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Gunmen Kill 3 Afghan Women Media Workers

Gunmen Kill 3 Afghan Women Media Workers

ISLAMABAD – Officials in Afghanistan said Tuesday gunmen killed three women employees of a local television channel in separate attacks in eastern Nangarhar province.

Witnesses and police said the victims were on their way home from work when assailants targeted them in different parts of Jalalabad, capital of the Afghan province, and managed to flee.

The slain women were associated with private Enikass TV, which operates in the city.   The station called it a “sad day” and noted that it has “been targeted many times but this is the second time we lost our dear colleagues.”

One of the women was pulled out of the vehicle she was travelling in before being fatally shot, said Zalmay Latifi, the head of the media outlet.

Provincial governor Ziaulhaq Amarkhil told reporters an elderly passerby woman was also wounded.

No one immediately took responsibility for the afternoon deadly shooting incidents. A spokesman for the Taliban insurgency denied it had any hand in the killings.

Nangarhar police chief Juma Gul Hemat said an armed suspect was taken into the custody and an investigation was underway.

The United States condemned the killings, calling on the Afghan government to defend press freedom and protect journalists by conducting “open and transparent” investigations into these “vicious murders” to end impunity.

The U.S. embassy wrote on Twitter these attacks are meant to intimidate and intended to make reporters cower. The U.S. embassy said “the culprits hope to stifle freedom of speech in a nation where the media has flourished during the past 20 years. This cannot be tolerated.”

Tuesday’s attack is the latest in an ongoing wave of targeted killings of high-profile figures in Afghanistan, including journalists, civil society activities, religious scholars, judges and government officials.

The violence has forced many into hiding while some have fled the country. Kabul, the Afghan capital, has experienced most of the attacks.

The Afghan government and U.S. officials have blamed the Taliban for being behind the violence, charges the insurgents consistently have rejected.

The latest attack comes as America’s special envoy to Afghanistan, Zalmay Khalilzad, returned to Kabul this week in a bid to move a troubled Afghan peace process forward.

Khalilzad has been reportedly tasked by President Joe Biden to renegotiate a February 2020 deal with the Taliban that requires the remaining 2,500 American soldiers withdraw from the country by May 1.

The agreement was sealed by Donald Trump’s administration in his bid to end what he would often dub as American’s “endless war.”

The accord opened peace negotiations between the Taliban and representatives of the Afghan government in September, though the process has made little headway and has not helped reduce violence in Afghanistan.

The bloodshed prompted Biden soon after taking office in January to review the deal to examine whether the Taliban have held up their end of the commitments. The insurgents have cautioned against dumping the troop withdrawal deadline, saying it would escalate Afghan hostilities.

Fuente de la Información: https://www.voanews.com/press-freedom/gunmen-kill-3-afghan-women-media-workers

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Nigeria: Hundreds of Girls Abducted From Nigerian School Are Freed, Official Says

Hundreds of Girls Abducted From Nigerian School Are Freed, Official Says

Credit…Afolabi Sotunde/Reuters

Ismail Alfa and 

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria — Hundreds of girls who were abducted last week from their boarding school in Nigeria by a group of armed men have been released, a local official said on Tuesday, the second time in less than a week that gunmen have returned kidnapped schoolchildren in the country.

The girls were taken on Friday from Government Girls Secondary School in the town of Jangebe, in the northern state of Zamfara. The Nigerian government has denied paying ransoms. It was not clear how the release of the children in this case was secured.

“It gladdens my heart to announce the release of the abducted students of GGSS Jangebe from captivity,” the governor of Zamfara State, Bello Matawalle, wrote on Twitter early Tuesday, referring to their school’s name. Mr. Matawalle did not provide details about the girls’ release. Officials initially said that 317 girls had been in the group, but later told journalists that the correct number was 279.

The frequency of mass kidnappings of girls and boys at boarding schools in northwestern Nigeria is rising in part because abduction has become a growth industry amid the country’s economic crisis. The victims are increasingly schoolchildren — not just the rich, powerful or famous.

