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#Education Initiatives
townpostin · 12 days
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Ex-Police Officers Launch Welfare Initiative in Jamshedpur
New association aims to support retirees and uplift underprivileged communities Key Points: • Retired Police Officers Welfare Association (RPOWA) formed in Jamshedpur • Group to focus on health, education, and social work for marginalized sectors • Five-member committee established to expand initiative statewide JAMSHEDPUR – A group of former law enforcement professionals has united to create an…
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Maharashtra Budget 2024: Key Highlights and Major Initiatives Unveiled by Deputy CM Ajit Pawar
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rbcorpfoundation · 6 months
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Catalysts of Change: RB Charity Foundation's Impactful Initiatives
RB Charity Foundation serves as a catalyst for positive change, spearheading impactful initiatives to uplift communities worldwide. Our foundation is dedicated to addressing societal challenges through innovative solutions and unwavering commitment.
From empowering youth through education to providing essential healthcare services and promoting sustainable development, we strive to create lasting impact in every project we undertake. Through collaborative partnerships and a focus on community engagement, we aim to foster resilience and promote social equity.
Transparency and accountability are paramount in our operations, ensuring that every donation is utilized effectively to maximize benefits for those in need. Together, let's be catalysts of change. Join RB Charity Foundation in our mission to create a brighter, more inclusive future for all. With your support, we can continue to make a tangible difference in the lives of individuals and communities around the globe.
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brownrice03 · 8 months
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Teaches Youth Responsible Decision-Making Skills
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Following his virtual graduation, the economics degree holder and Hatboro-Horsham High School class of 2016 graduate was at a standstill pondering his career in a world that, for the moment, had seemed to stop spinning.
Luke Gehlhaus - Scholarship Winner (etcfoundation34.org)
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poorly-drawn-mdzs · 11 months
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Happy Halloween and Wei Wuxian day!
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raincitygirl76 · 6 months
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For anyone getting excited over Hillerska being shut down by the school inspectorate, hold your glee. Lundsberg Skola is the Swedish boarding school Hillerska seems to based on. After years and years of warnings and fines re bullying and hazing, Lundsbergs was shut down by the school inspectorate on August 28, 2013.
It was supposed to stay shut down for a minimum of 6 months. Instead the school hired expensive lawyers, appealed, and were allowed to reopen on September 6, 2013. So it only took 9 days before they found a loophole. One can assume Hillerska will do likewise and everybody (except the third years) will be back in class in the second half of August when the new school year starts.
At Lundsbergs, the headmaster was fired and the entire board of governors resigned after the shut down. But they soon regrouped, hired a new headmaster, appointed new alumni and parents to the board, and debuted a shiny new anti-bullying policy. Whether it actually worked is unlikely. But the parents are mostly alumni themselves. They would’ve gone through the same brutal hazings and wouldn’t think they’d be such a big deal.
Here’s the Wikipedia page, scroll down to the Controversy section for the details on the abuse and bullying that the school was turning a blind eye to. The final investigation, the one that triggered the (temporary) shutdown, was when the younger boys were burned with hot irons by older boys at an initiation. One boy was burned so badly he needed to be hospitalized. The hospital called the local police, who called the school inspectorate. Note: that boy’s parents were not the ones to notify either the police or the school inspectorate.
Also scroll down to the Alumni section for a look at all the rich, influential and famous people (including multiple Swedish royals across many generations) who went there.
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doublel27 · 2 months
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I think one of my favorite things about The Trainee, aside from the slow reveal of who the characters all really are underneath our initial impressions of them, is how realistic it feels of training someone to go from a competitive education setting to a collaborative work space.
As an educator, admittedly in the US, there’s such a competitive nature for scores and individual achievement and there’s not a lot of room for failure. There’s a lot of reasons for helping students to develop an independent wealth of knowledge to pull on for problem solving and critical thinking based on brain science: the more information/patterns stored in your long term memory the more space you have for complex problem solving.
But also, with such an individualistic set up for achievement with self-reliance as a base, it leads to some of the issues we’ve seen the interns grappling with in terms of not being honest when problems come up or not asking a question of how to solve things, or if the decisions they’re making are the right ones. Especially as the assumption is often amongst the group that failure and mistakes mean they’re out of the intern experience. And the general response from the adults has been: you’re learning, this was a mistake but we are a team and we need to work together.
