It looks like I am going to have to choose to do this assignment with the alternative method, today I can say it looks like it will be ok. I love to read and this gave me a chance to read about a place would not have usually run across. I went to read on the Childhood Poverty Research & Policy Centre and saw there is a story about a little boy named Bokyt and his sister whose name is Burulai, they are from Kyrgyz Republic. The website is no longer funded so I don't know if there will be updates on the two children. There is a slide show about the lives of these two children that will make you see life in a different way. One of the slide shows shows Burulai washing cups in the market to earn money and the person with her describes her as a smart girl without studying books. The mother of this little girl says she has given up, but the little girl says she will continue to study so that she can move them into a house. The little boy that they show works in a mine (perhaps a coal mine) and he works alongside men. They go down into the mine and load their bags come back up and start it all over again. There is very little light just the light from their helmets and the spaces are super small to work in. When he gets home his mother says all she can see are his eyes-he is so dirty and tried. The slides show the families eating together and there is prayer going on, the little girl has not lost her hope but the little boys looks as if he has. Kyrgyz Republic is in Central Asia and most of the people speak a Turkic language, they have strong cultural and historical ties. A few interesting facts that I read about the Kyrgyz Republic is that they won a bronze medal for bandy(like ice hockey) in the Asian Winter Games, they celebrate New Year’s on Jan. 1st, and they may still have what is called bride kidnapping. Bride kidnapping comes from when an arrange marriage may not be consented and a kidnapping is arranged. They have a game called Ulak Tartysh it is a cross between polo and rugby but played with a goat's carcass and the two teams wrestle for the possession of the goat (talk about culture shock).
The education system goes from 1-4th as primary and 5-11 for secondary, there may sometimes be a 12 grade. To get a certificate of completion you must finish 9 grades of school, to receive a state-accredited school diploma you must go 11 years of school and pass four mandatory state tests in writing, math, history, and a foreign language.
China is the most populous country and their education and health levels are higher than in many countries with equitant incomes. China also receives more foreign investment than any other country in the world except for the US.
The number of children living in ABSOLUTE poverty is 600 million worldwide, and over 10 million children under the age of 5 die every year from preventable diseases. Out of a 100 children born in 2000, 30 will most likely suffer from malnutrition in the first 5 years of life, 26 will not be immunized, and 19 will lack access to safe drinking water, 40 will not have adequate sanitation, 17 will never go to school. These numbers show we really need to have policies to protect our children. The goals of the Millennuim Development Goals are to cut the numbers down by 2015- halving the poverty rate, two thirds the deaths of children under 5, and pushing for primary education for all children. The only way to make this work is to get the information out there.
Children of the world need help, and we can be a force of help-one student at a time (maybe a classroom at a time). We cannot let a child give up before they can even get started.
The education system goes from 1-4th as primary and 5-11 for secondary, there may sometimes be a 12 grade. To get a certificate of completion you must finish 9 grades of school, to receive a state-accredited school diploma you must go 11 years of school and pass four mandatory state tests in writing, math, history, and a foreign language.
China is the most populous country and their education and health levels are higher than in many countries with equitant incomes. China also receives more foreign investment than any other country in the world except for the US.
The number of children living in ABSOLUTE poverty is 600 million worldwide, and over 10 million children under the age of 5 die every year from preventable diseases. Out of a 100 children born in 2000, 30 will most likely suffer from malnutrition in the first 5 years of life, 26 will not be immunized, and 19 will lack access to safe drinking water, 40 will not have adequate sanitation, 17 will never go to school. These numbers show we really need to have policies to protect our children. The goals of the Millennuim Development Goals are to cut the numbers down by 2015- halving the poverty rate, two thirds the deaths of children under 5, and pushing for primary education for all children. The only way to make this work is to get the information out there.
Children of the world need help, and we can be a force of help-one student at a time (maybe a classroom at a time). We cannot let a child give up before they can even get started.
I love your comment about helping the world one child at a time. That is why I continue to be an early childhood professional. I find it so frustrating that we have so much information about everything yet as a group (the world) we fail to put it to use quickly if at all. I know we cannot change the world overnight, but I'd like too.
ReplyDeleteI hate to think that it is possible to give up before you even get started is disheartening, yet prevalent. I remember something called "learned helplessness," and the last thing we want any individual in our global community to believe is that they cannot succeed. Strength based perspectives are the only way we are going to encourage our world to grow in a sustainable way.
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