One of Amiru Malan’s daughters was among the kidnapped. He said that as soon as he heard the gunfire after midnight on Friday, he knew what the armed men wanted.

His home is only a short distance from a boarding school, where his two daughters lived in dorms. He knew the armed groups that have stalked schools in the region for months had come for his family.

The groups are known to target villagers in their raids, and there was little he could do but wait.

“I became apprehensive and tried to contact friends and relatives within the neighborhood,” Mr. Malan said. “A friend of mine also a parent to another abducted schoolgirl, whose house is just next to the school, told me that our daughters’ school has been invaded.”

His wife was by his side, “broken down in an inconsolable tears, calling out the names of our two daughters who are students in the affected school.”

Mr. Malan tried to comfort her with prayer and waited for the dawn.

“I headed to the school premises where two of my daughters are students,” he said.

“I saw my younger daughter, Maimunatu, who came running and crying,” he said. “I rushed to her and grabbed her firmly, hoping to hear that her older sister was safe, too. But Maimunatu shook her head and said, ‘They took her away.’ And she broke down in tears again.”

His daughter told him that the armed men were wearing uniforms and claimed to be with the military.

“We have come to protect you,” she recalled them saying. “Don’t be afraid because we don’t mean to harm any of you, just obey our instructions.”

Maimunatu, 13, hid under her bed and watched as her older sister, Khairiya, 14, was led away with hundreds of other girls. Three agonizing days later, the sisters were reunited.

Video posted on Twitter by the news site Daily Nigerian showed some of the girls walking past journalists in a straight line — solemnly and silently — as cameras flashed. The footage showed some as barefoot, while others were limping.

The week before the girls were kidnapped, more than 40 children and adults were abducted from a boarding school in Niger State, becoming the latest victims of the West African country’s slide into insecurity. They were freed on Saturday.

The banditry, one of Nigeria’s many complex conflicts, has even taken place in President Muhammadu Buhari’s home state, Katsina, where more than 300 boys were abducted by armed men in December. They, too, were later released.

The Katsina episode was reminiscent of the country’s most notorious kidnapping, the 2014 abduction of 276 schoolgirls by the Islamist extremist group Boko Haram in the northeastern state of Borno.

Last week, Mr. Buhari blamed state and local governments for the recent uptick in kidnappings and urged them to improve security around schools.

On Tuesday, after the girls from the school in Zamfara State were returned, the state governor, Mr. Matawalle, struck a note of celebration.

“I enjoin all well-meaning Nigerians to rejoice with us as our daughters are now safe,” he wrote

Fuente de la Informción: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/02/world/africa/nigeria-kidnapped-students.html

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Salt spa seeks to soothe cradle of Libya’s revolution

Salt spa seeks to soothe cradle of Libya’s revolution

A specialist in alternative medicine covers the body of a client with salt at the Opal salt treatment centre in Libya’s eastern city of Benghazi, once the cradle of the 2011 uprising that ousted the regime of dictator Moamer Kadhafi. By Abdullah DOMA (AFP)

Libya’s principal eastern city may be best known as the cradle of a revolution, but it has lately scored an improbable first for the conflict-riven country — a salt spa.

The Opal centre in Benghazi, where citizens rose up against dictator Moamer Kadhafi’s rule a decade ago, opened Libya’s first-ever artificial salt caves to clients last October.

Established by two women entrepeneurs, the centre offers soothing treatments in a zen-like atmosphere accompanied by soft music and subdued lighting.

«The inhalation of salt particles purifies the respiratory tract and brings benefits for the skin,» says joint founder Iman Bugaighis, sporting a white blouse and a pink veil around her head.

Armed with a shovel, the specialist in alternative medicine covers the body of a client in his 30s with salt, from his legs to his neck.

Eyes closed and hands clasped around a ball of salt, the man relaxes, breathing slowly in a windowless but uncramped room.

In another room, with crystal covered walls and resembling a cave, a machine propels iodine-laden salt particles through the air.

