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SAYEED A

Seniors World Chronicle: 10/12/08 - 10/19/08 - 2 views

  • Classes on board the Nauka school. Photo: Jaspreet Kindra/IRINThe monsoon season has not quite drawn to an end and just to prove it, the heavens open in an intense 15-minute downpour. The rain elicits more giggles from the children, who scamper for refuge under the trees lining the bank. Then a solar-powered boat with a sign "Nauka [Boat] School" suddenly appears on the horizon and slows down as it draws nearer to pull up beside the bank.The dripping children queue to get to their classes on board - a rainy day is not an excuse to play hooky in this part of the world. "Nauka schooley jaye khoob moja hoye [When we attend the boat school, we enjoy ourselves]," a giggling Shakila Khatoon, 9, said in Bengali, or Bangla, the national language."It's different from other schools – I really love the Bangla boi [book] – it teaches us things we see in our villages, helps us identify the birds, kinds of fishes, and tells us about river erosion."Women and older villagers watch the bobbing fishing boats from the bank while they wait patiently to catch the "health boat", the "library boat" or even the "agricultural extension boat", all due to arrive sometime that day.In a few weeks, some of the landless families in the region might even settle permanently on houseboats lashed together to form small floating villages, with a community boat in between.Architect-turned-activist Mohammed Rezwan is determined to prove that Bangladeshis can survive the climate change scenario, in which land steadily vanishes beneath relentlessly rising water, by staying afloat. "This is the future - various climate change forecast models have predicted that one-fifth of Bangladesh could be under water by 2050," he said.The impact of global warming will hit Bangladesh hard. Soaring global temperatures are increasing glacial melt in the Himalayan ranges, swelling the rivers that flow down from the mountains and across the Bangladeshi floodplain, the largest in the world, far beyond their capacity.The expanding volume of water is also causing higher sea levels to push inland. A rise above one metre, which could be reached in this century, means Bangladesh could lose 15 percent to 18 percent of its land area, turning 30 million people into "environmental refugees" by 2050, according to some estimates, says the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).Extreme weather events such as cyclones are also expected to become more frequent and intense as a result of global warming.Couldn't go to schoolRezwan grew up in the nearby village of Shidhulai and was often unable to go to school during monsoons, when the roads were flooded. "Schools would be closed for months," he commented. In 2007 more than 4,000 primary schools were closed, at least another 4,000 were affected and 44 were washed by river erosion, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) reported.
    • SAYEED A
       
      Since Bangladesh is near the Indian Ocean, the Bengali People are expected to suffer great changes in weather. They have very light protection from these particular weather conditions, so they are expected to learn in whatever means necessary. This is only if they want to.
    • SAYEED A
       
      Everyone, but people with special excuses have to go to school in America but people in Bangladesh can choose whether they will learn or not. Most of those who don't learn usually move to politics which in Bangladesh involves killing and destroying peoples lives for money.
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    This article shows how Bengali suffer from weather conditions that will affect their learning very badly.
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    You have a good start here. Remember, countries are proper nouns and start with a capital letter. Please fix your tags. You will have to do further research to learn more.
ARMANDO G

Bad Education in Albania - 3 views

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    In Albania, a lot of kids either dropped out of school and don't attend it or failed to complete primary school. Out of the 12,000 kids in Albania that have disabilities, 94% of them don't attend school. Also, many teachers have stopped teaching. A lot of those who do teach lack good teaching techniques so they can't really do much to help them. In fact, more than a quarter of teachers in primary schools are not qualified.
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    I see that you have a good start here. Please add the tag schools.
KEVIN L

Picture of a school in Nigira - 2 views

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    A picture of a old school in Nigeria that has bad standards.
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    I think that this school really needs help
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