17 school kids killed in Brazil road accident

Sao Paulo, June 6 (IANS/EFE) At least 17 school students were killed and three injured in a road accident in Brazil’s northeastern state of Bahia, media reports said.

The students were riding in an open truck, which was hit by a trailer while it was going over a bridge near Laje town, TV Globo reported.

The truck fell from a height of 15 meters while the driver of the trailer fled the scene, fire department officials said.

The victims were returning home after taking part in a series of school competitions.

14 pct school students use tobacco: WHO report

The latest Global Youth Tobacco Survey (2009) by the World Health Organisation (WHO), in consultation with the Government of India, suggests that more than 50 per cent of the people who bought cigarettes from stores were not refused despite the country’s law prohibiting sale of tobacco to minors. The WHO had carried out a school-based survey of students aged between 13 and 15. A two-stage cluster sample design was used to produce representative data for the country.

According to the preliminary results, 14 per cent students use one tobacco product or the other. Of these, 19 per cent are boys and 8.3 per cent girls. Worse, 15.5 per cent students who have not started smoking are likely to start soon. A total of 10,112 students participated in the WHO survey.

The survey revealed that 24 per cent think boys and 13.4 per cent think girls who smoke have more friends, and 21.1 per cent think boys and 15.6 per cent think girls who smoke look more attractive. And 5.7 per cent usually smoke at home.

The exposure to second-hand smoke is no less in India. The survey shows one in five students live in homes where others smoke and more than one-third of the students are exposed to smoke outside of their homes.

The good news is that more than two-thirds of the current smokers want to stop smoking.

According to the data, 66.1 per cent want to stop smoking, and 67.2 per cent have tried to stop smoking during the past year.

“Six out of 10 students think smoking in public places should be banned,” the survey added.

Over one million school students in England speak English as a second-language

London, May 14 (ANI): According to official figures, almost one million students in Britain speak English as a second language, while in some parts of London, their number is over 75 percent of the students.

The figures released by Britain’s Department of Education reveal that some 905,610 children do not speak English as a first language in 2010 – a rise of 42,750 in 12 months.

According to the Telegraph, a breakdown of the figures shows a hugely mixed picture across the country.

In 15 council areas in London and the south-east, the majority of primary school pupils now speak English as a second language.

In Leicester and Luton some 48 per cent of children speak English as a second language, compared with 43 per cent in Bradford, 42 per cent in Birmingham, 40.5 in Blackburn and 34 per cent in Manchester.

However this phenomenon is not as widespread as it may seem, the number of foreign language speakers is still lower than one percent of primary pupils in Redcar and Cleveland, in the north-east. In many other areas the numbers are below two percent.

These swelling numbers were cited by the Tory Party as one of the reasons they are formulating an immigration policy that will put an upper limit on the number of migrants into the country.

The Conservative claim about the supposedly immense stress that these students with relatively poor English skills would put on English schoolteachers is offset by what the schoolteachers themselves feel.

The teachers’ leaders have said that an increase in children with other languages improves schools’ cultural outlook and acts as an inspiration to British born pupils, the paper reports.

“Children who come to this country speaking English as a second language are an inspiration to native British children in the speed in which they learn the language and the hard work they put in to pass exams within just a few years,” the paper quoted John Dunford, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, as saying. (ANI)

Tamil Nadu plus two results now freely available on mobile

Chennai, May 10 (ANI): No more frustrating wait times at browsing centres or anxious visits to the school! Students across Tamil Nadu and Pudhucherry will be able to get the 12th standard results right on their mobile phones. Chennai based Impiger Technologies is providing this service free to over 7 lakh candidates who appeared for the 2010 plus two exams, results of which are expected on May 12.

On the results day, candidates can type “RESULT HSC ” and send to 92200 92200 from a mobile anywhere in India. They can also dial in to 28306262 and get the results over voice. For outstation calls, STD code 044 needs to be prefixed.

Before the results, those who register on www.getyourscore.in, 28306262 or via sms to 92200 92200 (“RESULT HSC ), will automatically get an SMS of their result on their mobile phone as soon as results are published. Getyourscore.in grossed more than 2.5 lakh hits on a single day during the 2009 TN 12th results. (ANI)

No high school for illiterate students: expert

The director of a national not-for-profit tutorial centre says there should be an iron-clad law that students cannot progress to high school until it is proven they can read.