An immersive session inhaling the concoction lasts 45 minutes and costs between 80 and 120 dinars ($18 to $27). Several sessions are required to yield results, says Bugaighis.

‘Soothes my pain’

The Opal centre, slap-bang in the chic district of Dagadosta in downtown Benghazi, promises treatment of respiratory issues like asthma and skin conditions including eczema and psoriasis.

Libya's salt spa is located in an artificial salt cave and treatment includes the inhalation of salt particles which founder Iman Bugaighis says purifies the respiratory tract and brings benefits for the skin.  By Abdullah DOMA (AFP)

Libya’s salt spa is located in an artificial salt cave and treatment includes the inhalation of salt particles which founder Iman Bugaighis says purifies the respiratory tract and brings benefits for the skin. By Abdullah DOMA (AFP)

Pockmarked walls and disfigured buildings are reminders of past conflict in the city, which in recent years has been the bastion of eastern Libyan strongman Khalifa Haftar.

Mustafa Ahmed Akhlif, a banker in his 50s, has suffered from acute sinusitis for a decade.

«I’ve taken lots of painkillers and tried traditional medicine without it dulling my pain,» he said.

But in just four sessions of inhaling the salty substances he says he feels «80 percent» better.

Bugaighis herself discovered the therapy when travelling in Arab countries that offer the same treatments.

She then studied alternative medicine in neighbouring Tunisia.

Convinced of the treatments’ efficacy in tackling chronic illnesses, she returned to her home city and launched her business, alongside her friend Zainab al-Werfalli.

Semblance of normality

The Opal «centre has met its public,» enthused Werfalli, even if the years of instability makes business success difficult to predict.

The centre’s opening coincided with a ceasefire agreed in October by the main players in Libya’s conflict — Haftar’s eastern-based forces and rival authorities in the capital Tripoli.

And a precarious new interim executive authority, approved by both parties to the conflict, tentatively got off the ground this month with a mandate to lead the nation to elections set for December.

Werfalli is determined to «make this complementary therapy known to the medical profession» in her home city, starting with the doctors and medical staff.

The two women are ready to treat patients of all ages and Bugaighis said one little girl with respiratory problems had improved considerably following sessions.

Buffeted by repeated rounds of fighting and interruptions to oil output in the decade since Kadhafi’s ouster and killing, Libyans are trying to rediscover a semblance of normality.

Tucked away from the nearby urban commotion, Libya’s first artificial salt caves invite clients to relax and forget, amid lungfuls of salty air, a chaos that otherwise all too often overshadows everyday life.

Fuente de la Información: https://www.modernghana.com/news/1064600/salt-spa-seeks-to-soothe-cradle-of-libyas-revolut.html

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Estados Unidos: NC early educators are seven times more likely to live in poverty than K-8 teachers, report finds

NC early educators are seven times more likely to live in poverty than K-8 teachers, report finds

Davina Boldin-Woods, director of Excel Christian Academy, a child care center in Burlington, recalls one of her favorite employees: a teacher who came to her center with only a high school diploma. With Boldin-Woods’ encouragement, the teacher went back to school while working to earn her associate degree, then her bachelor’s degree.

“She got a four-year degree in December, and by January she had a position at a high school,” Boldin-Woods said.

Boldin-Woods didn’t blame her. Though she offers her teachers as much as she can, many on her staff receive public assistance. She can’t compete with the compensation and benefits a public school district can offer. “That is the story that is told across the state,” she said.

In North Carolina, early educators with a bachelor’s degree are paid 28.8% less on average than their colleagues in the K-8 system, according to a new national report — the 2020 Early Childhood Workforce Index — from the Center for the Study of Child Care Employment at the University of California, Berkeley. The poverty rate for early educators in North Carolina is 17.6%, compared with 10.6% of North Carolina workers in general and 2.4% of K-8 teachers.

