals have been dismissed at the request of the union. 
Several educators thought that the principals could influence 
the schools by encouraging different teaching methods or the use 
of technology, but only if they maintain good relations with the 
union.  The parents have very limited influence.  Under a 
previous agreement with the union, parents were prohibited from 
entering the school while class was in session.  Although 
parents now have some access to schools, they still have little 
or no influence. 
 
6.  (SBU)  Mexican teachers normally are not university 
graduates, instead they attend teacher institutes and are 
selected for their positions by the union.  Post's consular 
officers interview numerous teachers, and they report that the 
vast majority attend teacher institutes rather than university, 
and the few university graduates typically do not teach the 
subject they studied.  Future teachers must take a tough test 
before entering the teacher institutes, but one institute 
official admitted that the applicants come from the bottom half 
of all students, so the teachers do not represent the best and 
the brightest.  Teachers do not need to take any certification 
test after they graduate, and the SNTE union, not the government 
or the school principal, normally decides if and where the 
students can work as a teacher.  In the past, according to 
anecdotal reports, teacher positions were sometimes sold or 
inherited if the mother of the applicant was a teacher. 
According to news reports, between 80-100% of teacher positions 
are now assigned by the union nationwide.   In Nuevo Leon, 
according to school officials, the union had less influence, as 
50% of the positions were assigned by the union and 50% by the 
government.  Our contacts stated that the SNTE union also 
controls movement of teachers into new jobs and promotions, so 
promotions can be based on friendships with union officials 
rather than merit. 
 
7.  (U)  Although teachers and school officials universally 
lamented that teachers receive low salaries, the OECD analysis 
and Post consular interviews confirm that teacher salaries are 
significantly above the Mexican average.  Moreover, public 
school teachers teach five hours per day, and many teachers hold 
second or third jobs at public or private school.  Teachers also 
receive rich benefits packages, including yearly bonuses and a 
generous pension.  Anecdotal evidence suggests that union 
officials can receive much higher salaries.  Although teacher 
certification is not required, the federal government has a 
program for 'career magisterial' (roughly master teachers) 
whereby if teachers pass additional tests they receive more 
money.  The teachers can rise to sub-director, director and 
superintendent/inspector if they continue to pass higher tests. 
 
8.  (SBU)  According to news reports and our contacts, most 
Mexican teachers primarily teach through memorization.  The 
leading newspaper El Norte stated that 66% of Mexican teachers 
teach through repetition, lecture and having the students repeat 
the information in chorus.  According to this same report, due 
to these instruction methods, only 10% of Mexican students 
comprehend and can analyze what they have learned.  Our contacts 
agree.  A school official in Monterrey commented that he thought 
that 90% of the teachers were old school, using chalk and 
blackboard, and that they have few books in the classroom.  A 
Nuevo Leon official agreed that teacher methods harken back to 
the 18th century in actual classrooms.  Moreover, an official at 
a teaching institute confirmed that the primary teaching method 
is still memorization.  Several contacts noted that teaching by 
memorization is the easiest method for the teacher and requires 
few skills. 
 
9.  (SBU)   Although the SNTE union argues that additional 
teacher training is needed to improve the educational system, 
current training is not properly directed to improve teachers' 
skills.  Econoff asked Nuevo Leon SNTE leader Juan Antonio 
Rodriquez what was needed to improve the educational system, and 
he immediately answered more training.  However, federal 
 
MONTERREY 00000194  003.2 OF 004 
 
 
Secretary of Education Josefina Vazquez Mota publicly decried 
 
SIPDIS 
that 80% of current teacher training teaches better self esteem 
or emotional intelligence.  Although these courses may have some 
benefit, Vazquez Mota thought that since 75% of children in 
primary school do not understand what they read and the 
mathematics results are poor, teachers should receive 
instruction on how to better teach basic subjects.   Our 
contacts could not confirm her estimate of teacher training 
courses, but they universally agreed that there are no 
guidelines on what training the teachers should receive, and no 
requirement that they take training courses useful in their 
teaching. 
 
