Homework Market Me – INDRENI https://indreniunesco.org.np UNESCO CLUB Wed, 08 Jun 2022 06:08:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.1.19 HomeworkMarket.Me – In her opinion, you can not solve the problem of migration without “a mature, sustainable concept”, which will focus on Africa. https://indreniunesco.org.np/homeworkmarket-me-in-her-opinion-you-can-not-solve/ https://indreniunesco.org.np/homeworkmarket-me-in-her-opinion-you-can-not-solve/#respond Wed, 20 Nov 2019 08:34:41 +0000 http://indreniunesco.org.np/?p=2744 Zł title low downpayment insurance, Millennium demands and unlawfully enforces the same amount again from Mrs. Jolanta “- wrote in the October Communication SBB. Added that despite ll of enforcement proceedings in the course of a lawsuit has been filed to set aside przeciwegzekucyjny BTE, credited the property was auctioned for about 50 per cent. market value. (PAP) Author: Marcin He had According to him, the function of government – the minister or deputy minister – will receive a PiS MP Martin Horal. Buda asked the Polish Radio 24, or any of the ministries will be abolished replied that “everything indicates that the Ministry of Energy will be split, it does not mean that the liquidated”. According to him, the task of the Ministry of Energy “will be transferred to other ministries” in connection with the “name may disappear.” Stipulated that the final decision on this matter is still pending. “It’s all weighed to the last moment. (…) today will be settled on the committee,” – said Buda. PiS Political Committee meet on Friday after południu.Buda did not rule out that the changes also affect the Ministry of Digitalization. But he did not provide details. Similarly, addressed the question of the appointment of a homeworkmarket.me new treasury department. “It was only after approval by the Political Committee will be able to say, as indeed it is,” – said Buda. “The plans were very different (…) finally as you will find on the PSC after the presentation of the proposal by the Prime Minister”, – noted Deputy Minister inwestycji.Buda expressed confidence that the new government will come deputy Horal – ending the term of the Sejm, among others, the head of the Commission of Inquiry to VAT. “I think it will be a minister. The question is whether constitutional or deputy minister,” – he said. Inquired, in which the ministry may find yourself Horal, pointed at the Ministry of Infrastructure. “He moves well enough to topics of infrastructure, and I think that in these areas should be anchored in the government” – ocenił.W last week held the leadership of the United Right, in which the outside of the Law and Justice and includes United Poland Agreement. Wicerzecznik Justice Radoslaw Fogiel said at the time that the meeting established the structure of the future government and confirmed the recommendation Mateusz Morawiecki, as a candidate for prime minister. I think we should listen to good arguments. For example, the Poles have the argument that they adopted at home 1.5 million Ukrainians – from a country where for many years there is a war and in a hybrid where people continue to die – said Ursula von der Leyen in an interview published Thursday on the website of the log “Sueddeutsche Zeitung”. “Member States that want to go on this issue further, take just finding solutions. We remain, however, the fact that each member country at various levels needs the solidarity of others. We need fair burden-sharing – maybe in different fields for different countries” – convinced Germany’s defense minister was derived from the Christian Democrat CDU. In her opinion, you can not solve the problem of migration without “a mature, sustainable concept”, which will focus on Africa. Ursula von der Leyen considers it necessary to increase investment on the continent. He has accompanied the fight against organized crime – people smugglers. “We need to secure the external borders and uniform interpretation of the (rules) of the Dublin system, it could work to the Schengen internal borders and to be able to remain open” – she noted. “All over the world there is an obligation to rescue people who are in distress at sea. It is our duty, however, also consistently counteract the causes that led to this situation. People leave their country because of oppression, terror and poverty. We have to be there to engage” – He called. See also: Brussels does not give Poland: Disputing the rule of law. Von der Leyen rather, does not help us “The politician is also opposed to cutting off EU funds for the lack of commitment in accepting migrants. “I am not an advocate of isolated threats (as a response) to the partial problems. It is after all a shared responsibility in the issue that will concern us for decades. If you cut up the issue of migration into small pieces, and we each other do reproach, it will lead to the blockade. Meanwhile, people rightly expect us to solutions “- stressed on Tuesday elected the new head of the European Commission von der Leyen, while calling for greater merytoryczności in debates on the rule of law in some EU countries. “We need a more substantive debate. First of all, you should first seek dialogue. Then there is the step to the European Court of