Sunday, June 15, 2008

Watery Cm Period Late Negative Test

Cambodia Cambodia: The school.

L School in Cambodia ...
Where to start? Nothing is clear or identical from one city to another, each adapting the basic system has its own way, so tough you clearly describe all this! Well then first of all, children from primary school have al school Monday to Saturday morning, the children have generally only Sunday to rest, I generally accurate because in some schools, they don not have classes on Thursday as well. Officially they have classes all day but during the after noon like in reality has more support classes, the majority of children will therefore underway that morning, the school n is not required here anyway.
In Cambodia, unfortunately, many children work, they are certainly less likely to work in factories because the regulation becomes more stringent over the cons are crossed by very regular street children now sell all sorts of things. Thus Sihanoukville eg balneaire tourist town in the south, al school children attend the morning, eat something quickly pick up their goods for sale at home and then spend the after noon at the beach trying to sell a bunch things to tourists (bracelets and other jewelry that they manufacture themselves, scarves, fruits, some girls of ten years even offer the same services than their elders to learn hair removal, massage, manicure / pedicure). So they return home late at night and have had that moment to help their parents with chores, making bracelets for those who sell and of course homework.

Regarding the holidays, we were certifies that Cambodia is the country where children are more holidays in the world and that in order to prevent children deserted the school too (c unofficially give them a maximum of free time to let them work and thus enable them to go at the same school al.), they in effect three months of the summer vacation of ROW, when the monsoon season, not counting a few weeks here and there, for Khmer New Year in particular.

As in many countries of Asia there are two types of school as widespread as the one the other: private schools and public schools. The two types of school are secular. The private schools charge fees, parents must pay a monthly sum al school. Cote staffing and equipment of this type school looks to ours, they are also of generally held by a foreigner, expatriate and c is often in these schools that the children of expatriates will. Classes are held in English and rated programs these schools have to follow the national curriculum defined by the state but have the permission to add material (for example English, sport or art are not signs in public) or to broaden the program (eg history or geo). The teachers of these schools are fairly well paid. In public schools
cons by the conditions of teaching and learning are not the same. Rating of staff first, instead of being about 30 students per class as in the private one located within 50 to 100 students per class depending on the schools. No rating equipment these schools have generally not much except painting, chalk, paper, pens. No teachers were not always available educational resources for two reasons, one being that books are expensive, the second being that there is little in Khmer, or all teachers especially in public does not speak English. State schools are supposed to be free but in reality they are paying informally. The teachers of the public are indeed very poorly paid (20 to 30 dollars per month in private wages rise to 150 to 200 dollars per month) and therefore require additional salary unofficial from parents, they must So pay 500 riels per day (equivalent to 4,000 riels a dollar) per child for the teacher s occupies the child, if the sum is not paid the teacher simply ignores the pupil, and in a class of 90 students it is easily drowned in the mass. Teachers are also pay for photocopies that they distribute (and in the secondary almost all courses are in the form of photocopies). In addition, papers distributed during exams to pass from one class to another are also paying if you do not pay the teacher does not distribute paper and the pupil to zero. The tutoring I told you about that after noon the place is regarded as a hand, if the child wants to attend must therefore pay a supplement.

In both types of school, the wearing of uniform is required (often high white shirt and blue socks, trousers for boys, skirts for girls), and the hygiene of children is controlled regulieremment (teeth cleaned, nails cut, etc. .) If children are not dressed properly or s are not impeccable the teacher taps the tips of their fingers with a ruler, square iron, it is the same whether the child is questioned and is wrong or does not know well his lesson. No law allows teachers has not hit the children but in reality c is a fact accepted from the time the child or had "merit".

In both types of school there is only one teacher per class that teaches all the materials (though there are Sometimes a teacher has to teach English part in private schools whose teaching is exempt in Khmer). In public schools the subjects taught are: social (this includes moral education, history, geography ...), science, literature, Khmer, mathematics. In private schools are added generally sport, art, English, computer sometimes.

Whatever the school, there is no canteen. All children come into effect at noon to eat at home, the few remaining al school lunch and after the principals would not have time to go home at lunch to buy something from street vendors and then eat in their classrooms.

As in Laos, the children were very little personal equipment, textbooks and school owned al are ready for a year (although there are usually one textbook for 4 to 8 students on average), then that they have no one or two pens, one or two books, a ruler, eraser and tidy all in a plastic bag.


here an example of uniform girl version.

A school or rather the hallway outside of ecole.Vous can see the bikes in front ranges.

The well of the school which children will draw the water here boils down to the toilet a hole way Turkish bath and poured a bucket of water in to flush with water, not tap so.

Here is the front of the school, you can see the roofs, sheet metal, which give you an idea of the state of the remaining buildings.

A book of high.


A class, precision small, it s here for a private school, so imagine the public.


an elevation chart.


The bikes parked outside the school, said onvous in the transport section that most children al go school by bike, on foot when they live really close as in cities such as boat and when they live in floating villages and that their school is also floating!



the school.



Another class.



The equipment of the teacher.



A course in Khmer, was to show you what it is like writing ...

A
textbooks loaned by the school and shared by several students (within 5 ...)



The teacher's desk.


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