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Job-related stress threatens the supply of teachers in the US, according to a new study by Rand Corporation, an American think-tank.
While teaching was a stressful profession even before COVID-19, it has become more stressful during the pandemic, said the 2021 State of the US Teacher Survey conducted in January and February 2021.
"Teachers are navigating unfamiliar technology, are balancing multiple modes of teaching, and have concerns about returning to in-person instruction. In addition, many teachers are caring for their own children while teaching," said the survey released earlier this week.
One in four teachers were considering leaving their job by the end of 2020-21 academic year, more than in a typical pre-pandemic year and a higher rate than employed adults nationally, it said.
"Teachers were more likely to report experiencing frequent job-related stress and symptoms of depression than the general population," it said, noting Black teachers are "particularly likely" to plan to leave.
While mode of instruction and health are the highest-ranked stress factors for teachers, other common reasons to quit teaching include stressful working conditions and increased personal responsibilities.
Technical problems while teaching remotely were also linked to job-related stress, depressive symptoms, and burnout.
The study recommended schools to implement COVID-19 mitigation measures to allow teachers focus on instruction, collection of data on teacher working conditions and well-being on a state and district level, and providing them mental health and wellness support./aa
China on Monday opposed what it called “politicization of people-to-people contacts” after people in Hungary protested the establishment of a Chinese university's campus in the country's capital Budapest.
“Transnational joint education programs, a common model of international educational cooperation nowadays, serves as an important platform to promote mutual understanding,” Wang Wenbin, China’s Foreign Ministry spokesman, told a news conference in Beijing.
“It is in keeping with the trend of the times and the interests of all,” he added.
Tens of hundreds of people held demonstrations in Budapest last weekend against the opening of a satellite campus of Shanghai-based Fudan University in the city.
Viktor Orban, the prime minister of Hungary, has backed the opening of the university campus.
Protesters are wary of the university’s costs and its alleged links with the China’s ruling Communist Party.
“We hope relevant individuals in Hungary will remain objective and rational, follow the science, and avoid politicizing or stigmatizing normal cultural and people-to-people exchanges with China to uphold overall friendly bilateral relations,” Wang emphasized, according to a Chinese Foreign Ministry statement.
Founded in 1905, Fudan University had signed a memorandum with Hungary's Ministry for Innovation and Technology on setting up the new campus in Budapest in December 2019 and the first phase of the project is expected to start operating in 2024.
When completed, it would be the first Chinese university in Europe.
The satellite campus is open for admissions to students from across the world and the graduates will be awarded a Hungarian degree, a Chinese degree or a Chinese-Hungarian dual degree./aa
Clumpy lead paint and plaster curl off the walls of some inner-city Philadelphia schools. Staff members at a Florida school haul sandbags and clear drains manually during heavy storms. A 1930s-era boiler is still used to heat a Rhode Island school.
The snapshots are in a report last year from the Government Accountability Office, the first comprehensive picture of the dilapidated state of school facilities since Congress tried to call attention to the problem nearly 25 years ago after finding that a third of schools were in severely deficient condition.
The situation has only worsened since then in many inner-city and poor rural schools, environmental engineering experts and local officials say. And some worry that even an influx of cash from the federal government won't be enough to remedy the issue.
"When I became superintendent, the most glaring example of disparity was the infrastructure," said Nikolai Vitti, who was appointed superintendent of the Detroit Public Schools Community District in 2017. The poor conditions included water-stained, decaying ceiling tiles and repeated school closings because of "oven"-like conditions in warmer months and no heat in the winter, Vitti said.
"That's a Third World country infrastructure issue, not something that we should be thinking about in America," he said.
Nationwide, the backlog in school maintenance and repair projects is at least $500 billion, the nonprofit 21st Century School Fund estimates.
The Biden administration's American Rescue Plan would inject $193 billion into the country's crumbling schools. In guidance it issued last month, the Education Department said schools can use the money on "school facility repairs and improvements to reduce the risk of virus transmission and exposure to environmental health hazards, as well as inspection, testing, maintenance, repair, replacement, and upgrade projects to improve the indoor air quality in school facilities."
But it cautions against new construction projects that could suck money from "essential needs and initiatives" and warns that major remodeling, renovation and new construction projects might be time-consuming and, therefore, unfeasible, because relief funds must be obligated by September 2024.
What's more, much of the money is expected to go to remedy learning loss and to hire teachers and support staff members. Some districts are also under pressure to add security features, such as bulletproof windows and door barricades, after numerous school shootings.
In short, the funding isn't nearly enough to overcome decades of neglect compounding health and safety risks, primarily in minority, underserved communities, local officials say.
