Skip to main content

Home/ SSIS_ICT_8H/ Group items tagged school

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Ronald Trinh

Despite China's growth, its workers endure a fundamental evil | Hsiao-Hung Pai | Commen... - 0 views

  • Migrants who toil in the cities still face a decades-old system of segregation and exploitation. But many are now demanding fairness
  • Schools for children of migrant workers in China are being closed down.
  • "We live under the same sky, why are we not entitled to the same rights?"
  • ...44 more annotations...
  • migrant workers – who build the capital's offices and mansions, clean its streets and guard its security – have been shut down,
  • Tens of thousands of migrant children are left without schools
  • rural origin – a third of the city's 19 million population
  • day-to-day inju
  • stices
  • hukou (household registration), set up in 1958
  • control rural-to-urban migration
  • Peasants' role was to produce and feed the cities and support the modernisation process of their motherland.
  • as shown on their ID – no matter what they might choose to do. "Wo shi nongmin [I am a peasant],"
  • Deng Xiao Ping's gaige kaifang (economic reforms and opening up), in the late 1970s.
  • Agricultural production increased in the early stage of the reforms in "releasing the productive forces",
  • half of the 400 million rural working population have been pushed off the land, seeking a livelihood away from their villages.
  • As rural residents came to the cities, they immediately faced discrimination and exclusion.
  • They spoke their own dialects instead of "proper" Mandarin. Many faced verbal abuse as soon as they arrived.
  • the strict requirement for the unaffordable temporary residency permit, and the random street search by police.
  • The criteria for applying for a hukou remain harsh, and unreachable for most migrants, and many work for years without any status.
  • Without hukou,
  • healthcare, education and housing.
  • urban dwellers pay a minimal cost for medical care, many migrants have to return home for treatment.
  • "These children aren't treated as everyone else. They're called the mobile students, who can't go to state schools. Their parents have for years sent their children to privately run schools without proper facilities or curriculum."
  • hundreds such private schools were set up.
  • government-funded National Development and Reform Commission
  • admits it is an "institutional barrier"
  • government has shown no wish to listen to migrant workers' demands.
  • voice their discontent is by petitioning the local authorities
  • Little happens as a result.
  • Some suspect that migrant children's schools are being closed as a disincentive to future migration.
  • protests, road blockages, sit-ins and spontaneous strikes.
  • Hsiao-Hung Pai, Beijing
  • Migrants who toil in the cities still face a decades-old system of segregation and exploitation. But many are now demanding fairness
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      Migrant workers should have tell the police earlier so they won't be treated so violent. 
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      Why does the chinese people have to segregated themself, they're from the same country! 
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      Why do they have to treat people like that? They're all from the same country!
  • Beijing "a city of violence"
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      it reflects the conflict of the urban dwellers and the migrant workers.
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      I think maybe the urban dwellers pay the government to be on their side and act ruthlessly to the migrant workers.
  • Beijing's migrant worker slums
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      which means that the migrant workers cannot move to other city or quit their job, they have to work there and got treat badly, ruthlessly.
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      "I've had migrant workers tell me about their class origin, as if it were a stamp on your body for life. It was impossible for peasants to move their hukou to the cities."   http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/sep/20/china-migrant-workers
  • are ruthlessly segregated from the urban dwellers, economically, socially and culturally
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      the government is not fair!
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      why dont the government get involve earlier if they already knew what's going on?
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      they have to speak their own language?  not Mandarin? 
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      Once the rural residents came to the cities, they immediately faced discrimination and exclusion??? that's so not fair and segregated.
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      Migrants children are called the mobile students, who can't go to state schools.
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      Urban childrens have free primary education while migrants children aren't be able to go to school because their parents cannot afford it. It costs 2/3 of their parents wages.
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      IT'S NOT FAIR
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      Migrants workers continue to be burdened with the hukou system. So they won't be able to access any services in the cities like: helthcare, education or housing. While urban dwellers pay a minimal cost for medical care, many migrants have to return home for treatment.
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      "Even the government-funded National Development and Reform Commission admits it is an "institutional barrier" and believes it should be scrapped. However, these institutions aren't in the position to change things. "Protection of migrant workers' rights" is a rhetorical statement of state organisations, but the government has shown no wish to listen to migrant workers' demands."
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      What? the government has shown no wish to listen to migrant workers demands? Why? They think they're rich so they don't care about other people? These governments should be in jail!
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      "Some suspect that migrant children's schools are being closed as a disincentive to future migration. "   What??? There's no reason why they hate the migrants workers and childrens! They're all from the same root! They don't have a right to do this?
    • Ronald Trinh
       
