ELT Syrianrefugeescrowdsourced activity book English language teaching Julie Pratten9492689

Материал из megapuper
Перейти к: навигация, поиск

A visiting lecturer in the University of Brighton has launched a publishing initiative to raise funds for educating Syrian children surviving in camps in Iraqi Kurdistan. In October 2015 Julie Pratten told us which she received a Facebook message asking for the aid of a logistics officer on the Domiz camp near Dohuk in Iraqi Kurdistan. She then launched a crowdfunding initiative to boost money to set up a school in the camp.


Ms Pratten said she was told how the volunteers who are employed in the camping ground were so busy managing medical issues that no-one had the capacity to actually engage the kids”, she said. “They didn’t possess activities, a pc, or craft supplies, they didn’t even have a room where they may play.”She went on to express them to be given permission to turn a “mobile unit, filled with old boxes” in the camp in to a classroom, which Kaniwar, and a few other volunteers in the camp cleared out and stuffed with donated craft supplies and furniture borrowed from your local school beyond your camp. One's heart School is run by a local English teacher, who's also a refugee. So far, the project has raised around ?3,000.Whenever we started “The kids were queuing up outside to get in the classroom,” Ms Pratten continued. “We can educate about 100 kids. These kids happen to be via a lot. Most of them have mislaid their parents for the war. Others choosing a lump sum their friends for the sea. During this period they merely need to play and sing where you can little fun. For Four years they’ve experienced that camp along with their lives have been receiving hold.”The objective of the publishing initiative is usually to raise funds to aid the varsity. ‘Now how the school is placed I am interested in the sustainability of the project. Asking people for the money is hard i really made a decision to change my strategy and order help from the international community of ELT Syrianrefugeescrowdsourced activity book English language teaching Julie Pratten. I drawn authors and teachers to ‘donate’ one activity each. The first publication, A-Z of Hope is really a crowdsourced book of 26 activities for young learners to teenagers around the universal theme of joy and happiness. The response from authors has become overwhelming. Book 1 and two are fully subscribed and now we use a waiting set of authors ready to step up if someone can’t submit. We now have over 160 authors registered that are ready to give rise to future projects. The first book is going to be published at the end of April and this will be launched with the Annual IATEFL conference to become held from 13 to 16 April on the ICC in Birmingham.