Justice (ECJ). It shows the beauty of Europe that this neutral institution is respected by all Member States. When looking for a conversation, it does not begin with threat “- says the future President of the European Commission. “In Europe, there are divisions. Between the North and the South – for economic reasons, but also between East and West, where we have to deal with the element of emotion. In the countries of Central and Eastern Europe many feel that they are not fully accepted. If we lead the debate so hard, as we do, it is a consequence of entire countries and nations will feel that they are criticized as a whole. Meanwhile, we mean individual shortcomings “- says von der Leyen. “It is important that the debate has become more businesslike. Therefore, the issue of the rule of law we want to monitoring for all countries, so as not to the impression that one part of Europe’s definition treats other critically. We must all learn that the full rule of law is our goal, but no one is perfect. on this basis we can find solutions more easily “- was proposed to head the Ministry of defense also RFN.zobacz:” the Economist “: Law and Justice has no reason to believe that von der Leyen sympathize with their point of view» Asked about brexit, Ursula von der Leyen voted against leaving the UK from the European Union without a contract. In her opinion, the agreement negotiated by the Prime Minister Theresa May is not dead. Also he did not rule out further postpone the withdrawal from the EU by the British – if would be placed on a good reason. “It would be wrong if we treated brexit as the end of something. It’s like Shape brexit, will decide how they will look like our relationship in the future. In the interest of both sides is that it should be regulated and a good start for future relations,” – said the future President of the European Commission. Asked on whether to accept a candidate for European Commissioner from Italy if it will be a representative of the right-wing League of Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salviniego said: “Basically, each Member State is entitled to propose a Commissioner. And at the same time, Chairman of the Commission (EC) has the right, if it has reason to ask for another person . For a good start, but I do not want to put preconditions. Basically, I recognize only that we should have in the college as many women as men, “- he said, repeating a promise in terms of climate policy and social policy. Von der Leyen has avoided answering the question of a federalized Europe. “In the European Union there is unity and diversity. It’s something different than federalism. I think it’s a good way” – spuentowała. Von der Leyen, will become President of the European Commission on November 1, replacing the outgoing Jean-Claude Juncker. In an interview in addition to the “Sueddeutsche Zeitung”, they were also attended by journalists from the British “Guardian”, the French “Le Monde”, the Italian “La Stampa” and the Spanish “La Vanguardii.” Clearly more expensive precious metals / ** / (function (d, s, d) {var js = vtjs d.getElementsByTagName (s) [0]; if (d.getElementById (d)) return; js = d.createElement ( s); js.id = id; js.src = “https://videotarget.pl/v1/sdk.js” vtjs.parentNode.insertBefore (js vtjs)} (document, “script”, “vt -sdk “)); / ** / If within eight days in Venezuela will not notice a fair, free and transparent elections, considers Spain Juan Guaido for president – said the prime minister reporters at the Moncloa palace. “Do not try to appoint or designate governments in Venezuela, we want democracy and free elections in Venezuela” – Pedro Sanchez said in his televised address. This statement came after Madrid, the EU Member States did not come on Friday evening to agree on a “joint declaration” calling for early elections in Venezuela. According to Spain and some EU countries, the proposed text of the declaration “was weak in its formula.” United States, Canada and most Latin American countries have already recognized the Guaido, who announced on Wednesday the acting president of Venezuela. Russia, in turn, clearly supported Maduro and China condemned the “external interference”. In the absence of agreement within the EU, the Spanish foreign minister Josep Borrell warned on Friday that his country “will not remain passive, because it is a clear will to act to restore democracy in Venezuela.” (PAP) Twitter suspended 936 active accounts, and approx. 200 thousand. others were suspended earlier, before they become active. “With these accounts (…) political attempted to sow discord in Hong Kong, including the legitimacy and undermine the political positions of the protest movement” – written in Monday’s statement. “As a result we carried out intensive investigations have reliable evidence for the fact that this is a coordinated operation supported by the government” of China – he said on Twitter. Lasting nearly three months of anti-government protests in Hong Kong plunged into the deepest political crisis since decades and are considered one of the greatest challenges for the leaders of the PRC Xi Jinping, since in 2012 he stood at the head of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Demonstrators demanding a supported