The
highlight of the evening was the inaugural presentation
of the Change the World - Best Practice Award, which was
given to four international educational projects that
aim at empowering people through learning and enabling
them to take full control of their economic development.
Dr. Gustavo
Correa, Director of FUNDAEC and one of the founders of
the project, represented the Foundation at the ceremony.
He remarked that this was a big step in the recognition
of the FUNDAEC program. "Although our initial
efforts started out very small and humble, as time went
by, more experience and confidence were gained and in
1980 SAT, the Tutorial Learning System, was born. While
our first materials were developed and tested only in
the North Cauca Region of Colombia, with the official
recognition of the Ministry of Education in Colombia SAT
has been implemented in other parts of South and Central
America as well. At present the SAT program is used for
secondary education in Honduras, Guatemala, Ecuador,
Venezuela, Panama, Costa Rica, Brazil, and Colombia. At
the same time the first phases of the implementation of
the programme have started in Zambia, too," said
Dr. Correa.
FUNDAEC
(Foundation for the Application and Teaching of the
Sciences) was established in 1974 by a group of
professors at the University of Valle in Colombia who
were looking for new strategies to develop the
capacities of people and to generate knowledge in
isolated regions of the country.
The program
is rooted in rural reality, based upon the needs of the
local residents with the aim of strengthening local
economies and communal identity. SAT offers students a
high school education that not only provides them with
theoretical knowledge, as most traditional educational
practices do, but also allows them to become independent
and to serve their own communities.
"When
started this project, we were originally inspired by a
quotation from Baha'u'llah, the prophet founder of the
Baha'i Faith," explains Dr. Correa. "Baha'u'llah
talks about man as 'a mine rich in gems of inestimable
value.' He says that 'education can, alone, cause it to
reveal its treasures, and enable mankind to benefit
therefrom'. In FUNDAEC we firmly believe that there is
significant hidden potential within every individual, a
potential which, if nurtured, may foster the spirit of
service and contribute to the well-being of the whole
community."
SAT is open
to, and in most countries free for, everyone. Students
usually pay only for their textbooks. To date, the
six-year study program has been completed by 50,000
students, and there are currently about 30,000 youth
attending various levels of SAT courses. Participants
are not only strengthening their own sense of identity
and purpose but are also starting to realize the
importance of the community and are gaining a sense of
unity.
"The
basic idea behind FUNDAEC is a sense of spiritual
transformation," says Dr. Correa. "In the
course of their studies the students discover the spirit
of service and begin to consciously nurture their
spiritual qualities. One of our students, for example,
used to be a thief, and in the lapse of six months he
became a useful member of his community, while one of
the graduates was actually elected the mayor of his
locality."
Each SAT
course is facilitated by a tutor from the same locality
as his or her students. Tutors are trained at the Center
for Rural Education, the university founded by FUNDAEC
in 1992. The five-year degree program offered there has
also been officially approved by the government of
Colombia and offers training in education.
Local SAT
groups, guided by their tutor, apply the principles
learned in the program, use their knowledge to become
active in strengthening a sense of community identity
where they live. Their activities demonstrate a wide
range of diversity, from the implementation of
sustainable productions systems to artistic and sporting
events, and from educational activities for children to
environmental projects.
The Club of
Budapest sees the Change the World -- Best Practice
Award as the first step leading to long-term cooperation
between the Club and FUNDAEC. "As a first step we
are consulting with one of the German TV channels about
the establishment of a new kind of talk show that would
promote the mission of visionary projects such as
FUNDAEC," explained Mr. Spiegel who has been
observing the work of the Foundation for several years.
"I
visited the SAT project myself in Colombia in 2001 and
met a number of youth who worked as tutors of the SAT
program. I felt stunned by the clarity of vision these
young tutors possessed and the level of their devotion
to their communities, as they truly see themselves as
servants of society."
The concept
of FUNDAEC has caught the imagination of a number of
contemporary thinkers. Uwe Henrich, one of the members
of the board of directors of the Asian Development Bank,
has described FUNDAEC as "a system of highest
potential that could solve the problems of Third World
Countries, and at the awards ceremony renowned German
actor and ecologist Dietmar Schonherr, expressed his
full support for the implementation of the SAT program
in Nicaragua.