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Csütörtökön 537 új fertőzöttet azonosítottak PCR-teszttel, nem volt halálos áldozat

Bumm.sk (Szlovákia/Felvidék) - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 10:20
NCZI: Június 30-án az elvégzett 1.320 laboratóriumi PCR-tesztből 537 (40,68 %) zárult pozitív eredménnyel. A járvány hazai halálos áldozatainak a száma csütörtökön nem emelkedett tovább (20.147).

Artikel - Was die tschechischen Europaabgeordneten von der Ratspräsidentschaft ihres Landes erwarten

Europäisches Parlament (Nachrichten) - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 10:17
Am 1. Juli übernimmt Tschechien die rotierende EU-Ratspräsidentschaft. Was erwarten die tschechischen Abgeordneten in den nächsten sechs Monaten?

Quelle : © Europäische Union, 2022 - EP
Categories: Europäische Union

Trust and citizen participation in Cyprus

Euractiv.com - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 10:07
Civic engagement in Cyprus has long been influenced by the tensions between the Turk-Cypriots and Greek-Cypriots and by the strained relations with the European Union, which has impacted citizen’s trust in decision-making. If empowering citizens is no longer seen as...
Categories: European Union

Ruth Humbel: Des collègues de parti annoncent sa démission… sans son accord

24heures.ch - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 10:05
Des politiciens du centre argovien parlent publiquement de repourvoir le siège de la députée au National. Or, celle-ci s’y oppose. Que se passe-t-il?
Categories: Swiss News

The Digital Divide, a Pending Issue in Chile’s Educational System

Africa - INTER PRESS SERVICE - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 10:02

Children at the San José Obrero School use the primary school's computer lab. At their homes in the municipality of Peñalolén, to the east of Santiago de Chile, many do not have computers because 90 percent of them come from poor families. CREDIT: Courtesy of San José Obrero

By Orlando Milesi
SANTIAGO, Jul 1 2022 (IPS)

A Chilean government plan seeks to ensure connectivity in remote areas, in a first step to address a deep digital divide among the country’s inhabitants that includes a lack of access to technology and digital education deficits, exposed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

In 2020, during the social isolation at the height of the pandemic, 76 percent of children in higher income segments had their own computer, laptop or tablet and 23 percent had access to a shared one.

But in the lowest income segments, only 45 percent of children had their own computer or laptop, while 16 percent had none. The rest managed to get access to a shared computer or tablet.

There are also notable differences according to the type and location of schools.

 

One school that illustrates the gap

“People here don’t have computers, although it may seem strange,” said Cecilia Pérez, principal of the San José Obrero School in Peñalolén. “Computers are just a dream for many. Nor do they have their own connection, or wi-fi. They have cell phones with prepaid minutes or very cheap plans that do not give them a good enough connection to support a lesson.”

In a conversation with IPS at the school, she said “this is a disadvantage that has nothing to do with the children’s desire to study, their intelligence, or their worried families. It is something external that is difficult to solve.”

To illustrate, Pérez said that “if homework is posted on the platform, it is very hard for children to read it and do it from their cell phones.”

Her school is in a poor neighborhood located at the end of Las Parcelas Avenue, in the Andes foothills of Santiago, the capital. Most of the first to eighth grade students come to school on foot.

At the San José Obrero School in the municipality of Peñalolén, in the foothills surrounding the Chilean capital, 90 percent of the students come from poor families, with parents who work as street vendors, cleaners or similar trades. Parental support for homework is almost non-existent, says the principal of the primary school, Cecilia Pérez. CREDIT: Orlando Milesi/IPS

This public primary school in the municipality of Peñalolén, which serves 427 students, is an example of the connectivity problems faced by students in the most deprived urban and rural areas.

In this South American country of 19 million people, there are 3.6 million primary and secondary students. Two million students are enrolled in the first to eighth grades (six to 13 years of age) and the rest are in secondary school (13 to 17 years of age).

Of the total number of students, 53 percent study in state-subsidized private schools, 40 percent in municipal schools and seven percent in private schools.

“We have third grade students today who started first grade in 2020, at the height of the pandemic, when they had to learn to read and write. These children had only gone to kindergarten and are now coming to class in the third grade with a very significant delay,” she said, referring to the effects of distance learning during the pandemic.

Because of this, Pérez said, “we had to set priorities in the curriculum and reinforce language and math which are super important to continue learning.”

She added that another serious problem is that many of their students experience situations of domestic violence. “Their emotional and social support is the school, and when they couldn’t be with their classmates, they lost two years of socializing,” she said.

“We have children between the fifth and eighth grades who have experienced a lot of violence, a lot of individualism, a lot of sexualization that never happened before. Partly because there is no parental control over cell phones at home,” she said.

An additional problem is connectivity because in Peñalolén “there are many hills and in some parts the internet does not work. There are families who returned the ‘router’ (a device that receives and sends data on computer networks) that we lent them because the signal does not reach their homes.”