Thousands of primary school students around Australia cannot adequately read and write yet still make the transition to high school.

Reverend Bill Crews, who runs remedial learning centres in Sydney, Darwin and Gladstone, says that is a massive mistake.

He says the Federal Government’s national literacy and numeracy tests, known as NAPLAN, are critical to keeping a check and balance on students, especially those who might slip through the system.

“It is such a good thing to do. Our experience here, which is now being shown up in the tables, is if kids don’t leave primary school being able to read they fall behind at high school,” he said.

“It should be an iron-clad law that kids cannot leave primary school until they can read.”

State and territory education unions are stepping up their push for teachers to boycott next week’s NAPLAN tests, saying data will be used for the My School website and lead to the creation of league tables.

Reverend Crews says students like Joel West prove how important testing is.

At age 11 Joel has the reading skills of a child four years his junior.

“I couldn’t read and spell, write, and whenever I couldn’t do it it was making me angry,” he said.

He has been at the Exodus tutorial centre for two months.

His mother, Monie West, says the change in her son has been unbelievable.

“He went from reading nothing… struggling with every word… to being able to sound out the biggest words. So I’m very proud of him,” she said.

“It’s only been a term and he can read. It helps now because he can read the back [of microwave packets] now to cook his own pasta and stuff like that. So it’s helped in a lot of ways, big and small.”

Life skills

Mary Storch, a senior teacher from the Exodus centre in Ashfield, says the inability to read can lead to a host of problems later in life.

“We have to catch these kids before they go to high school because what happens, if you look at the statistics, I think something like 70 per cent of people in prison have literacy problems,” she said.

“So if you can’t read it’s very difficult to get a job. You can’t a job. You can’t fill in forms. What happens? How do you earn an income? It’s very hard.

“So what Bill is trying to do is get them into good jobs and keep them out of trouble.”

Reverend Crews says education unions are fighting the wrong cause.

“I think their compassion is misguided. The whole thing is to do what’s in the best interest of every child, and in 2010 the best interests of every child are being served by them being able to read,” he said.

He also believes the NAPLAN test results should be made public.

“Yes, because we need to know. Everybody needs to know. What then happens is anecdotal evidence can be supported.”

On Tuesday afternoon Fair Work Australia ruled that teachers in Victoria could not boycott next week’s national tests.

Education unions in other states and territories have already been ordered to supervise the NAPLAN tests.

The Australian Education Union (AEU) is attempting to defy the order because it says the tests can be used to compile league tables ranking schools.

Education Minister Julia Gillard says that is not what the NAPLAN tests are about.

“It’s not like we’re standing by just going ‘bad school’. We’re there with $2.5 billion of new resources and reforms including things like getting the best graduates to go into teaching, paying our best teachers more to go to the classrooms that need them the most to make a difference,” Ms Gillard said.

“And it just amazes me that people would stand in the way of that journey.”

Speaking to business leaders in Adelaide, Ms Gillard said illiteracy is a sensitive area but it must be addressed.

“Forty per cent of Australian workers don’t have basic literacy and numeracy skills; the skills we need in the modern workforce. That equates to around 4.5 million Australians.”

She says boosting the language, literacy and numeracy capacity of the workforce is perhaps the single most constructive step in improving Australia’s productivity.

Online game promotes Triple-0

Tasmanian primary school students now have access to an online computer game that teaches them how to use the emergency number, Triple-0.

Students using the game learn about the importance of the number and when to call it.

The Police and Emergency Services Minister Lin Thorp says the service fields more than 60,000 calls a year.

“Sometimes those callers are young people,” she said.

“So if a child is in a situation whether it be at home, at the shack at the beach or whatever, and the adult involved is unable to make the call, we need to make sure that children feel confident in ringing Triple-0.”

School students injured on bushwalk: reports

Paramedics are responding to a report that two school students have been injured on a bushwalk in the Kosciuszko National Park in southern New South Wales.

