Autogestión Ministerio De Educación Venezuela (Tested ✪)

The supervisor smiled. He took out his notebook and wrote a new policy proposal for the District: "Protocol for Community Self-Management in Public Schools."

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.

"We are teaching the Bolivarian ideals of self-reliance," he said. "Maybe the Ministry can’t send us paint, but the community can." 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 teachers held an emergency meeting. Frustration boiled over. But a young history teacher, Professor Alejandro, raised his hand. The supervisor smiled

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).

That was the birth of the Comité de Autogestión Miranda . They didn’t give solutions—they gave validation

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."