by Beijing to withdraw the draft amendment of extradition law and universal democratic elections authorities also regionu.zobacz: Protests in Hong Kong, Beijing haunted intervention, but hopes to boredom revolt “Twitter and Facebook are on the long list of websites blocked by the communist authorities of the PRC. They are not available in mainland China, but you can use them in Hong Kong. A coordinated campaign against the protests was conducted through virtual private networks (VPNs), but also unlocked IP addresses on the continent – drew attention to Twitter. Facebook has removed seven pages, and three groups of five accounts involved in the “coordinated, inauthentic activities within a small network, originating in China and Hong Kong, focusing on” – the company said in a statement. “Those behind the campaign benefited from a series of deceptive tactics, including fake accounts used the (…). Although tried to hide his identity, our investigation has detected compounds with related with the Chinese government “- also napisano.zobacz Trump presses China, because he did not care to arrange them” Facebook gave examples of entries of deleted pages, among graphic comparing them to protest Islamic State militants, defining them as “cockroaches of Hong Kong” and assigns them responsibility for eye injuries sustained by a young woman during one of the demonstrations. According to the protesters has been shot in the face by the police, uses non-lethal ammunition. Twitter and Facebook were under fire for displaying ads protests criticizing the Chinese state media. Twitter gave on Monday that it changes its policy and will no longer accept advertising from media controlled by the Chinese government – the agency said Reutera.zobacz also: China wants equal treatment for Huawei »The root cause of the protests in Hong Kong was reported by the local authorities a draft amendment to the law of extradition, which provides, among others, repatriation of suspects to mainland China, where the courts are controlled by the CCP. From time to withdraw the draft postulate joined, among others, request an independent investigation into the police action and demand democratic elections. Hong Kong was handed over to China by Britain in 1997 and since then operates as a Special Administrative Region of the PRC. According to the Sino-British Declaration of 1984, despite Beijing’s sovereignty in the region should be at least 2,047 years to maintain their difference from the rest of China, including civil liberties and an independent judiciary. In 2017 years the Chinese authorities, contrary to the London Declaration recognized this as a “historic document without any practical significance.” “It is not in any way binding on the management of Hong Kong by the central government,” – said the spokesman of the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs Lu Kang. Earlier the ambassadors of 27 EU countries agreed that the EU27 accept the UK’s application for an extension to brexitu January 31, 2020 year. Formally, the government in London had to settle for a decision on the matter in the EU27. Now you will be able to move the written procedure of 27 Member States, which ultimately approve the retirement date of departure from the UK UE.Z Aamanna entry on Twitter that this procedure is to start soon. EU sources give out earlier that it has take 24 godziny.W the draft decision, which saw the PAP, the European Council agrees to extend brexitu but excludes further renegotiation of the agreement on the conditions of the output of the United Kingdom UE.Jeśli ratification by both parties will be completed in November , the United Kingdom leave the European Union on 1 December if in the next month, will brexit January 1, and if the procedure will be completed in January, it will be the starting date of February 1, 2020 r.zobacz also Brexit. Whether the European Union can do without Britain? [OPINION] »British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has confirmed in a letter to European Council President Donald Tusk that agrees to delay brexitu, but stressed that it will continue its delay beyond 31 January 2020.” Under the British Act to withdraw from the European Union (No. 2) of 2019, which was imposed on the government against his will, I have no right to take any action other than to confirm the formal approval of the United Kingdom for an extension “- wrote Johnson. “It unwanted extension of the UK’s membership of the EU is bad for our democracy,” – he added the British premier.Johnson on Saturday, October 19 sent a formal request – though under him has not signed – the EU to shift brexitu to 31 January 2020. It was to this forced under that Act in the list, so. Benn Act, which ordered him to send such a request if the October 19 parliament will not accept an agreement with the EU on the conditions of output, or does not agree to brexit without umowy.zobacz also: Life after brexicie. That is why the United Kingdom will never come back to the EU [INTERVIEW] »Agreement with the EU was agreed on Thursday, October 17 and the deputies last week supported a related bill, agreeing to refer her to work in the committees, but rejected the government’s request for fast track legislative her.