In Detroit, where school buildings are 66 years old on average, the money will cover half of an infrastructure backlog estimated at $1.5 billion, Vitti said.
The disrepair in many inner-city schools is one of the starkest illustrations of inequality in America. Most school funding is tied to local tax bases, not formulas for equitable distribution.
"It really is a national tragedy when you start looking at these schools and understand what kids are subjected to," said Jerry Roseman, an environmental engineer for the Philadelphia teachers union. In many buildings, conditions have deteriorated so badly that districts are plowing everything they have into maintenance to prevent schools from "failing catastrophically," Roseman said.
Daniel Peou, principal of Horace Furness High School in Philadelphia, said he no longer feels safe in the school building. He said he and others have developed unexplained rashes after spending time inside.
"The truth is, no, I don't feel comfortable being in there, and I spend most of my days in there," Peou said. "But at the same time, I don't want [students] to be home. I want them to be here. This is where they get their education."
Maria Tobing, a student at the school, remembers one time when "the whole ceiling just went down," almost hitting a teacher.
"We were all shocked, and I couldn't concentrate during my test," Tobing said.
Schools in Philadelphia need $3.5 billion in immediate upgrades, said Roseman, who produced a report last month describing "toxic" conditions in schools that he said have already had a "real impact on health." Eighty percent of district buildings are more than 70 years old, and schools contain hundreds of thousands of square and linear feet of asbestos-containing material, the report found.
"Districts know they cannot fund what they need to fund. So you have to start misrepresenting the truth of that, because no one wants to compromise [faith in] public education. As these problems grow, you are less and less likely to be truthful and fully disclose reports," he said.
The union said the superintendent has stopped sharing information about mold, lead paint and other hazardous materials that it used to share. Monica Lewis, a spokeswoman for the Philadelphia superintendent, said the office hadn't received Roseman's report, which is public.
Lewis said that an environmental advisory group is already in place and that issues from last year "have already been addressed." She didn't respond directly to Roseman's claim that the superintendent has stopped sharing information.
Image: Peeling paint inside the auditorium at Horace H. Furness High School in Philadelphia. (Philadelphia Federation of Teachers Health and Welfare Fund)
While there have been significant associated health risks for decades, the Covid-19 pandemic has shed new light on the scale of the problem. For example, last summer the GAO estimated that 36,000 schools nationwide needed heating and air-conditioning repairs or updates for problems that, if left unaddressed, could lead to poor air quality and mold.
Other hazards the GAO has recently documented: 51 percent of the 100 largest school districts found lead-based paint in schools, and fewer than half of school districts have tested for lead in drinking water.
No federal law requires testing of drinking water for lead in schools that get their water from public systems. Furthermore, most states don't conduct statewide assessments, leaving it to individual districts.
"There's a weird regulatory gap when it comes to lead in the water," said Anisa Heming, director of the Center for Green Schools, which advocates for greener and healthier school buildings. "A lot of schools are scared to test, because they don't have the money to fix it."
Turkey won 18 medals at the 2021 World Weightlifting Championships, the Turkish Weightlifting Federation (TWF) confirmed Monday.
Competing in Tashkent, the capital of Uzbekistan, the Turkish athletes, including 10 men and 11 women, claimed six gold, six silver and six bronze medals in the tournament.
The women's national team collected 672 points to clinch the top of the standings for the first time in 17 years, the federation added.
The federation also said that the Russian team came in second with 608 points, while the US team finished in third spot with 594 points.
With 572 points, the men's national team trailed behind first-place Russia, which amassed 646 points in the men's category.
TWF President Tamer Taspinar congratulated the weightlifters and their trainers on winning the medals./aa
At least 3,000 children, including 1,424 girls, have been out of school since the end of March following recent intercommunal clashes in the Kasai region of the Democratic Republic of Congo, according to a UN report on Monday.
UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said the clashes in the health zones of Kakenge and Bena Leka have also forced 36,600 people to flee the area.
Temporary learning spaces, school supplies for students, teachers and host schools, as well as the organization of remedial classes and training of teachers in psychosocial support are urgently needed to facilitate the return of children to school, according to OCHA.
No emergency education response capacity is available in the two affected provinces, according to the report.
It warned that if urgent action is not taken to support these displaced students, they risk being exposed to various types of abuse and exploitation.
At least 651,500 people are in need of emergency food assistance in the territories of Kamonia and Luebo (Kasai), Dibaya (Kasai central) and Kabeya Kamuanga (Kasai-Oriental), OCHA said, quoting the Food Security Cluster of the Kasai region./aa
Spain’s government on Monday condemned the creation of a breakaway football league, seeking a way to defuse a major shakeup in the world of professional sports.