“We can continue to encourage educating our workforce, but we have nothing to provide for them to hold on to,” Boldin-Woods said. “That teacher alone, for the over eight years that she was working for me, she received subsidized child care, Section 8 housing, and she received food stamps.”

The report breaks down early educator compensation by age range, showing differences in pay across early childhood settings. North Carolina’s profile shows 2019 median wages for child care workers at $10.62 (compared with $11.65 nationally), for preschool teachers at $12.83 ($14.67 nationally), and for kindergarten teachers at $27.89 ($32.80 nationally).

“We want people to see this as a wake-up call,” said Caitlin McLean, senior research specialist at the center and lead author of the report. Though most of the report’s analysis relies on information from before the pandemic, McLean said the pandemic adds urgency to improving the supports that states offer to teachers of the youngest children.

“I do think there is a moment in time now where people are really recognizing that this can’t go on, that we actually need direct public investment in the system and recognizing that we can’t keep treating it like just a private system parents are expected to shoulder the burden for,” she said. “If we want to make sure all children have access to early education that they need and deserve, we have to invest in it the way we do K-12 education.”

‘Edging forward’

The index labels states as “stalled,” “edging forward,” or “making headway” across workforce policies. North Carolina was labeled as “edging forward” on teacher qualifications, work environments, compensation and financial relief, and financial resources. In one category, workforce data, the state received a “making headway” label.

In North Carolina, the minimum requirement for early educators is one community college course, yet certain funding streams require higher education levels. NC Pre-K, the state’s targeted public preschool for vulnerable 4-year-olds, requires lead teachers to have bachelor’s degrees. The state’s quality rating system, which affects the public resources a child care facility can receive, factors in teachers’ education level.

Many providers, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, are struggling to retain teachers doing risky work. Nationwide, the workforce has shrunk by 25% since the start of the pandemic, the report says.

McLean pointed to the T.E.A.C.H. Early Childhood North Carolina Scholarship Program as a promising practice. Developed in North Carolina by the Child Care Services Association (CCSA) but active in 24 other states, the program funds education for early educators in the field returning to school. It also requires a commitment to stay in the early education field for at least one year afterward.

Other services from the same organization support early educators in other ways. The Child Care WAGE$ program provides wage supplements depending on education level and requires teachers to stay at the same program while receiving the supplements. “WAGE$ is designed to provide preschool children more stable relationships with better-educated teachers by rewarding teacher education and continuity of care,” the program’s website reads.

Out of 37,000 early educators in the state, according to the CSCCE report, the T.E.A.C.H. scholarships reached 2,405 individuals from 2019-20. These programs receive funds from the state Division of Child Development and Early Education.

CCSA President Marsha Basloe said she’s proud of what the programs have done in terms of education levels and retention in the workforce. In CCSA’s 2019 study of the workforce, 62% of center-based teaching staff had at least an associate degree in any field. Yet more resources are needed, she said, both to scale these strategies up and to build an early educator pipeline for the future.

“The only way to recruit the pipeline is to say to people in high school, ‘If you want to be an early childhood teacher, you can make a living,’ as opposed to, ‘You want to be an early childhood teacher? You’re going to live in poverty the rest of your life,’” Basloe said. “We’ve got to change our messaging, and the only way to do that is to change our policies and to look at our financing strategies.”

A need for redesign

Workforce issues point to an unsustainable business model for private child care, the report says, that parents can’t afford, that teachers and directors can’t make a living from, and that many children can’t access.

“The entire market-based early care and education system is profoundly flawed and needs to be redesigned,” reads the report’s introduction to its policy recommendations.

This is particularly true of educators in the infant/toddler range, the report says, who have not seen the kinds of investment that states have directed toward early education for preschool-age children.

“It’s great that there’s been this attention paid to pre-K services, but we really need to expand that across the 0-5 age range, or else we’re just perpetuating disparities for children in that age and for the workforce that’s caring for and educating them,” McLean said.