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Websites For Homework Answers – The Toronto Homework Policy After Two Years: One Parent’s Perspective (part 2) https://indreniunesco.org.np/websites-for-homework-answers-the-toronto-homework-21/ https://indreniunesco.org.np/websites-for-homework-answers-the-toronto-homework-21/#respond Mon, 18 Nov 2019 19:04:48 +0000 http://indreniunesco.org.np/?p=2721 The Toronto Homework Policy After Two Years: One Parent’s Perspective (part 2)

Before I attempt to answer the question, ‘why two years later am I complaining about my children’s homework?’ I should note that many parents I’ve spoken to have indeed noticed a decrease in their children’s homework. But my experience and that of other French immersion parents I’ve consulted has been that teachers continue to assign homework inconsistent with the new policy.

Grade 4 French Immersion
On curriculum night in September 2008, the Grade 4 teacher warned parents to expect a difficult year. She explained that the nature of ‘mid-immersion’ its compression compared to immersion programs starting in Kindergarten made it necessary to work the children particularly hard. (There was scant mention of the new homework policy, no hint that the program might have to be adjusted in order to comply with it.)

She was not kidding. On a nightly basis, students were expected to review

copious notes from class, practice spelling words, complete math and grammar sheets, and study for tests (two per week). In addition, there were projects to be completed outside of class. Although my daughters loved learning in French and their grades remained strong, they were unaccustomed to a such a heavy workload. They began to show signs of stress (read, meltdowns) almost immediately. By Christmas, they were proclaiming their hatred for school; I prepared to pull them out of French immersion. After the holidays, homework eased up marginally, but enough to convince me I would not be irreparably harming my daughters by keeping them in the program.

Grade 5 French Immersion
Grade five was initially better. On curriculum night, the teacher professed her dislike of homework; as a parent herself, she understood how busy today’s children are. Yet this teacher is renowned within the school as a kind of project queen. Every year, her students (or their parents) produce extraordinary projects in science and social studies, which are displayed on designated days to the other students and teachers in the school. And sure enough, it was the projects spaced inconsistently and piled on top of regular homework that nearly did us in. Three of them were clumped together in the space of five weeks in the spring term when, as my daughter put it, kids have ‘had it with the torture of school.’ To be fair, the teacher allocated class time to the projects, but often project time encroached on core subjects such as math and grammar, so more homework came home in those subjects. Moreover, class time was not allocated to the building of temples or eyeballs or machines; parents were responsible for supplying materials, and were expected to provide space and time at home for their children to complete all of the arts and crafts components. As a result, my daughters had little choice but to spend multiple weekends including ‘days of significance’ and holidays, such as Passover, Easter, Mother’s Day and Victoria Day working on various elements of assigned projects.

Contradiction Between Policy and Practice
Frustrated and confused by the contradiction between the new policy and the homework we were experiencing, I decided to do a little investigating. I asked several people the principal of my daughters’ school, the superintendent of our particular school district, and my local school Trustee a simple question: Is the homework policy a set of voluntary guidelines, or is it binding? The answer, it turns out, is not simple. Howard Goodman, school Trustee for my area, summed up the confusion when he answered: ‘somewhere in between.’ Both he and John Chasty, the area Superintendent, insisted that schools are expected to comply with the new policy, and that responsibility for implementation lies with principals and teachers. However, as Goodman reminded me in an email, the TDSB is ‘a highly decentralized organization which works hard to be responsive to . . . local conditions.’ In other words, the board tolerates a certain latitude in the interpretation of its policies in order to empower schools and teachers to respond flexibly to the needs of students.

I began to wonder whether the TDSB counts French immersion along with other enrichment programs such as gifted classes as a local condition necessitating a ‘liberal’ interpretation of the homework policy. Not so, according to Lyn Gaetz, principal of my daughters’ school. The new recommendations, Gaetz told me, were well received by teachers at the school. She explained that she meets with the teaching staff yearly to discuss the policy and to monitor its implementation. No program is exempt, but Gaetz did acknowledge the challenges the school has faced reducing homework in French immersion.