Culture and Sports Minister José Manuel Rodríguez Uribes spent his day in meetings with the presidents of the three Spanish teams backing the new European Super League, as well as the heads of European football authority UEFA, the Royal Spanish Football Federation, and La Liga.
“Through conversations, the government has verified that all parties are interested in dialogue… and hopes it will lead to an agreement that benefits everyone,” said a statement released afterward.
Spain’s Real Madrid, Atletico de Madrid, and Barcelona have all signed up for the new league. Six British teams and three from Italy are also on board.
Florentino Perez, the current president of Real Madrid, has been named the league’s first chairman.
Under the proposal, the league would consist of 20 teams from across Europe that would play matches all season until a finale in May.
The major European football leagues said in a statement: “We remain united in our efforts to stop this cynical project, a project that is founded on the self-interest of a few clubs at a time when society needs solidarity more than ever.”
The statement also said that the clubs involved in the rebel league will be banned from playing in other domestic or international competitions, while their players could also be denied the chance to represent national teams in tournaments like the World Cup.
Javier Tebas, the head of Spain’s La Liga, slammed the move, tweeting that “gurus of the superleague... are exiting the darkness of the bar at 5 AM, intoxicated with selfishness and a lack of solidarity.”
The major criticism of the new league is that it will leave out less powerful teams and could steal the spotlight from other football leagues.
The 12 clubs that signed up for the super league said in a statement that the move aims to put the game on “a sustainable footing for the long-term future” and “open a new chapter for European football, ensuring world-class competition and facilities.”
“The pandemic has shown that a strategic vision and a sustainable commercial approach are required to enhance value and support for the benefit of the entire European football pyramid.”/aa
At least 20 students from a nursery school were killed on Tuesday in a fire that ravaged the establishment, located in the Nigerien capital Niamey, according to local media on Wednesday.
"Twenty classes in straw huts were consumed by the fire and unfortunately 20 children were killed," Col. Sidi Mohamed, the head of the firefighters told the country's national broadcaster Tele Sahel.
Reached by Anadolu Agency, Halidou Mounkaila, the secretary-general of the National Trade Union of Contractual Agents and Civil Servants in Basic Education said: "25 out of 38 classrooms in the school were devastated by the fire," adding that "the provisional death toll is 20."
The school where the fire started is located on the southeastern outskirts of Niamey, not far from the airport.
Prime Minister Ouhoumoudou Mahamadou visited the scene and conveyed the government's "compassion" to the families of the deceased children./aa
Sports ministers on Saturday emphasized the importance of the Ethnosport for countries' cultural and traditional roots and values as well as boosting competition internationally.
The fourth Ethnosport Forum was held in Istanbul's Radisson Blu hotel as Qatari, Serbian, Gambian, Malian and Somalian sports ministers joined an online session and the moderator was the World Ethnosport Confederation president (WEC) Necmeddin Bilal Erdogan.
Qatar's sports minister Salah bin Ghanem Al Ali said that traditional sports have the same passion, competition and benefits as all sports branches and they are the parts of the identities of the nations.
Al Ali stated that the youth would be interested in them if the nations played their cards right and should know the histories of their countries to focus on the Ethnosport.
He added that traditional sports should have a chance to improve.
Serbian sports minister Vanja Udovicic said that they are doing their best to enhance traditional sports as Serbia has local championships in this field.
Udovicic stated that they are organizing events to amass traditional values and youngsters and to instill a traditional point of view.
He said that Serbia wants to boost its international competition power in the Ethnosport, supporting them.
Bakary Badjie - the Gambian sports minister - said that sports events in Gambia were canceled for almost a year due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Badjie said that youth in Gambia got further away from sports because of the COVID-19 restrictions, but the people can establish bonds via the Ethnosport to benefit from the traditional sports to connect people.
Meanwhile, Malian sports minister Mossa Attaher said that his country had old traditions for ethnic sports; however, they lack chances to promote them institutionally.
Attaher said that Mali aims to hold events in all their traditional sports branches as the countries can not succeed in modern sports if they ignore the traditional ones.
Somalian sports minister Hamza Said Hamza said that the Ethnosport is the base of all sports branches as it is a culture and identity for countries.
Hamza separately said that disasters and civil wars could block sports as they used it as an instrument for peace, and Somalia pulled through after the civil war.
He added that the coronavirus is blocking sports in the country, but they are determined to bring them back and Somalia is now doing its best to improve the youth despite all disasters, including the pandemic.
Ethnosport is not an industrialized sports field as football or basketball but focuses on the traditional sports of nations such as oil wrestling, range and mounted archeries, and equestrian javelin.
