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Pularumpi School Tiwi IslandsJordan banking crisis
Sac à Main Longchamp,Pularumpi School Tiwi IslandsJordan banking crisis,Pularumpi School Tiwi Islands

Pularumpi School conducts a unique community based learning experience in term two of each school year. A fabric of learning is woven from many rich threadswhich culminates in Turtle Dreaming Festival The threads include student and community engagement, learning experiences that are embedded in Tiwi culture language, art, craft, history, myth and dance, environmental education. Information technology is used as an integral tool to collect information andto publish student work.

Students are highly motivated throughout the term. Opportunities to talk, write and read about sea turtles and other native animals provide a comfortable platform for the children to develop many skills. Formulating questions, researching and choosing ways to publish work are highly child centered. All classes participate in integrated units of study that focus on sea turtles and environmental challenges. Children are exposed to a learning that requires them toidentify problems, formulate questions,sac voyage longchamp, locate information, problem solve and publishing findings. Students read widely, develop persuasive and report writing skills and use technology as a tool to assist in their learning.

Parents and families are engaged in three principle ways. The first through attendance at the many events and performances that take place over the term. Through the active participation of community groups and lastly through pictorial displays on the Community Noticeboard and Dreaming Live" Pularumpi School Social Networking project.

It must be emphasized that our School core business is the teaching of literacy and numeracy. From 8:00 am to 10:00 am each morning children are immersed in literacy education. From 10:30 to 12:20 children across grade levels participate in numeracy education. Coupled with this is music, art, physical education, health and personal development. The staff's 2011 evaluation of Dreaming highlighted the development of staff team work and the ease to which the activities were integrated into class routines.

The following activities and events are embedded in the school's curriculum.

Dreaming Pottery from year three to year eight worked with our local potters to create a ceramic piece to be exhibited at the

School Turtle Dreaming Art Show in a Morning from preschool to Year 8 worked with a local artist to create a painting to be exhibited at the School Turtle Dreaming Art Show in a Day"

Class groups used iPads to create an animation around the Dreaming theme.

Rangers community service morning where children become Turtle Rangers for the day. Old fishing line, plastics and litter are cleared from the Front Beach. The litter is sorted, classified and weighed. Methods of reducing litter are explored and implemented.

Dreaming Printing />

With the support of the Women Centre children use Lino block printing to make curtains for the school.

Dreaming Mural local artist created a mural of a Tiwi creation story. Children watch and ask questions during the painting. The mural is on a cement pad that forms the base of our School four Tiwi carvings which depict the values of respect, safety, belonging and having a go.

A Tiwi smoking ceremony is to be held when the mural is completed,Pularumpi School Tiwi IslandsJordan banking crisis.

Dreaming Camp two night, three day camp for our middle school students. The camp focuses on bushcraft, story telling, cooking and team building,portefeuille femme longchamp. A day visit to the camp is made by Transition to Year 5. a beach walk, sand sculpture, games and picnic are enjoyed by all.

Dreaming Blue Light Disco and families attend and enjoy a night of music and dance.

Pularumpi Schools own version of Wikipedia. A place to publish class work and work collaboratively across classes.

School Turtle Dreaming Art Show conjunction with Munupi Arts and Crafts, the children paintings and pottery are exhibited in a professional art show. Community and special guests attend,Pularumpi School Tiwi IslandsJordan banking crisis. This is the official ceremony for the opening of the festival.

A welcome to country is held and the children present a number of Tiwi dances.

The Turtle Dreaming Deck Chair Theatre

A picnic night is held for families and community. A short film showing a cross section of the activities from Turtle Dreaming is enjoyed by all. This year the children animations will also be premiered.

Respected community members visit our school and tell their story to the children. The theme this year is "When I was a child like you."

The story tellers share with small groups of children what life was like for them as a child.

The children are visited in their classrooms by Land and Sea Rangers for expert, hands on information about all things environmental. The Pirlangimpi Clinic holds a workshop on bush first aid for children and staff involved in the Turtle Dreaming Camp.

From the above you can see the many dedicated hours contributed by staff and friends of our school. The analogy of Dreaming as a rich fabric is very powerful. Engagement, identity, cooperation and sharimg of highexpectations provide an ideal learning environment which contributes to high attendance rates (90%) and consistent improvements in student literacy and numeracy outcomes.Jordan banking crisis

It has been clear for some time now that the banking sector in Jordan is in need of revamping if dire consequences are not to befall the whole Jordanian economy.

Many bad practices have already appeared in the sector. Regulators should become more aware of their roles and responsibilities, and take upon themselves to act strategically and proactively, otherwise they will be blamed for harming the whole economy, which is already stagnating.

Currently, 25 banks are operating in Jordan, of which two are Islamic and eight are branches of foreign banks,porte monnaie femme longchamp. Jordanian banks operate through 558 branches and 79 representative offices throughout the Kingdom. At the end of 2007, the number of Jordanian banks' branches operating abroad was 129; there were 24 representative offices. Of these numbers, 57 branches and 12 representative offices were operating in Palestine.

The Jordanian banking sector is highly concentrated - the concentration rate is used as an indicator of the relative size of firms in relation to the industry as a whole.

It is calculated as the sum of the percentage of market share of the top three or four firms. This rate assists in determining the level of monopolistic power and market structure of an industry - with only one large international bank, the Arab Bank, and a number of small national and foreign banks.

The three-bank concentration rate (market share of the largest three banks) in terms of total assets, total deposits and total equity in 2007 amounted to around 47.8 per cent, 50.35 per cent and 47.86 per cent respectively, which are considered high relative to other countries.

Most recently, banks lowered interest rates on deposits and in many cases increased them on credit facilities, thus increasing their own margins while starving the nation for credit.

Lending is primarily to employees, not to corporations. Credit to real estate companies has dried up due to imposed ceiling of 20 per cent on the credit portfolio by the Central Bank of Jordan, and credit to companies is at a trickle - liquidity has shrunk in the last quarter.

Firms, unable to secure credit have been selling their portfolios. At least one bank, it has been rumoured, has been converting its dollar deposits into dinars and lending them at the higher interest, thus making profits on the interest rate differential.

The Amman Stock Exchange, currently at one-third of its value in 2005, is an indication that funds are going towards deposits instead of the financial market, thereby destroying the capital of Jordanian companies and with it the wealth of over a million Jordanians. Furthermore, ownership in publicly traded companies is switching from cash-starved Jordanians to cash-flush Arabs whose markets are not subject to our overbearing economic activity and stifling controls, which is clear evidence that we are in deep trouble.

Reported market manipulations by certain Arab investors in the stock market show the vulnerability of Jordanian companies to the monetary policy and its strange and stubborn persistence, intentional or otherwise, on shrinking the credit faucet.

Having weakened the economy and economic agents considerably, banks now insist that they are not lending because of the high risks involved. However, some of them have shown willingness to lend overseas, bear the associated risks and suffer great losses. All that is needed is a firm involvement by regulators to remedy the situation before it is too late,Sac à Dos Longchamp.

The observation that none of the operating banks in Jordan has moved to lower the interest rates on loans to capture market shares from others is a strong indicator of possibly harmful collusion.
radoner6d 08.12.2012 0 207
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