My sense from talking to teaching staff is that most of them French-immersion teachers included believe they are complying with the new policy. And returning to the document itself, I see how this belief is enabled by a discernible vagueness of wording. For example, in reference to the early elementary years, the policy notes the ‘strong connection between reading to or with elementary children every day . . . and student achievement’ and goes on to encourage regular reading at home, among other family activities. One would be hard pressed to object to such a recommendation, but its lack of specificity allows for some bizarre interpretations. The teacher of a third-grader I know seems to have interpreted it as an endorsement of reading logs. As followers of stophomework are well aware, reading logs are a discredited form of homework which often instill in children a loathing rather than a love of reading. Yet so convinced is this teacher of the value of reading logs that she instructs her students to complete them during major holidays, such as Christmas, a demand clearly in conflict with the new policy.

Another troubling area of vagueness is the section on homework in the later elementary years. Time guidelines for these pivotal grades (3-6) are conspicuous by their absence. And the one directive specified namely,’Homework may begin to take the form of independent work’ is so vague it barely counts as a directive at all. I suspect it is commonly interpreted to mean projects, since projects are considered a more creative, engaging form of homework than, say, drill work. This may be true, although, as most parents know, many projects are comprised of arts and crafts-type busywork. Even the most educationally valid projects are labour-intensive, especially when they are assigned as group endeavours, which adds an element of scheduling chaos to the mix. And when projects are used as the principle means of covering the curriculum, as they seemed to be for much of the spring term in my daughters’ class . . . well, before you know it you have temples collapsing and tearful children rebuilding them in dark basements on brilliant spring afternoons.

Conclusion
Which leads back to the initial question: what went wrong? Has the Toronto policy failed to achieve true homework reform? One could argue that my experience with French immersion is atypical, and that it renders invalid any answer I might offer to such a question. But one could also reasonably view French immersion as a kind of microcosm of elementary education in Ontario, a system characterized by an over-stuffed curriculum (the phrase ‘mile wide and inch deep’ comes to mind) and an over-reliance on standardized tests as a measure of quality. In French immersion, as elsewhere in the system, homework overload and curriculum are inextricably intertwined. To paraphrase guest blogger Fred Baumgarten, who has written about this interconnection on his blog Homework Headaches, when you pull at the thread of one, you inevitably catch the other, and the whole overwrought educational fabric threatens to unravel.

But issues of curriculum are beyond the scope of this post. With respect to the homework policy itself, ambiguous language and inconsistent enforcement notwithstanding, I regard the April 2008 revisions as a huge step in the right direction. I applaud Frank Bruni for instigating them.The TDSB also deserves credit for taking the issue of homework overload seriously enough to review the research and change the policy. However, the last two years have taught me some crucial lessons. Policies even well-meaning, progressive ones must be seen as works in progress, in continual need of re-evaluation. More importantly, I have learned that passivity my own in particular is part of the problem. A change in practice does not flow seamlessly from a change in policy. It is up to all of us to remain vigilant and advocate for the the ultimate stakeholders in any educational system: children.

On a recent Saturday morning, my 10-year-old daughter emerged from the basement on the verge of tears: ‘The temple’s collapsed,’ she announced. Though it sounded dire, she was speaking not of an actual building, but of the model of an ancient Greek temple she and a classmate had constructed out of cardboard the previous week. They had piled on the white paint, and the structure had simply buckled under the weight. Later that day I glanced out the window to see my two daughters turning cartwheels on the back lawn while my husband diligently sawed wooden cylinders into pillars for the new temple. It was a brilliant spring day, and soon my husband would finish his task and call my reluctant daughter in out of the sunshine to start rebuilding the temple. What is wrong with this picture?

From the perspective of a homework skeptic, many things: arts and crafts busywork, weekend homework, parental involvement. But the main problem is that I live in Toronto, and my children attend public school in a board which in 2008 enacted one of the most progressive, ‘family friendly’ homework policies in North America. So what happened?