It has a confederation; the WEC, founded in 2015 and its headquarters is in Istanbul and Ethnosport aims to raise awareness of traditional sports and games./aa
China on Wednesday hit back at the U.S., accusing it of "politicizing sports," after Washington said it would discuss boycotting the Beijing Olympics with allies amid growing calls to shun the Winter Games on human rights grounds.
Republican politicians in the U.S. have led calls for a boycott of the Olympics, in part over what rights monitors say is the mass incarceration and indoctrination of more than a million Uyghurs and other mostly Muslim people in the northwestern region of Xinjiang.
China has rejected the claims and said Wednesday that allegations of genocide are "the lie of the century from top to bottom."
"As for the idea of a so-called joint boycott of the Beijing Olympics, I want to stress that politicizing sports goes against the spirit of the Olympic Charter, and damages the rights and interests of each country's athletes and the global Olympic cause," said foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian.
He said it would "not be accepted by the international community."
On Tuesday, State Department spokesman Ned Price was asked if the United States would consider a joint boycott with allies and said it was "something that we certainly wish to discuss."
But he later stressed that the United States does not "have any announcement regarding the Beijing Olympics," writing on Twitter that "we will continue to consult closely with allies and partners to define our common concerns and establish our shared approach."
"When it comes to our concerns with the government in Beijing, including Beijing's egregious human rights violations – its conduct of genocide in the case of Xinjiang," Price said, U.S. action is "meaningful" but an effort that "brings along our allies and partners will have all the more influence with Beijing."
President Joe Biden's administration has repeatedly kept the door open to boycotting the Olympics without announcing any firm direction.
A potential boycott of the Beijing Olympics has increasingly become embroiled in U.S. domestic politics, with Republicans seeking to paint Biden as hypocritical and soft on China.
The United States led a boycott of the 1980 Moscow Olympics over the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, with the Soviet bloc snubbing the Summer Games in Los Angeles four years later in retaliation.
US Olympic chiefs oppose boycott
The United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC), in the meantime, reiterated its opposition to a boycott of the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, saying athletes should not be used as "political pawns."
In remarks to reporters ahead of a U.S. Olympic team media event, USOPC president Susanne Lyons repeated the organization's stance that boycotts were ineffective.
"We at the USOPC oppose athlete boycotts because they've been shown to negatively impact athletes while not effectively addressing global issues," Lyons said.
"For our athletes, their only dream is to represent the USA and what we stand for on the international field of play.
"We do not believe that Team USA's young athletes should be used as political pawns."
The Beijing Winter Games are scheduled to begin on Feb. 4 next year, just six months after the postponed summer Tokyo Olympics./agencies
The municipal government of South Korean capital Seoul on Thursday formally notified the International Olympic Committee (IOC) of its bid to co-host the 2032 Games with North Korea's Pyongyang, Yonhap news agency reported.
The IOC said in February that Brisbane was its preferred candidate to host the Games, adding it would enter "targeted dialogue" with the Australian bid organizers.
But the Seoul municipal government Thursday urged them to reconsider the bid for the two Koreas to co-host the Games, agreed to at a summit between South Korean President Moon Jae-in and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in September 2018.
Yonhap reported Seoul's bid emphasized the peace-building potential of the co-hosting, as well as a "combination of cutting-edge technologies and Korean culture."
North Korea has not publicly commented on the bid, which comes amid markedly frosty relations between Seoul and Pyongyang.
The two have not held formal talks in over two years, and last week saw North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's influential sister slam the South's president as "a parrot raised by America" after he criticized a missile test by Pyongyang.
South Korea last hosted the Olympics in 2018, during which the two Koreas' teams marched under a united flag. North Korea has never hosted the Olympics.
The Minister of Health (MoH), Dr. Basil Al-Sabah said that the students would gradually return to school in various stages with the beginning of the new academic year in September. MoH plans to vaccinate all educational and administrative bodies in schools next month, Al Jarida reported.
Dr. Basil Al-Sabah stressed the importance of vaccinating everyone, to preserve the health and safety of life. He pointed out that so far 400,000 have been vaccinated in addition to that half of the elderly Kuwaitis registered have been vaccinated, while about a quarter of the elderly foreigners have been vaccinated. He also said that around 80 to 100 elderly people are vaccinated daily at their homes.
Al Sabah said that the vaccination process will continue during the Ramadan period. He said that approximately 120,000 educators and administrators in education, along with cooperative societies, hairdressers, and banks, will be vaccinated next April.