A spokesman for the Ambulance Service says the initial report says a 17-year-old and a 16-year-old are at the White River Hut within the park.

The spokesman had no further details about the nature of the injuries or the students’ medical condition.

Geraldton Yr 12s keen on science: survey

The Geraldton Universities Centre says more science-based courses will be offered in the region as interest in the area grows.

A survey of Year 12 students in Geraldton has found nearly a third of those wanting to pursue higher education are interested in a science course.

The survey found nearly half the students wanting to go to university or TAFE would prefer to study in Geraldton.

The centre’s director, Meredith Wills, says the region’s tertiary education providers are keen to meet the growing demand for science-based courses.

“We’ve been very encouraged by the strong interest in science and that was really brought about by the WA chief scientist, Lyn Beazley, working in our region with school students and with the Durack Institute and the Geraldton Universities Centre over the past two years,” she said.

“We’re now working closely with Curtin and Durack to offer new science options in Geraldton next year.”

Ms Wills says Australia’s bid to host the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) – the world’s most powerful telescope – in the Murchison region has attracted a lot of local attention.

“There’s a fair general interest in astronomy and an understanding within that that there’s opportunities in the mining industry as well with engineering and science,” she said.

“I think our region is seeing that we should be really looking to train up for these areas and of course the kids who are in school now are the ideal workforce.”

Qld government blames contractors for schools’ asbestos problems

Queensland’s Attorney-General Cameron Dick says contractors, not the Government, are to blame for at least one incident involving asbestos at a north Queensland school.

Students and teachers from Mackay North High School were evacuated from 24 rooms earlier this week when it was revealed work in September may have disturbed asbestos.

Up to 20 students at Mirani State High School were forced to shower in their uniforms last week after problems with an asbestos ceiling.

Mr Dick has told ABC Local Radio the government is investigating why proper procedures were not followed.

“I’m advised that in one instance it was contractors who’d come into the school who had breached very clear and well-known standards for dealing with and treating and working with asbestos,” he said.

“That is unacceptable and they’ve already been dropped as a contractor.”

However, Opposition Education spokesman Bruce Flegg says there are systemic failures within the system.

“This is not just one school – we’re talking about three schools in Mackay – one was under investigation when the news broke about the other two,” he said.

“Recently one on the Gold Coast.

“There are strong national guidelines and they’re not being enforced by the Government in schools.”

The Premier says she is very concerned about the number of incidents involving possible asbestos exposure in the Mackay region.

Ms Bligh says the Government is taking the breach of procedures very seriously.

“But I am very concerned that this situation arose in the first place,” she said.

“We have very tight procedures and we expect people in the school system to adhere to them for the safety of our children.

“There is now an investigation into how these matters arose and if someone has been found to breach their duty at any level of the schooling system, then there will be disciplinary action taken.”

Patna schoolchildren protest against kidnapping of six-year-old boy

Patna, Sep. 16 (ANI): School students in Patna city protested on Wednesday against the kidnapping of a six-year-old boy.

Shresht Sanjay was kidnapped at the gunpoint in Patna on Monday. Shresht is a standard One student at Christ church school in Kankarbagh area.

Students of Montessori School in Patna organised a ‘hawan’ to pray for an early release of Shresht.

“We are praying so that Shresht Sanjay comes home soon and celebrates Diwali and Durga Puja with his parents, ” said Swastik, a student

Meanwhile, students in West Point school observed a ‘Black Day’ by wearing black bands on their arms.

The black band was to express their resentment against the rising incidents of kidnapping and ransom killings in the city.

“Children are living in fear and that’s why we have organised this ‘Black Day’. We hope that the government listens to us and realises that the children are in trouble here and their education is under threat. We also hope that such incidents does not happen in future,” said S.N Suhail, principal of West Point School.

Shresth is suspected to have been kidnapped for ransom.

However, the kidnappers have not made any demand yet.

The police are interrogating the auto-rickshaw driver for further investigations in which Shresth was travelling before his abduction. (ANI)

Pet dog saves 3 Chinese kids from drowning in raging river

New Delhi, September 2 (ANI): A pet dog has saved three children from drowning in a raging river in China.

One child, however, died in the incident that took place in Tianmen, Hubei province, on Sunday.