When I read the news in early 2008 that the Toronto District School Board (TDSB) was re-evaluating its homework policy, my heart did a little happy dance. At the time, my twin daughters were in third grade. Although we had not yet experienced homework overload, the prospect of a reformed homework policy thrilled me because the following year my daughters were due to enter mid-elementary French immersion, a program renowned for its heavy workload both inside and outside the classroom. Suddenly there was hope that French immersion would provide a qualitatively (as opposed to quantitatively) different experience for my daughters, with enrichment enabled not by means of extra work, but simply through learning the curriculum in a second language.

The TDSB the largest school board in Canada, serving approximately 250,000 students appeared to have done its homework, so to speak, on homework. Spurred on by parent Frank Bruni and sympathetic Trustee, Josh Matlow, the board reviewed and eventually rewrote its homework policy, approving a new family-friendly version on April 16, 2008. The new policy re-defines ‘effective’ homework, promotes ‘differentiated’ assignments and removes punitive consequences for incomplete work. It virtually eliminates homework in the early elementary years, and mandates substantial decreases for all other grades. But perhaps the most progressive feature of the Toronto policy is its recognition of the deleterious effect of homework on family life. It stipulates that homework should not be assigned on scheduled holidays or ‘days of significance,’ and that ‘time spent on homework should be balanced with the importance of personal and family wellness’

My excitement back in 2008 was not unfounded: this was a good policy.

So why two years later am I complaining about my children’s homework?

In yesterday’s post, I wrote that guidelines issued by the New York State Board of Education provide that when a school requires summer homework, it must comply with a set of rules. But from what I can tell, schools don’t comply with those rules and continue their summer homework assignments as they have in the past.

If your children have received summer homework assignments, or are about to, why not nip the problem in the bud?

Here’s what you can do:

1. Call your school’s principal. If you’re in a state with guidelines like New York’s, ask your principal whether your school will be following the guidelines. If s/he’s unaware of them, offer to send a copy. Tell the principal what the guidelines say. It’s pretty difficult for a school not to follow the guidelines once a parent’s asked about them. After all, the guidelines were issued in response to litigation, and non-compliance leaves the school open to wrath, scrutiny, lawsuits. Get several of your friends to call the school principal as well. There’s power in numbers.

2. If you discovered that your school doesn’t have any rules about summer homework, open up a discussion on the topic now. If you wait until your child brings home an assignment it’s too late. (Of course, you don’t have to make your child do the assignment. And how many children, especially those in elementary school, would actually do an assignment if they didn’t have parental help? Let the school see what happens when parents resist.)

3. Get together with a few of your friends and ask the principal or department head for a meeting. Tell them how summer assignments affect your family. Read a little about the problems with assigned reading so that you can make strong arguments:

      * An

article on summer reading

      in

USA Today

      , cites a recent study by Richard Allington, a researcher and author of many books on literacy. Allington and colleagues selected students in 17 high-poverty elementary schools in Florida and, for three consecutive years, gave each child 12 books, from a list the students provided, on the last day of school. No assignment came along with the books no reading log, no essay, not even an order to read them. Three years later, researchers found that those students who received books had ‘significantly higher’ reading scores and read more on their own each summer than the 478 who didn’t get books. (I’m sure that any school that gave students books from a list of their own choosing would see the same results students who like to read more and, as a result, students with better comprehension, better written and analytical skills and yes, even higher standardized test scores.)

* This op-ed by my co-author and me published in The New York Times four years ago. I think it’s still relevant.

* An article on reading books you like from The New York Times.

Given the pressures most students face during the school year from high-stakes testing, homework, and extracurricular activities, summer should be seen as a time to explore passions, get outside, read for pleasure, hang out with friends, work a summer job (if one can be found), become a little more independent, etc. These are where students learn to problem solve, be responsible, make good use of their time, in short the kinds of learning experiences most students don’t have time for during the school year. And these life skills are ones that will serve them well in the future, undoubtedly more than most of what they learn in school.

In sum, gather a few of your friends and talk to the people who assign homework at your school. Explain why summer homework doesn’t work in your family and why you’re opposed to it. And let me know what happens.

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