Autogestión Ministerio De Educación Venezuela -
The principal, a weary but kind woman named Doña Carmen, had spent most of her budget on chalk and toilet paper. One Tuesday, a notice arrived from the District office: "Due to budget restructuring, maintenance funds are frozen indefinitely."
The committee didn’t wait for orders. They walked through every classroom with a clipboard. Students, parents, and teachers listed everything: broken desks, missing bulbs, a cracked water tank. They color-coded the list: Red (urgent), Yellow (medium), Green (low). autogestión ministerio de educación venezuela
In a bustling parish of Caracas, surrounded by the humid heat and the sound of barking dogs, stood the "Dr. Francisco de Miranda" High School. For years, the school had been a symbol of neglect. The "Ministerio del Poder Popular para la Educación" had not sent repair supplies in months. The water pumps were broken, the computer lab was a graveyard of old hardware, and the library’s roof leaked so badly that students had to sit under umbrellas during reading hour. The principal, a weary but kind woman named
That was the birth of the Comité de Autogestión Miranda . Francisco de Miranda" High School
The Ministry of Education caught wind of the project. Instead of sending money, they sent two facilitators from the Dirección de Participación Comunitaria . They didn’t give solutions—they gave validation. They helped the committee register as an official "Legal Entity" so they could open a small bank account for voluntary contributions.