The minister indicated that vaccination is very effective in reducing the number of death significantly. He said that since the number of vaccinated people in the world reached 400 million, the number of infections and deaths has decreased in America, Britain, and many countries.
He added that in the next stage and after the month of Ramadan, anyone who is not vaccinated will be prevented from entering the cinema any place where workers have not been vaccinated will also be closed.
SOURCE: TIMESKUWAIT
All schools across England have reopened as part of the first of four stages of the gradual easing of lockdown, amid concerns that infection rates will spike in the following months as restrictions begin to relax.
During a press conference aired on BBC News to commemorate the beginning of the first stage, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said that the risk of increased transmission was inevitable as schools reopen but nonetheless he is hopeful that today will be a “cautious but irreversible” step on the roadmap out of lockdown.
Despite the cautious optimism, Johnson warned that the number of people being admitted to hospital with the coronavirus was eight times higher when compared to the summer of 2020 when numbers were generally low and repeated that people must continue to follow the "stay at home" message.
“We must remember that today’s return to schools will, of course, have an impact on the spread of the virus, and so, at all times and as we decide on the next steps forward and when we take them it’s more vital than ever to follow the rules,” Johnson said.
“We all know that the education of our children is so important that the greater risk now is keeping them out of school for a day longer. We all know that the burden has disproportionately fallen on women often holding down jobs and providing childcare at the same time,” he added.
Last month the government unveiled a four stage plan that will see England gradually eased out of its third national lockdown starting with the reopening of schools, allowing people from different households to meet outside and the reopening of businesses.
At the end of each stage the government will assess the data and statistics relating to the number of cases, deaths and hospitalizations caused by the virus and will decide whether or not to go ahead with each stage depending on whether there is a rise or fall in the three factors.
On Monday, 4,712 people had a confirmed positive test of the virus adding this week’s total to 41,225. This represents a 26.2% decrease in comparison to the last seven days.
Sixty-five deaths were reported within 28 days of testing positive for the virus on Monday. Between March 2 and March 8, there were 1,441 deaths within 28 days of testing. This shows a 34.4% decrease in comparison to the previous week.
More than 22.3 million people had been administered their first dose of the vaccine as of late Sunday, with 1.14 million others receiving the second. Vaccines are currently administered in two doses, three weeks apart.
The latest R range for the UK has increased slightly and is now at 0.7-0.9, with the current growth rate also increasing to -5% to -3% per day. The R number is a mechanism used to rate the virus’s ability to spread, with R being the number of people that one infected person will pass the virus on to./aa
More than 40 out of 100 people play mobile games at least once a day, according to a recent survey.
AdColony, global advertising, and marketing platform surveyed 1,250 people on mobile games and social media platforms in Europe, Middle East and the Africa (EMEA) region.
While 88 of 100 people play mobile games, 42 of 100 play at least once a day, the survey revealed.
Players said the games have become a part of their daily lives. The time spent on games has increased day by day. Nearly 70% of respondents in the EMEA play for more than three hours a week.
More than 80% of respondents said they are in a good mood while playing and 47% play to make leisure time enjoyable.
But it is not only young people who play. Nearly 80% of adults play in Turkey. Action-adventure games are preferred by Turkish gamers at 49.2%. Puzzles and racing games are also favorable.
The survey revealed that advertisements for mobile games, which have become the biggest socialization tool, have started to turn into online stores.
While 72% of participants said mobile ads they encountered positively affect their shopping, 66% said they preferred to shop in-app./aa
Despite the novel coronavirus pandemic, a grand library opened in Turkey's capital has received over 340,000 visitors over the past year since its launch.
Inaugurated in Ankara by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in February 2020, the Nation's Library received approximately 6,000 visitors daily until March 15, 2020, having to shut its doors due to emergence of COVID-19.
The library, which was visited by more than 15,000 people on the weekends, continues to provide over 4 million printed and 216 million electronic publications in a 125,000-square-meter (1.3 million square feet) area.
The Nation's Library stopped accepting visitors between March 15 and May 31, 2020 due to the pandemic, then limited its capacity to 1,000-people at a time between 9.00 a.m. and 6.00 p.m. as of June 1, 2020.
Prior to the introduction of COVID-19 restrictions, the library received an average of 2,000 visitors on weekdays and the number of visitors on the weekend was 3,200 people.
Turkey's grand library provides over 2 million books, more than 13,000 periodicals, and at least 18 private collections.
Inspired by Seljuk, Ottoman and contemporary architecture, the library has over 121,000 members.
Aside from its rich printed resources, the library also offers a variety of electronic resources, including 65 databases, 209 million accessible e-resources, over 665,000 e-books, 77,448 e-journals and more than 7 million e-theses./aa