And I just really love seeing that modeled in a television show, how effective teamwork is built and how it’s a skill that has to be learned/taught alongside the technical skills of the job. Clearly that’s not how all workplaces are, but it’s going a long way to show why the production company works well even when problems arise.
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gainercryptocom · 17 days
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Caw Crypto Price Prediction: Unveiling Future Market Trends
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somecunttookmyurl · 9 months
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wild to me that people are actually trying to defend that classification system cause my reaction whenever i see poor curation is the unshakeable urge to go get a qualification in curation just to be able to storm back in and smack everyone's hands away so i can do it properly this time (yes i know it would never be that easy, but a woman can dream)
even if it would make sense at all ever to group them all together like that (it wouldn't! if for no other reason than they aren't ordinarily labelled like that and so the natural reaction is at least some degree of confusion) there are still... literal factural inaccuracies everywhere?
It's Just Bad, Man
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townpostin · 2 months
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Loyola School Jamshedpur Students Spread Joy Through Community Outreach
Plus-Two Students Connect with Underprivileged in Heartwarming Initiative Loyola’s outreach program engages 400 students in acts of kindness, fostering empathy and social responsibility among youth while touching lives across communities. JAMSHEDPUR – Loyola School’s plus-two students embarked on a mission of compassion, visiting various institutions and remote villages to spread joy and support…
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nothorses · 1 year
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Hi I have a question/discussion? about public schools and ik this is your area of expertise so I thought I'd ask your opinion. When I ponder the problems of schooling, I think about things like: how we value grades more than actual learning and information retention; how late work policies aren't representative of how the real world works and needlessly puts extra stress on students; how we don't give students that need it the additional support they require to succeed; how we overemphasize success on the first try rather than allowing multiple attempts, which isn't reflective of how to appropriately navigate life; how we require students to be unnaturally quiet, still, and non-disruptive, which is genuinely difficult for a lot of kids, especially younger ones, and can impact their ability to learn; how we give them too much work for too many subjects at once...
And it genuinely feels like the root of a lot of these problems, aside from teaching philosophy, is a simple lack of manpower- we don't have enough competent teachers for the amount of kids we have in public schools. A lot of these problems, in my opinion, don't result from teachers or administrators who have a meanspirited or incorrect philosophy about teaching, but from the fact that it is impossible to manage an ideal classroom environment in a room of 30 kids to 1 adult (or 2 adults if the teacher's lucky enough to have an assistant). We require kids to be silent and still because in a room of 30 children if all of them got to fidget and move around, no one would be able to focus on the lesson or even hear it. We have late work policies because the teacher needs to be able to get a move on on the curriculum and can't spend forever on a few students for one topic. Etc etc
I struggled immensely in public schools, so much so that continuing to go to school there irreparably damaged my mental health. I was lucky enough to get transferred to a private school with a max of 4 kids per class after being hospitalized when I became a danger to myself. The learning environment there was so much better and it pretty much solved every single issue I ever had with school; I was able to build a personal relationship with all my teachers and I learned more effectively there than I had anywhere else. The teachers also had room to diverge from the curriculum as needed and move as quickly or as slowly as the class required, so we could spend more time on important, interesting, and difficult topics and skip past the easy ones within a week. My history teacher was able to make his own unit on greek philosophical history just because he wanted to and we were all interested in it. I really think the small class sizes was what made all the difference.
How accurate is that assessment? And is there really a solution other than simply more people going into teaching so we can have smaller classes?
That's a huge chunk of it, yeah- large class sizes cause a lot of those problems, and smaller class sizes create a lot of flexibility for teachers that we currently lack in the public ed system.
The thing about it, though, is that those policies are often not even up to the individual teacher. They do usually have control over late work policies, accommodations they can personally offer, and how much fidgeting they'll allow; but they often don't get a say in things like curriculum, the physical classroom they teach in, school policy, and certainly not in standardized testing and the prep that comes along with it.
Education as a whole is designed to be "optimized", in a way, in order to run as effectively as possible on a shoestring budget.
You'll often see that schools in wealthier areas tend to have smaller class sizes and better learning environments on the whole, and that's because school funding is partially local property taxes, and they have the money to hire more teachers, reduce class sizes, fund classroom furniture and accommodation tools, and give them more control.
