ENGLISH LISTEN: GOING TO SCHOOL (1. zatia)

GOING TO SCHOOL OF INDIA (I)
Indian eskolara egunero milioika haur joaten dira itsasontziz, bizikletaz, oinutsik edo gurpildun aulkian, eskola hauek basamortuan, mendian, kalean, autobusean... kokatuta daude. Ezagutu itzezu ikasleen ahotik eskola hartzeko eguneroko erronka zein den. Serie hau Lisa Heydlauff idazlearen liburuan oinarrituta dago eta sari asko irabazi ditu.
Beste haurren esperientzia ezagutzea garrantzitsua bada, kasu honetan are eta gehiago, zuen adineko zenbaitek eskolara joateko egiten duten ahalegina izugarria bait da.
Ikusi, entzun eta hausnartu. Baloratzen al dituzu zuk dituzun erreztasunak?

Bertan ikusi ditzakezu youtubeko bideoak.

   

     Jose Luis Etxezarreta Garin

Going to school on Wheels (How some children go to school in India-West Bengal
Haider goes to school in his wheelchair. Every morning, Haider's friends arrive at his house 30 minutes before school begins. Deciding who gets to push Haider today, they tip the wheelchair back onto its two big black wheels and are off! Haider lives one kilometre away from Raspunja Free Primary School. One kilometre was a long way for Haider, when he didn't have wheels. In fact, one kilometre was so far that Haider didn't go to school until he was given a wheelchair. Now he wheels wherever the boys take him, and they take him everywhere. Going to School in India Series is based on the book by Lisa Heydlauff. In this award-winning book and film series, you will experience what it is like to go to school in India through the eyes and voices of children. Every school day, millions of children in India go to school by boat, by bicycle, by wheelchair or barefoot. Some classes are held in the blistering heat of the mud desert, in the chill of the mountains or at night under lamps. Meet these students who overcome their challenges—all for the chance to learn. Going to School on a Mountaintop (How Some Children Go To School in India-Ladakh) Going to School on a Mountaintop means you have to be able to climb. Skarma knows how to climb, so does his friend Sonam - it is how they get to school. You have to be able to climb if your school is nestled in the mountains. There is no electricity in this school or in the village, but in the summer months this does not matter - school moves outside where there is plenty of light. Today, high in the mountains where India touches Tibet, 29 children are learning about their world and playing hide-and-seek in the bright, cold sunlight. Going to School in India Series is based on the book by Lisa Heydlauff. In this award-winning book and film series, you will experience what it is like to go to school in India through the eyes and voices of children. Every school day, millions of children in India go to school by boat, by bicycle, by wheelchair or barefoot. Some classes are held in the blistering heat of the mud desert, in the chill of the mountains or at night under lamps. Meet these students who overcome their c hallenges—all for the chance to learn.


Going to School in a Mud Desert (How Some Children Go To School in India-Gujarati)
Every year, the monsoons turn the desert into a sea. When the rain stops, the water slowly sinks into the ground, leaving salt behind. Saltpan workers and their families move into the desert to make salt. They build houses and install pumps to bring salty water from under the ground into surface basins; water that will crystallize into six-sided salt cubes. Children move into the desert with their families and while their families work, they go to school. Ramash, a 12-year-old boy takes us to his desert classroom where water must be delivered by truck and students must mark their trails to avoid getting lost by oases. Children go to school to learn to read so they can visit other villages. 


Going to School in a Tribe (How Some Children Go To School in India-Orissa)
Meet Sagarita, a 10-yr-old girl of the Saura tribe as she attends school in her village of Tarasinghi on the hills. At school she learns how to count with sticks, make abacuses out of mud, and use blocks with Oriya letters. All the tribal children know how to use a bow and an arrow, so even at school they learn to identify letters by throwing an arrow on the correct letter on a string. Some days they go on nature walks, go door to door doing village surveys, or even run a pretend market.


Going to School in the Lake (How Some Children Go To School in India-Kashmir)
Twelve-year-old Zahida lives on an island in the middle of a lake and her school is also in the middle of a lake, in a small village. Everyday Zahida and her sister Masarat go to school together in their shikara boat. Here they learn how to keep the lake clean and about the vegetation and plants of the floating garden within. They even have shikara races in school.


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