8
Student teachers should come
exclusively from rural areas -
including small towns in
predominantly rural regions. b)
Selection should be by competitive
examination, systematically refusing
appointments based on political
requests. c) Courses should be
divided into two distinct levels: 1)
courses in technical subjects and
methodology, designed to give the
teacher a specific technique useful in
the school, and 2) broad and general
courses, designed to give the teacher
a new consciousness and vision of
the school's role in the local
community, in the country's economy
and on the national stage. (Hall,
1950, p. 121).
The recommendations for the
training of rural teachers established a
minimum training, with a curriculum that
dispensed with areas of knowledge that
were related to philosophical, historical,
sociological foundations, justifying the
absence of these contents, by the inability
of "... interpretation and the practical
application of these disciplines, in the daily
life of the school, seems to me to be far
above the capacity of the teacher-students"
(Hall, 1950, p. 121), as placed in the
mentioned Document.
This inertia continued even with the
approval of the first Law of Directives and
Bases of Education (LDB), Law no.
4.024/1961, with the existence of a single
article that dealt with Rural Education, in
Title XIII, entitled "General and Transitory
Provisions", in which it was determined, in
art. 105: "The public authorities shall
institute and support services and entities
which maintain schools or educational
centers in rural areas, capable of favoring
the adaptation of man to the environment
and the stimulation of vocations and
professional activities" (Law No. 4.024,
1961).
The political and economic changes
that took place in Brazil after 1964, with
the intervention of the military in the
government, provoked new changes in the
organizational format of education. The
first of these was the disregard of LDB nº
4.024/1961 and the approval of Law nº
5.692/1971, which fixed education in 1st
and 2nd grades. This change transformed
the rural normal courses into a teaching
course, and presented two articles dealing
specifically with Rural Education:
In Chapter I, "Primary and Secondary
Education", Art. 11, §2, it was
determined that in the Rural Zone the
establishment could organize the
teaching periods, with a prescription
of vacations at planting and
harvesting seasons, according to a
plan approved by the competent
teaching authority.
Chapter VI, "Funding" ... In Article
49, it was determined that the
companies and rural landowners who
are unable to keep education for their
employees and their children on their
land are required, without prejudice
to the provisions of Article 47, to
facilitate their attendance at the
nearest school or to encourage the
establishment and operation of free
schools on their properties. (Law No.
5.692, 1971).