Hua Hua had accompanied the four primary school students from the Fangwan village to a nearby riverbank.

When it saw the kids falling into the river while playing on the rocks, the dog jumped in to save them, reports the China Daily.

It grabbed one of the kids by the shoulder with its mouth, as the struggling children held on to each other’s hands, and pulled them ashore.

The fourth child drowned because he could not reach his friends in time when the dog was pulling them to safety. (ANI)

Pet dog saves 3 Chinese kids from drowning in raging river

New Delhi, September 2 (ANI): A pet dog has saved three children from drowning in a raging river in China.

One child, however, died in the incident that took place in Tianmen, Hubei province, on Sunday.

Hua Hua had accompanied the four primary school students from the Fangwan village to a nearby riverbank.

When it saw the kids falling into the river while playing on the rocks, the dog jumped in to save them, reports the China Daily.

It grabbed one of the kids by the shoulder with its mouth, as the struggling children held on to each other’s hands, and pulled them ashore.

The fourth child drowned because he could not reach his friends in time when the dog was pulling them to safety. (ANI)

Here’s a sneak peak into Britain’s first Hindu state-funded faith school

London, June 21 (ANI): Yoga, vegetarian food and calm and alert pupils – these are some of things that one can expect to find while visiting Britain’s first Hindu state-funded faith school.

Students at the Krishna-Avanti Primary School in north London have their morning prayers and yoga followed by a reading of the Bhagavad Gita.

Launching into a Hare Krishna prayer, singing, patting a drum and touching the floor in a low bow forms a part of their daily routine.

The four- and five-year-olds also snack on fresh fruit and vegetables in between their schedule.

However, critics have raised their voices against the rise in religious education, calling it divisive and proselytising.

According to Keith Porteous Wood, executive director of the National Secular Society, faith-based education should be discouraged.

“Most church schools proselytise. It is wrong in principle for the state to fund proselytisation – whatever state or religion,” The Independent quoted him as saying.

Headmistress Naina Parmar at the Krishna-Avanti, however, insisted: “We’re certainly not here to proselytise the Hindu faith.” (ANI)

US school sets world record with 27 hours of drumming

New Delhi, May 14 (ANI): A group of US school students have made a new world record by drumming for 27 hours and 23 seconds.

Students at Rock Hill High School in South Carolina began the drum roll at 5pm on May 8 and continued to play until around 8pm the next day.

The 27 musicians lent a helping hand in raising 3,600 dollars which will now be spent on new equipment for the school band, reports the China Daily.

Percussion director Michael Skellett told a local newspaper: “It’s been a huge success. Plus, we got to break a world record in the process, which is cool.”

One student, Jason Piers, piped the previous individual world record by two minutes but his name may not officially enter the Guinness since he did not complete the paperwork in advance.

Piers, who kept the drum roll on for four hours and 10 minutes, revealed he would appeal for his efforts to be officially recognised since the video footage of the attempt existed.

He added: “If not, I’ll do it next year.” (ANI)

Child star of ‘Balika Vadhu’ campaigns against child marriage

Jodhpur, Apr 22 (ANI): Young television actor Avika Gaur motivated school children here to take a pledge against child marriage.
Avika interestingly plays a child bride herself in the poplar soap opera, ‘Balika Vadhu’.

“I am too young to talk about it, but I know that this is a bad thing. Like it is shown on my show that an eight year old is married. She has to be away from her parents, leave her studies, which are very important. She leaves her friends and was given responsibilities, which she was unable to understand. She just had to sit with her head covered. This is a bad thing,” she said.

She campaigned against child marriage and made people take a pledge to neither be involved in child marriage nor let child marriages happen.
The writer of the show accompanied her. Thousands of school students were present to support the cause and take the pledge.
“I just want to say that the government legislating laws against child marriage and implementing them is not enough. We all need to understand the pain these children go through. They are robbed of their childhood. There needs to be social uprising against this custom so that it stops,” said Purnendu Shekhar, the writer of the television show.
According to last official census in 2001, 6.4 million persons under the age of 18 were married, with Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh accounting for a large chunk of such marriages. By Yogesh (ANI)