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Contents contributed and discussions participated by FILIP M

FILIP M

Education in the Republic of the Congo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • 12.6% of the Congolese budget is spent on education; 40% on primary education, 31% on secondary level, and 27% on tertiary level. Only 1% goes to pre-primary education. Education in Congo takes 13 years, from the first level of Primary School to the Higher Certificate. According to the 2005 UNDP report, 82.8% of Congolese are literate.
  • 12.6% of the Congolese budget is spent on education; 40% on primary education, 31% on secondary level, and 27% on tertiary level. Only 1% goes to pre-primary education. Education in Congo takes 13 years, from the first level of Primary School to the Higher Certificate. According to the 2005 UNDP report, 82.8% of Congolese are literate.
  • 12.6% of the Congolese budget is spent on education; 40% on primary education, 31% on secondary level, and 27% on tertiary level. Only 1% goes to pre-primary education. Education in Congo takes 13 years, from the first level of Primary School to the Higher Certificate. According to the 2005 UNDP report, 82.8% of Congolese are literate.
    • FILIP M
       
      ONLY 12.6% for schools? Wow! That probably means that some schools have trouble with funding.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • 12.6% of the Congolese budget is spent on education; 40% on primary education, 31% on secondary level, and 27% on tertiary level. Only 1% goes to pre-primary education. Education in Congo takes 13 years, from the first level of Primary School to the Higher Certificate. According to the 2005 UNDP report, 82.8% of Congolese are literate.
  • 12.6% of the Congolese budget is spent on education; 40% on primary education, 31% on secondary level, and 27% on tertiary level. Only 1% goes to pre-primary education. Education in Congo takes 13 years, from the first level of Primary School to the Higher Certificate. According to the 2005 UNDP report, 82.8% of Congolese are literate.
  • 12.6% of the Congolese budget is spent on education; 40% on primary education, 31% on secondary level, and 27% on tertiary level. Only 1% goes to pre-primary education. Education in Congo takes 13 years, from the first level of Primary School to the Higher Certificate. According to the 2005 UNDP report, 82.8% of Congolese are literate.
  • 12.6% of the Congolese budget is spent on education; 40% on primary education, 31% on secondary level, and 27% on tertiary level. Only 1% goes to pre-primary education. Education in Congo takes 13 years, from the first level of Primary School to the Higher Certificate. According to the 2005 UNDP report, 82.8% of Congolese are literate.
FILIP M

islamic-school-bamali2.gif (GIF Image, 225x169 pixels) - 1 views

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    This is the picture I found of the classroom, before it was fixed
FILIP M

kids-at-ips-bamali.gif (GIF Image, 320x213 pixels) - 0 views

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    This is a picture of the fixed classroom
FILIP M

Schools For Africa - Home - 0 views

  • Our aim is to raise money to build schools in rural Africa through our partner NGO Strategic Humanitarian Services (SHUMAS), Cameroon. In addition to clean, hygienic and well-constructed classrooms, we aim to ensure clean drinking water and sanitation facilities are available at each of the schools we support, in order to help improve the health of the children.
    • FILIP M
       
      To me, it seems that Cameroon is the place on Earth we have to help by making them schools. They have the most trouble, because they need many things such as "clean, hygenic and well-constructed classroom, we aim to ensure clean drinking water and sanitation facilities are available... in order to improve the help of the children.
    • FILIP M
       
      I also see that the health of the students is also a very big and imprtant factor of education in places like Cameroon. Maybe we can do something about that as well.
  • £10 will buy a set of wall charts for a classroom.£25 will buy a set of text books for a teacher.£80 will buy a sewing machine.£350 will help us build toilets for a school.£500 will help us install clean drinking water.£3500 will pay for the building of a new classroom.
  • ...5 more annotations...
    • FILIP M
       
      The schools in Cameroon really don't have many of the things the schools here have. This is another example of what we can do to help the children of Cameroon. It also shows that the People of Cameroon really depend on us to donate money to fix their schools...
  • Since 2003, SHUMAS, our partner organisation in Cameroon, has received over 500 applications from rural villages asking help to rebuild their local schools. Of this number, an initial 150 were identified as 'top priority' because of the state of delapidation of the buildings. Building Schools For Africa started fundraising in April 2007. In our first two years we have funded the reconstruction of eleven schools. It costs so little to build a village primary school in Cameroon, and each school improves the lives of thousands of children. Will you help us?
    • FILIP M
       
      Over here in the text, they directly tell us what they need: A new school. They also tell us that many of their schools have to be rebuilt, and that there is an organization helping them already. I am not sure if this could be important right now, but it shows that people are already trying to help.
    • FILIP M
       
      These before and after pictures show a dramatic change in the appearence of the class rooms. They all seem to appreciate the help the people from else where gave them. One big change is the fact that they now have a roof over their heads. They also have desks to work on. Other than that, the walls and floor look so much cleaner and safer than before. I feel that we can do the same in Google Sketch-Up to help the other schools in Cameroon and other countries in Africa that need help.
    • FILIP M
       
      I think the reason we can do the same things with schools from countries in the same region as Cameroon is because they probably face the same problems (Climate, clean drinking water, resources, etc...). Therefore, we can to the same to countries like Gabon and Nigeria in terms of helping their schools
  • One of the new classrooms at IPS Bamali What a difference from the old classroms at IPS Bamali
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    This is the article I want to share. I think that people in Cameroon need help with their schools and education. I think that they have the most problems(see the pictures). Their needs are simple, but they will make their school all the better.
FILIP M

Cameroon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    This is a map of Africa. It shows the country I am interested in--Cameroon. The reason I included this picture is because we can also help countries around it with similar problems.
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