10.  (SBU)  Although private schools only educate 10% of 
students nationwide, 24.5% of Nuevo Leon students attend private 
school.  In Econoff's interviews, our contacts thought that 
aside from a few model private schools, most private schools 
taught using the same methods as public schools.  They further 
claimed that there was no difference in quality, but private 
schools have more social prestige and some have better 
facilities.  Our contacts emphasized that beyond some extremely 
well funded private schools, there are small private schools 
with a few poorly trained teachers in someone's house.  In other 
words, there is great variation in the quality of private 
schools. However, an official at a teaching institute admitted 
that the public school teachers all sought to educate their own 
children in private schools.  Private schools normally teach 6.5 
to 7 hours per day, rather than the 5 hours taught in the public 
schools.  The international PISA test found that private school 
students perform better, scoring 53 points higher than public 
school kids.  However, according to the OECD analysis, when the 
socioeconomic background of students and schools is taken into 
account, public school students actually score 21 points better. 
 
The Plan: Nuevo Leon's Ambitious Goal to Modernize School System 
 
11.  (U)  Nuevo Leon's Secretary of Education, Dr Reyes Tamez 
Guerra (the former federal Secretary of Education under 
President Fox) has an exciting plan to modernize Nuevo Leon's 
educational system.  Tamez agrees that the principal challenge 
for the Mexican educational system is quality, and the system 
must teach students to analyze, not just memorize.  At present, 
Tamez stated, 70% of students do not have the required reasoning 
skills.  Tamez noted Nuevo Leon's improving test scores, and he 
plans to build on this success by making Nuevo Leon one of the 
top three school systems in Mexico shortly and one of the ten 
best school systems in the world by 2017.  These educational 
reforms fit perfectly with Nuevo Leon's general strategy to move 
into higher value-added industries and have the Monterrey area 
become a 'city of knowledge'.   In addition, Nuevo Leon 
officials report that the World Bank is conducting a study of 
how Nuevo Leon successfully raised its academic achievement. 
Moreover, the World Bank is currently negotiating a program for 
Nuevo Leon to provide a combination of scholarships and grants 
to provide bright students from poor backgrounds the ability to 
attend college. 
 
12.  (U)  Nuevo Leon's fundamental educational reform focuses on 
teacher selection, a certification test for current teachers, 
moving from memorization to teaching critical thinking, and 
improving the use of technology, symbolized by the Enciclomedia 
computer program.  We understand that tehse changes can be made 
without state legislative approval.  Secretary Tamez told 
Econoff that Nuevo Leon wants to select teachers through a test 
after graduation, and the candidates who score the best can 
choose their school.  In addition, Nuevo Leon would require 
certification tests for existing teachers, and teachers will be 
given three years to pass before they are fired.  Moreover, 
state officials report that the federal government is changing 
the method of instruction from memorization to teaching critical 
thinking skills in preschool and secondary school and will 
change it in primary school as well.  Nuevo Leon wants to test 
students' reasoning ability and publish the results to put 
pressure on the school and the teachers.  It also envisions 
empowering parents by providing test results and increasing 
their oversight role, more like the parent teacher associations 
in the United States.  The crowning touch will be the 
Enciclomedia computer program (much like the Encarta program) 
that provides 3D interactive information about music, history, 
science, and language.  (Note. The Enciclomedia program was 
established nationwide during the Fox Administration when Tamez 
was federal Secretary of Education, and has been dogged by 
charges of misspent public funds. End Note.)  In particular, 
Secretary Tamez expects that Enciclomedia will help teachers who 
 
SIPDIS 
cannot speak English themselves to teach their students English. 
 
 
The Reality:  Incremental Change but Don't Expect a Revolution 
 
MONTERREY 00000194  004.2 OF 004 
 
 
 
13.  (SBU)  The improved test scores indicate that Nuevo Leon is 
headed in the right direction, but there is no clear explanation 
why test scores are up.  Several academics dismissed the 
improved test scores by speculating that the students had become 
experienced test takers, or the teachers were now teaching to 
the test, but these theories do not explain why Nuevo Leon 
improved and other parts of Mexico stagnated.  The World Bank is 
currently studying the issue, but it seems likely that there has 
been an improvement in teaching quality and method. 
 