The report links the historic undervaluing of early care and education directly to systemic racism, and finds a racial wage gap in the field. Nationally, Black early educators are paid $0.78 less than their white colleagues after controlling for education level. The report says:

Continuing to pay early educators poverty-level wages out of an expectation that women, especially women of color, will continue to do this work for (almost) free — either out of love for children or because they have few other options — perpetuates sexism, racism, and classism in the United States.

McLean added that Black and LatinX communities have also been hit the hardest by the pandemic, a period in which many early educators kept caring for children of essential workers and, later, school-age remote learners.

The report recommends several policies to strengthen the workforce, such as aligning teacher qualifications with national standards, ensuring teachers have paid planning and professional development opportunities, and increasing compensation across settings.

“We have to understand that this is actually essential to a modern economy,” McLean said. “And that, on the child side, this is education, it’s about their development. And we need to expect that we’re going to have to invest in it.”

Fuente de la Información: https://www.ednc.org/2021-02-24-nc-early-childhood-educators-low-pay-poverty-child-care-workforce-report/

 

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Uganda: Schools in Lira register poor turn up of learners

Schools in Lira register poor turn up of learners

Lira, Uganda | THE INDEPENDENT |  Schools in Lango sub-region have registered poor turn up of learners as schools reopened for semi candidate classes.

Last month President Museveni allowed schools and tertiary institutions to reopen for primary six learners, senior three and senior five students on the 1st of March 2020, after a long closure since March, last year due to the coronavirus pandemic.

However, many rural schools in Apac, Kwania, Kole, Dokolo and Oyam districts have suffered a low turn up of candidates.

In Apac district, Patrick Waca, the head-teacher of Ibuje primary school, says of the 110 semi candidates they had in the first term before closure, only 15 have reported back.

Aninolal Primary School in Kwania district received 14 primary six learners, out of 115 they had in term one, 4 learners reported for studies at Agwa primary school, out of 38, Ikwera Negri school for the disabled registered 11 learners, out of 38 and Inomo secondary school registered only 3 students, out of 235 students.

Ader P.7 in Oyam district registered 20 out 55; Kure P.7 still in Oyam registered 18 out of 60 among other schools. Patrick Ocweo, the headteacher of Agwa primary school, attributed low turn up to teenage pregnancies and early marriages. 

He says that they have already embarked on serious sensitization of the parents. 

Ambrose Okori, a resident of Olami Village in Ikwera ward Aduku Town Council and a father of nine children, says most parents are suffering financial burden, a reason many children have remained home.

But Janet Lydia Ajwang, the headteacher Ikwera Negri School for the disabled, says due to financial burdens imposed on the parents by Covid-19 lockdown, they have resolved to lower the school fees from 215,000 shillings to 120,000 shillings for the boarding learners.

According to Ajwang, the move is intended to motivate parents to send their children back to school.

Sammy Bob Okino, the headteacher Lango College in Lira City proposed that the education stakeholders in the districts conduct radio talk shows to mobilize parents to send children to school.

Kwania district Education Officer, Andrew Omunu, urged the school authorities to conduct serious sensitization, mobilization and engagement meetings with parents to help the learners report back to school.

Omuno says in the worst come to the worse, the teachers and local leaders will have to move door to door tracing for the learners.

Fuente de la Información: https://www.independent.co.ug/education-ministry-appeals-to-schools-to-wait-for-reopening-guidelines/

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Venezuela: Estado desatiende solicitud de búsqueda de dos pescadores desaparecidos hace 20 días en Caicara

Estado desatiende solicitud de búsqueda de dos pescadores desaparecidos hace 20 días en Caicara

Rubén Jesús Díaz Bolívar, de 38 años, y Yuskaly Alexander Herrera Pérez, de 32 años, llevan 20 días desaparecidos en Caicara del Orinoco, la capital del municipio Cedeño, en el estado Bolívar.

Sus familiares aseguran que ni el Cuerpo de Investigaciones Científicas, Penales y Criminalísticas (Cicpc) ni Protección Civil emprendieron la búsqueda.