But even then, they still have to follow district- and state-mandated curriculum requirements, they will definitely still have to go through standardized testing, and their schools will still be limited by the larger, system-wide roots in that sort of "optimization".
How many students can we educate? Where can we best put our money to support learning? is that gonna be 24-32 new exercise ball chairs and a box of fidget toys, or is it gonna be new learning materials with updated content, informed by modern learning science?
These aren't obvious choices, these are genuinely difficult questions to answer. A lot of people spend a lot of time doing research and writing papers and having discussions in attempts to answer them.
A lot of future-teacher education that I've been through has talked about what we as teachers can do with the tools we're given, and less: democratic classroom environments, anti-racist and culturally-responsive teaching practices, trauma-informed care of students and classroom culture, critical literacy and student empowerment, and removing unnecessary access barriers (late work, testing, etc.).
As a student teacher, I worked with my teacher to redesign his whole grading structure to be more equitable- all according to what I had been learning at my university. But according to the school, I still had to take attendance, mark tardies and absences, and make sure only one of my (high school!!!) students was out of the room at a time. And I felt like a fucking warden.
It's not just that we need more people to go into teaching; I assure you, lots of people want to teach. Lots of people love teaching. And there are things we need to address to enable them to teach: teachers usually go into debt in order to get their degrees and certifications, and the whole field pays so little that they are extremely unlikely to ever pay off that debt without significant outside help. You have to be able to afford to teach.
Not to mention it's an extremely emotionally intensive- even traumatizing- job, and access to mental health support is reliant upon income that, again, does not exist.
We need to pay teachers more; not because They Deserve It (they do, and so does everyone else on the fucking planet), but because if we don't, we won't have teachers. They will leave the profession, they won't enter it in the first place (I'm getting higher degrees partially so I can go into education in a better-paying position), or they'll burn out, undergo trauma, won't have the care they need- and that impacts the health, wellness, and safety of students, too. And that means more funding toward education.
The other piece of it is, again, school culture; schools being run on these shoestring budgets means they have to answer these difficult catch-22 "what's more important" questions, and those answers will never be good enough. It will never be "good" to choose better text books over fidgets, or to choose engaging readings over experiential learning opportunities.
Schools- not districts, not higher-ups in the system- should have enough money that they can run the way they want to run, that their students need them to run, without having to worry about whether this field trip to a science museum is going to deprive other students of filling, nutritious school lunches.
I know "fund education" isn't the most controversial take here, but I do think it's important to emphasize just how much of an impact that has on the system overall: not just the day-to-day decisions, not even just the teachers, but the culture and the fundamental structure of our schooling.
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venacoeurva · 3 months
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It's the Underfarm, AKA cute little farm with a waterfall in a cave, and kind of a pocket dimension Wren lived in while in Kurk's realm, since, y'know, enrichment. Also an excuse to do something with the little farmhouses
Little dim though with my ENB settings, so I gotta crank that up a tad
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lavernius · 3 months
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😳😳😳THAT CALIBRATION SCENE…FUCK…
🥸 I have a lot of funny little ideas regarding Lopez and physical affection!
That scene was meant to get a little more intense but I settled on keeping it more vulnerable-trust-building-gentle :) Locus doesn't trust himself not to hurt people but Lopez is very difficult to hurt and would love to see Locus try...
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spleen9000 · 3 months
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my parents want me to take family medical leave so that I can take care of my dad for a few months of recovery from a medical procedure, and the more I think about it the more I don't want to, but I don't see any other great options, especially since him being in recovery also opens up the question of who will be my mom's caretaker during that time. but I feel like I'm finally making progress again in school and with my jobs, and I don't want to give that up. but I also can't imagine leaving my parents hanging on this. what do people do in situations like this :(
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obsidiannebula · 7 months
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I didn't watch Danny Phantom as a kid and I like, really don't know anything about it, but I keep seeing the occasional meta and a lot of fic of it on my dash, especially crossing over with DC/Batfam and I just have to say
You're all doing amazing. This shit is so good keep it coming. You're all so creative and passionate. Idk what's going on all the time but you guys have the coolest ideas I love you
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scrawnytreedemon · 1 year
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People are headcanoning Sephiroth as illiterate now. As in. The fucking reason he took so long in that basement was because he had to finger-read every single fucking book.
I'm putting Sheltered Sephiroth on the top shelf until you goons stop veering into outright ableism. For fuck's sake.
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