Older children at the San José Obrero School in the municipality of Peñalolén, near Santiago de Chile, stay two hours longer at the school, doing sports and other activities as part of their education. In this way they avoid excessive leisure time and a lack of supervision at home, which can be dangerous for them. CREDIT: Orlando Milesi/IPS

 

Tackling inequality

The deep digital divide among Chileans is aggravated by the difficulties in accessing the internet in isolated villages, rural localities and also in poor urban neighborhoods where telecommunication companies do not provide service or where criminals steal the cables.

“Inequality in our country is also manifested in internet access,” said leftist President Gabriel Boric, in office since March. “Thousands of students were unable to exercise their right to education during the pandemic due to a lack of connectivity.”

To address this situation, he said in a recent communiqué, “our Zero Digital Divide Plan will ensure, by 2025, that all the country’s inhabitants have access to connectivity.”

“This requires a sustained effort to continue with current initiatives such as the Internet as a Basic Service Bill and the generation of new projects that will allow us to reach isolated and rural areas,” he said.

As an example, Boric mentioned the town of Porvenir, which a month ago became the southernmost part of this long narrow South American country with access to the 5G network.

The 36-year-old president won the elections in the wake of the huge 2019 protests, in which one of the demands was to end the social inequality gap, one of the largest in the world according to international organizations, and where more equitable access to education was one of the main points.

Paulina Romero, a first-year chemistry and pharmacy university student, became a symbol of the digital divide that Boric seeks to eliminate, when two years ago images of her climbing onto the roof of her house in the small community of San Ramón, in the southern region of La Araucanía, in a dangerous attempt to find a signal to be able to do her assigned homework, went viral.

A colorful mural decorates the staircase leading to the second story of classrooms at the primary school in Peñalolén, located in the snowy Andes foothills seen here in the background in the middle of Chile’s southern hemisphere winter. CREDIT: Orlando Milesi/IPS

 

Plans to close the gap

Claudio Araya, undersecretary of telecommunications, told IPS that all efforts are focused on improving connectivity.

“A bill was approved in Congress a month ago that guarantees internet access for students,” he said. He pointed out that in part this access already exists but it is not operational for schoolchildren, because “many students in areas with coverage had problems with distance learning because their families could not afford cell phone plans.”

Araya added that a project is being implemented to ensure that all public schools, whether run by municipalities or the State, as well as subsidized private schools, have coverage for remote areas and connection speed.

“One part of the project is being completed now, by August, for 8,300 schools, a second part with 500 more by March 2023, and a third with a call for bids before 2023, which will cover just over a thousand schools,” he explained.

His office has also allocated resources for a new project, called “last mile”, which seeks to bring connectivity to isolated or rural areas. “We have already invested some 200 million dollars and we are contemplating an additional 150 million dollars to provide service coverage to the communities,” he said.

There are 40 computers available at the San José Obrero School for the children to search for information and complete their learning in various subjects under the supervision of the teacher in charge. But there is no possibility of laptops that they can take to their homes, where most of them have no computers. CREDIT: Courtesy of the San José Obrero School

 

Another school stumbling over connectivity issues

Connectivity is the main problem for the 73 students at the school in the small town of Samo Alto, in the Andes foothills area of the municipality of Rio Hurtado, 440 kilometers north of Santiago.

“We are educating 21st century children with 20th century resources and technology,” Omar Santander, principal of the primary school, told IPS by telephone.

“The connection to the global world does not exist. You turn on a computer, log on to the network and all the other computers disconnect. It is impossible to work online. We have computers and tablets, but there they are, and they can only be used with resources and programs downloaded ad hoc,” he said.

The students cannot communicate and “these are gaps that keep us from providing greater opportunities,” he said.

“The lack of computers is the smaller problem. We have achieved internet efficiency and we have the equipment. The big problem is connectivity,” Santander stressed, adding that an antenna they made to capture the signal was not enough.

He said that “last year when we held hybrid classes, half at home and half at school, one day we tried to connect and it was a terrible disappointment.

“There is a wealth of information, of pedagogical resources available to students that unfortunately we don’t have access to,” Santander complained.

The principal explained that “everything that has to do with access to resources that enrich reading, writing, calculus and mathematics is there and we cannot make use of it.”

From the San José Obrero School, Santiago de Chile can be seen in the background, under a cloudy sunset after a recent rain on the first day of the southern hemisphere winter in Chile. CREDIT: Orlando Milesi/IPS

 

More than internet access

Luciano Ahumada, head of the School of Informatics and Telecommunications at the Diego Portales University, said that “reducing the digital divide goes far beyond having an internet plan.”

“It also involves promoting the use and daily impact of information and communications technologies (ICTs) to maximize people’s well-being. It is a much more complex and time-consuming challenge than access,” he told IPS.

In his view, “we must work on access, but also on economic, ethnic and gender barriers and establish a framework concept of cybersecurity or basic concepts in the population to live in a healthy way in this new world.

“There is an economic gap, an age gap, an ethnic gap, which in different countries has become very evident,” he said.

Ahumada said that “access is just the starting-point. It is a good initiative, necessary to massify internet access, but we must think about massification of high-speed connections because with networks of the past we cannot carry out actions of the future and establish the basis for an information society.”

