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Język polski w Kirgistanie
Thursday, 29 December 2011 17:25
There are no translations available.

Wprawdzie nie z peronu 9 i 3/4 ani nie fordem Anglia pana Weasleya, jednak bibliotekarka przeniosła się tymczasowo do Kirgistanu, skąd serdecznie pozdrawia.
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Last Updated on Thursday, 29 December 2011 17:34
 
Afgan Children Need Schools
Monday, 11 July 2011 11:14

We have joined to the Polish Humanitarian Campaign intended to ensure access to education for children from Afghanistan and Southern Sudan.
Selling special pensils and pens we gathered 316 PLN - All this money will be used to build school in Afghanistan.
Conditions of schools in Afghanistan is very bad
Eight years since the repressive Taliban regime was overthrown, 42 per cent children still do not attend or have access to schools.


Almost half of school-age children in Afghanistan do not have access to education, President Hamid Karzai said Saturday as he inaugurated the new school year.

Eight years since the repressive Taliban regime was overthrown, 42 per cent children still do not attend or have access to schools. (Photo: RFE/RL)

Despite a seven-fold increase in the number of children going to school in the eight years since the repressive Taliban regime was overthrown, 42 per cent still do not attend or have access to schools, Karzai said.

“Five million school-age children in our country do not go to school, some because of war or because their schools have been closed by the Taliban or others, some because they do not have the ability to go to schools,” he said.

In early 2002, fewer than one million children - only boys - attended 3,400 schools across the country, taught by 20,000 male teachers, said education minister Mohammad Farooq Wardak.

By contrast, seven million students - 37 per cent of them girls - attend 12,500 schools, where 30 per cent of the teachers, or 175,000, are women.

“We are still facing a series of serious challenges,” Wardak told a ceremony at a secondary school adjacent to the Presidential Palace.

“Forty-two per cent of school-age children do not have access to schools and another 11 million of our compatriots are illiterate,” he said.

Afghanistan has been suffering some sort of armed conflict for the past 30 years, starting with the Soviet invasion of 1979, through civil war, and, from 1996-2001, rule by the Islamist Taliban who banned girls from education.

This has left a huge knowledge gap that the international community has been trying to fill, with billions of dollars of aid pouring in since the Taliban were pushed out in a US-led invasion.

But a Taliban insurgency has effectively paralysed the reconstruction drive and in some areas under the insurgents' control, schools have been closed down completely and schoolgirls had acid thrown in their face.

Wardak said that in 200 out of 412 districts across the country there were no girls studying at all, mainly for fear of Taliban attack or because in many rural areas girls have traditionally not been educated.

He said 245 districts did not have a professional female teacher, and only 27 per cent of all teachers had minimum professional qualifications.

Last Updated on Monday, 11 July 2011 11:35
 
Penpal friends in Ghana
Saturday, 09 July 2011 17:26

History & Development of MQPCS Mary Queen of Peace catholic School Is the realization of a dream that began in the early 1980’s when the late Archbishop John Kodwo Amissah was approached by parents asking for a school that would provide quality Catholic education for the people who lived in Cape Coast. In 1989, the School Sisters of Notre Dame entered the dream with the commitment of 2 sisters who undertook to administer the school and to teach some classes. Months of preparation during 1990 -91 culminated in the school welcoming its first students on 8th October 1991 – just 2 weeks after the untimely death of Archbishop Amissah. The Archbishop’s dream had become living reality as seventy 4, 5 and 6 years olds began their education in temporary year olds began their education in temporary arrangements in the uncompleted church building of Mary Queen of Peace parish at 4th Ridege.
Currently the school consists of kindergarten, primary and secondary school. On 24-31 July 2011 celebrates 20th anniversary.
The 20th Anniversary Celebrations 24-31 July 2011

Programme of Activities

• Sunday 24 July Launching at MQP Church
• Monday 25 July Quiz Competitions/ debates
• Tuesday 26 July Seminar/ Talk/ Exhibitions
• Wednesday 27 July Clean-up/ Outreach
• Thursday 28 July Official closing of school/ Report cards, etc.
• Friday 29 July Fun Fair/ Games/ Homecoming
• Saturday 30 July Speech & Prize-giving Day
• Sunday 31 July Thanksgiving Service at MQP Church

More photos in the Gallery in album Mary Queen of Peace Catholic School in Ghana
Last Updated on Monday, 11 July 2011 11:37
 
Meeting with Jan Miodek
Friday, 10 June 2011 13:14

We took place in a meeting with Jan Miodek, eminent linguist, Professor of Wrocław University. With numerous television appearances "Ojczyzna polszczyzna" and newspaper articles, he is a popular media figure. Many laypeople consider him to be "the authority on the Polish language". His many columns, essentially dealing with minor problems, were published and republished in many books.

Meeting with Jan Miodek

Meeting with Jan Miodek

Last Updated on Friday, 10 June 2011 13:21
 
Mini Playback Show
Thursday, 09 June 2011 10:24

We are pleased to invite you to watch a Mini Playback Show's movie from a competition, which took place in our school.
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Last Updated on Monday, 11 July 2011 11:12
 
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