14. (SBU)  Although Nuevo Leon has established new procedures 
for some teacher selection, it is unclear if it will certify 
teachers, change teaching methods, or empower parents.  The good 
news is that through an agreement with SNTE, in April 842 
teachers took a test to assign 325 teaching positions, and the 
results are to be released publicly.  However, the outlook for 
other reforms is more doubtful.  Econoff followed up his 
original meeting with Secretary Tamez with a meeting with a 
senior member of the Nuevo Leon schools.  This contact reported 
that Nuevo Leon hoped for, but did not have, new resources for 
the reforms.  In addition, he said that there would be no 
penalty if current teachers flunk their certification test, 
although they could receive incentives if they passed. 
Moreover, when asked about an additional role for parents, he 
speculated that perhaps they could provide school maintenance, 
hardly giving them a say in running the school.  Finally, there 
has been progress on modernizing teaching methods, as our 
contacts believe that teaching methods are slowly changing as 
new teachers enter schools. 
 
15. (SBU)  Secretary Tamez touts the Enciclomedia program as the 
magic bullet to revitalize the Mexican school system.  The 
Enciclomedia program constitutes a heavy investment of scarce 
resources, and Enciclomedia will be placed in all fifth and 
sixth grade classrooms.  The Enciclomedia program is a wonder, 
and the student can explore Mayan sites in 3D, hear different 
instruments from an orchestra, or learn English even if the 
teacher cannot speak the language.  The real questions are 
whether teachers use Enciclomedia and whether it is the right 
priority for a strapped educational budget.  Econoff spoke to 
teachers, teaching instructors and university academics who 
agreed that most teachers did not use Enciclomedia, because they 
were uncomfortable with computers, they were not properly 
trained, or Enciclomedia was not incorporated into the 
curriculum.  Moreover, a recent press report stated that 30% of 
Nuevo Leon schools lacked access to the internet or the ability 
to use the Enciclomedia program.  (Note.  Secretary Tamez has 
claimed that 100% of schools have facilities for Enciclomedia. 
End Note).  In addition, our contacts all denounced the 
resources spent on Enciclomedia as a gold plate solution, while 
the school system neglected more fundamental needs. 
 
16. (SBU)  Finally, the Nuevo Leon reform can only succeed if 
the SNTE union signs off on plans to take away their power to 
select teachers, agrees to a certification test that could 
result in the dismissal of many long standing teachers, and 
changes teaching methods from memorization to a critical 
thinking approach using technology.  Our contacts agree that the 
government cannot successfully oppose the SNTE teachers union. 
(see reftel B).  When Econoff asked why the SNTE union would 
agree to these far reaching reforms, the Nuevo Leon school 
officials breezily replied that Mexican society was changing and 
that the SNTE union would agree, in part because the Nuevo Leon 
officials have a better relationship with SNTE than the federal 
Education Secretary Vazquez Mota.  Although it is encouraging 
that SNTE agreed to distribute some teacher places through a 
test, during Econoff's meeting with the local SNTE union, 
Rodriguez primarily discussed how the media unfairly attacked 
SNTE, it was unfair to compare Mexico with Finland, and his 
strong support for the national union (see reftels B and C). 
There is no public indication that SNTE will voluntarily 
relinquish its privileges. 
 
17.  (SBU)  Comment.  Mexican officials, from President Caldron 
on down, realize the importance of improving the Mexican 
educational system to improve international economic 
competitiveness.  In addition, the Nuevo Leon plan is very 
promising by focusing on improved teacher quality, modernizing 
the method of instruction, and empowering parents.  However, 
despite some incremental steps forward, it seems doubtful that 
the state government, in the last 18 months of its term can push 
through the tough reforms needed.  It also seems very unlikely 
that the SNTE union would agree to such fundamental changes. 
Nuevo Leon is likely to take some small steps forward, but not 
nearly enough to fundamentally improve the educational system. 
End Comment. 
WILLIAMSON