Categories: Africa

Germany’s nutrition strategy in-the-making needs more fleshing out

Euractiv.com - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 09:54
A virtual meeting between German Agriculture Minister Cem Özdemir and the country's associations on Wednesday (29 June) kick-started the development of a sustainable and healthy nutrition strategy, though expectations differ widely on the details.
Categories: European Union

Erneuerbare Wärmetechnologien haben Potenzial noch nicht ausgeschöpft

Euractiv.de - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 09:52
Die Europäische Kommission will den Einsatz erneuerbarer Energien beim Heizen und Kühlen ausbauen, um vom russischen Gas unabhängig zu werden.
Categories: Europäische Union

Europa Kompakt: Freihandel mit Neuseeland

Euractiv.de - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 09:42
Europa Kompakt ist EURACTIVs morgendlicher Newsletter.
Categories: Europäische Union

Slowakei erleichtert Zugang zu EU-Mitteln zur Förderung der Geothermie

Euractiv.de - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 09:42
Mit der Förderung von Erkundungsbohrungen im Haushaltszeitraum 2021-2027 hat die slowakische Regierung beschlossen, eines der Haupthindernisse für die Entwicklung der Geothermie im Land zu beseitigen.
Categories: Europäische Union

Spanien will Militärausgaben fast verdoppeln

Euractiv.de - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 09:40
Premierminister Pedro Sánchez hat am Donnerstag angedeutet, dass er seinen linken Koalitionspartner Unidas Podemos (Vereint können wir) um Unterstützung bitten wird, um Madrids neue Verpflichtungen gegenüber US-Präsident Joe Biden und der NATO zu erfüllen.
Categories: Europäische Union

Frankreich hat EU-Integration in Verteidigungsbereich erfolgreich vorangetrieben

Euractiv.de - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 09:36
Das seit langem verfolgte Ziel Frankreichs, die europäische Zusammenarbeit im Verteidigungsbereich zu stärken, hat in den vergangenen sechs Monaten durch den Ukrainekrieg und die französische Ratspräsidentschaft neuen Auftrieb erhalten.
Categories: Europäische Union

Media Partnership – Accelerating the Green Transition in Europe: Life after Russian Fossil Fuels [Promoted content]

Euractiv.com - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 09:30
This is the second event in the series “Fueling the War”, which brings together experts from fields as diverse as energy, climate and social justice, and leading thinkers and civil society from Ukraine, the EU and Russia to examine the complexities of the energy crisis. You can watch the recording of the first discussion, “Fueling the War: Why Energy Sanctions Matter and How to Make Them Effective” on Open Society Foundations’ website.
Categories: European Union

Après avoir fui la guerre en Ukraine, des étudiants africains dans l’impasse

BBC Afrique - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 09:29
Nombre d’étudiants africains qui ont fui la guerre en Ukraine pour se réfugier ailleurs en Europe semblent dans l’impasse. En Suisse ou certains ont trouvé un point de chute, il leur est impossible de s’inscrire.
Categories: Afrique

Macron: Kompromiss über EU-Bewerbung Nordmazedoniens gefunden

Euractiv.de - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 09:25
Der französische Präsident Emmanuel Macron sagte am Donnerstag (30. Juni), er glaube, dass eine Kompromisslösung für den EU-Beitrittsverhandlungsrahmen für Nordmazedonien gefunden worden sei, jedoch ohne Einzelheiten zu nennen.
Categories: Europäische Union

Selenskyj fordert mehr Unterstützung von Österreich

Euractiv.de - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 09:23
Der ukrainische Präsident Wolodymyr Selenskyj hat Österreich in einer Rede, die am Donnerstagabend in Echtzeit an ein Wiener Publikum übertragen wurde, zu mehr Unterstützung für sein Land aufgerufen.
Categories: Europäische Union

Neue tschechische Atomanlage auf EU-Wettbewerbsregeln hin untersucht

Euractiv.de - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 09:21
Die EU-Kommission hat eine Untersuchung eingeleitet, um zu prüfen, ob die geplante staatliche Finanzierung für den Ausbau des tschechischen Kernkraftwerks Dukovany im Einklang mit den EU-Wettbewerbsregeln steht.
Categories: Europäische Union

Ukraine reconstruction: what to expect from Lugano meet

Euractiv.com - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 09:18
Leaders from dozens of countries and international organisations will gather in Switzerland next week to discuss rebuilding Ukraine, with the aim of providing a "Marshall Plan" for the war-ravaged country.
Categories: European Union

'Cristiano made me a Real Madrid fan' - Jabeur

BBC Africa - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 09:06
World number two Ons Jabeur on 'Ons the footballer' and her love for Cristiano Ronaldo and Real Madrid.
Categories: Africa

Russia hauls in ambassador over ‘offensive’ UK comments on nuclear weapons

Euractiv.com - Fri, 07/01/2022 - 08:52
Russia said on Thursday (30 June) it had summoned the British ambassador to voice a strong protest against "offensive" British statements, including about alleged Russian threats to use nuclear weapons.
Categories: European Union

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