      "In recent years, migrants have raised their demands through protests, road blockages, sit-ins and spontaneous strikes. Although these have not always proved effective, workers have become more aware of their collective strength. In the past year they have won some improvements in wages and working conditions. Many migrant workers, now better informed, are far less willing to accept the status quo. As they grow in confidence, the regime will find it increasingly difficult to ignore their demands. China's rulers should realise now that it is in their long-term interests to listen." YES, they really should do this to show the government that they have a right to complain about what's right or wrong! If you're rich still doesn't mean that you have all the rights to do anything you want.
  •  
    In China, poor migrants who earn a living by working low calss jobs in Beijing is treated unfairly. The chinese public schools, especialy nursery schools, would not let the migrant's children be enrolled. Yet, migrants are treated differently than Beijing citizens, and they can't have a normal life. 
  •  
    Despite China's growth, its workers endure a fundamental evil
Jeon Yap

Toronto Catholic elementary school teacher charged with sex assault - The Globe and Mail - 0 views

  • Toronto Catholic elementary school
  • sexually assaulting
  • allege
  • ...17 more annotations...
  • “some kind” of relationship
  • developed between a teacher and a girl at St. John the Evangelist Catholic School
  • The relationship continued a couple of weeks
  • Police Detective Rick Ramjattan
  • girl told her mother about the alleged relationship
  • police charged Orlando Fusaro, 37, with sexual assault
  • and sexual interference
  • St. John the Evangelist for 11 years.
  • he’s from Woodbridge, Ont.
  • Mr. Fusaro’s next court date will be Sept. 13.
  • Ontario College of Teachers website
  • Mr. Fusaro graduated from York University in 1997 with a Bachelor of Arts
  • Bachelor of Education in 1998
  • Toronto Catholic District School Board
  • RateMyTeachers.com
  • “the best teacher in the world !!!
  • Det. Ramjattan
  •  
    Dr. Fusaro was charged for sexual attacks to a 13 year old girl.
vy Nguyen

Study: Too Much Facebook Bad for Teens | GamePolitics - 0 views

  • A new study suggest that too much time on social networking sites such as Facebook or playing video games is bad for teens
  • stomach aches, sleeping issues, anxiety, and depression.
  • howed that teenagers who spend a lot of time with technology like "video games or the internet" had more stomach aches, sleeping issues, anxiety, and depression.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • using Facebook were more "narcissistic" because services such as Facebook allow users to "share themselves constantly on their terms."
  • Rosen also found that middle school, high school, and college students studying for exams over 15 minutes were only able to focus for two to three minutes before moving on to other things like texting or apps.
  • help kids to practice life behind a safety curtain
  • hare tidbits about themselves, practice being empathetic and interact with their friends without having to deal with other people’s reactions right away."
Chozen Takei

Steve Jobs: American Genius - The Daily Beast - 0 views

  • Exit the King
  • How did Steve Jobs become a wizard among muggles? And what will Apple do without its willful inspiration at the helm?
  • showman who knew how to end on a high note
  • ...26 more annotations...
  • Steve Jobs announced to the world last week that “unfortunately, that day has come” for him to step down as chief executive officer of Apple,
  • impeccable.
  • 14 years since Jobs regained control of his company in the summer of 1997 after a long, bitter exile
  • Apple shares have increased a stunning 110-fold
  • surpassed rival Microsoft a year ago, Apple’s $350 billion in market capitalization places it behind only ExxonMobil
  • most valuable company in the world.
  • Apple has made money so quickly and so prodigiously that it holds an outrageous $76 billion in cash and investments
  • graduate students at the University of Wisconsin, Madison: Abdulfattah Jandali, a Syrian immigrant
  • In his second time around at Apple, Jobs ultimately achieved what had eluded him in his early years there, from 1976 to 1985
  • visionary and a brilliant promoter but wasn’t respected as a businessman
  • Now Jobs, 56, retires,
  • awesome sum thought to be parked in an obscure subsidiary,
  • Jobs didn’t just create products that instilled lust in consumers and enriched his company.
  • Personal computing. The music business. Publishing. Hollywood. All have been radically transformed because of Steve Jobs.
  • It’s impossible to begin to understand the sources of Jobs’s success without looking to his unusual life story.
  • like the fictional Harry Potter, he was a misfit, raised by adoptive parents
  • Bill Gates as the most highly regarded business figure of our times
  • doctorate in political science
  • He was adopted at birth by Paul and Clara Jobs of San Francisco.
  • his constant risk taking, his rare deal-making ability
  • icrosoft’s Bill Gates and Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg.
  • “dropout”
  • drop-in”:
  • leftist artsy intellectualism, even though he knew his parents couldn’t—and wouldn’t—pick up the tab.
  • That’s how strongly he wanted to be at an elite school and obtain its validation that he was indeed a wizard rather than a muggle. And that’s how good he was at persuasion and dealmaking—and how open to real risk.
  • fruitarian” diet that left him constantly hungry.
  •  
    Steve Jobs changed the world, and his company is one of the best in the world. He retired at the age of 56, and now he is chairman of Apple, not the executive manager.
1 - 4 of 4
Showing 20 items per page