Desesperados, parientes solicitan al gobernador del estado Bolívar Justo Noguera, y a la Alcaldía del municipio Cedeño apoyo para el rastreo e investigación de la ubicación de los pescadores.

La última vez que vieron a Rubén Jesús y Yuskaly Alexander fue la tarde del jueves 4 de febrero, cuando salieron a pescar. Partieron del puerto El Guamo con dos cavas para almacenar el pescado, dos trenes de pesca y otras pertenencias en dirección hacia El Burro, un asentamiento a 210,28 kilómetros de Caicara.

Tres días después de la partida de ambos, compañeros de faena avisaron a los familiares que ninguno de los dos hombres llegó a su destino. Fue entonces cuando decidieron poner la denuncia ante el Cicpc y Protección Civil.

Ninguno de los dos cuerpos de seguridad emprendió la búsqueda. Isamar Díaz, hermana de Rubén Díaz, informó que el Cicpc ayudó con la búsqueda por un día, y dieron con una de las cavas que su hermano se llevaba a pescar, luego se retiraron del caso. “Ya no los podemos ayudar a buscar, porque esa no es nuestra competencia, nos dijeron”, relató la mujer.

Precisamente la Unidad de Víctimas Especiales del Cicpc es el organismo del Estado responsable de recibir las denuncias de desaparición y llevar el control y seguimiento de la investigación, una vez que el Ministerio Público asigna un fiscal para el caso.

Funcionarios de Protección Civil también se negaron a iniciar la búsqueda, esta vez por falta de recursos. Finalmente la familia acudió a la Guardia Nacional para solicitar apoyo al menos con combustible para iniciar la búsqueda por cuenta propia, pero tampoco eso recibieron.

Sin sabanear combustible no hay búsqueda

“Muchos llegan allá a la GNB a pedir apoyo con combustible, ellos dicen que no tienen. La ayuda que nosotros pedimos es esa, que ayuden al menos con eso para que nosotros podamos seguir buscando en el río”, afirmó Díaz.

En la zona, el litro de combustible está entre los dos y tres dólares. Para iniciar la búsqueda, los allegados de los pescadores lograron recaudar 20 litros que alcanzaron para uno o dos días, hasta ahora sin resultados.

“Si se hubiesen ahogado, los cuerpos hubiesen flotado en el agua, pero no hay nada, no han salido”, dijo Díaz.

El día que desapareció Rubén Díaz iba vestido con una franela turquesa, pantalón negro y botas grises. Mide 1,60 metros, es moreno y tiene el cabello liso. No tiene tatuajes ni cicatrices.

Rubén no es pescador de vocación, pero desde diciembre apela a la pesca, para conseguir suficiente dinero para reparar el camión que utiliza en la empresa de construcción de bloques que tiene.

Hace dos años que ya no pisa las minas de la entidad a vender carne de res y de cerdo, por lo que su familia descarta que la desaparición esté vinculada con la violencia minera.

Yuskaly Herrera es pescador desde pequeño, conoce el río. Es moreno, delgado, mide 1,70 metros aproximadamente. Tiene un diente de plata, aunque su familia no precisó cuál, y también tiene un tatuaje en el brazo derecho, cerca del hombro. Hace un año regresó de las minas del sector.

Parientes de ambos desaparecidos aseguran que ninguno de los dos recibió amenazas por parte de particulares o grupos armados.

De tener cualquier información sobre el paradero de ambos, sus familiares ponen a disposición el número de teléfono 0426-4416806.

¿Qué pasa en Cedeño?

El municipio Cedeño es de vocación minera, antes por la explotación de bauxita y ahora por la explotación de coltán, principalmente, diamante y oro. Desde 2016 la entidad forma parte del bloque 1 del Arco Minero del Orinoco (AMO) y es el asentamiento de grupos armados irregulares como las Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias Colombianas (FARC), y el Ejército de Liberación Nacional, aunque ya estaban presentes antes de que el decreto se hiciera realidad.

Con la diseminación de la guerrilla y el pranato minero, también se diseminó la violencia de estos grupos en aras de hacerse con el control de los yacimientos e imponer un orden que mantiene en zozobra a la población y que el Estado es incapaz de controlar. Desde 2019 hasta junio de 2020 Correo del Caroní contabilizó 137 personas asesinadas en las zonas mineras del estado Bolívar.

De acuerdo con los lugareños, en Caicara ocurren con frecuencia desapariciones forzadas que no siempre trascienden a la prensa por lo remoto de la localidad y el hermetismo. Con frecuencia aparecen pescadores amordazados a orillas del río Orinoco, atados a sacos de piedras o personas ajusticiadas con una bala en la cabeza.

Las desapariciones en los pueblos de vocación minera, asediados por grupos armados, son un patrón indeleble pero que el Estado ignora. Hasta diciembre de 2020, un grupo de periodistas independientes junto a la Comisión para los Derechos Humanos y la Ciudadanía (Codehciu) documentó 82 casos de desaparición de personas vinculadas directa e indirectamente con la minería en el estado Bolívar y comprobó de manera irrefutable que a los desaparecidos nadie más que su familia y amigos los busca.

Esto, aunque el Estado es responsable de buscar en vida a las víctimas de desaparición, investigar, sancionar a los culpables y reparar a las víctimas que son tanto los desaparecidos como sus familiares, de acuerdo con estándares internacionales de derechos humanos suscritos y ratificados por Venezuela.

Fuente de la Información: https://www.correodelcaroni.com/region/sucesos/estado-desatiende-solicitud-de-busqueda-de-dos-pescadores-desaparecidos-hace-20-dias-en-caicara-del-orinoco/

 

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Costa Rica: UNA diseñó libro de matemáticas para cultura Bribri-Cabécar

UNA diseñó libro de matemáticas para cultura Bribri-Cabécar

KÚL ËLTËPA I CHA, es el primer libro de matemáticas elaborado desde y para las comunidades indígenas Bribri-Cabécar.

El texto para sétimo año se basa en una educación paralela y comparativa entre las matemáticas escolarizadas y las de los territorios indígenas Bribri-Cabécar de Costa Rica, que representan saberes matemáticos característicos de estos pueblos como el uso del cuerpo humano para hacer mediciones, la geometrización de su cosmovisión, el uso de técnicas propias para resguardar información contable.

Para fortalecer la educación matemática desde las etnomatemáticas, área que se fundamenta en las formas propias de entender la matemática desde los saberes y las prácticas culturales de todos los grupos humanos, es que se elaboró esta obra a cargo de la Dirección Regional de Educación Sulá del Ministerio de Educación Pública (MEP) y el Fondo Universitario para el Desarrollo de las Regiones de Etnomatemática de Campus Sarapiquí la Universidad Nacional (UNA), con apoyo de la Red Latinoamericana de Etnomatemática y la Unesco.

A mediados de febrero, unos 2 mil ejemplares se distribuyeron en los colegios y liceos rurales de Talamanca Bribri-Cabécar, Valle la Estrella y Bajo Chirripó, aproximadamente a una población de 700 estudiantes.

Para fortalecer la educación matemática desde las etnomatemáticas, área que se fundamenta en las formas propias de entender la matemática desde los saberes y las prácticas culturales de todos los grupos humanos, es que se elaboró esta obra a cargo de la Dirección Regional de Educación Sulá del Ministerio de Educación Pública (MEP) y el Fondo Universitario para el Desarrollo de las Regiones de Etnomatemática de Campus Sarapiquí la Universidad Nacional (UNA), con apoyo de la Red Latinoamericana de Etnomatemática y la Unesco.

A mediados de febrero, unos 2 mil ejemplares se distribuyeron en los colegios y liceos rurales de Talamanca Bribri-Cabécar, Valle la Estrella y Bajo Chirripó, aproximadamente a una población de 700 estudiantes.

Fuente de la Información: https://www.larepublica.net/noticia/una-diseno-libro-de-matematicas-para-cultura-bribri-cabecar

 

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