Las clases en Entre Ríos comenzarán el 2 de marzo
El presidente del Consejo General de Educación (CGE), Martín Müller, confirmó que el 2 de marzo es la fecha de inicio de clases correspondiente al ciclo lectivo 2022 · Indicó además que el receso de invierno se extenderá del 11 al 22 de julio y remarcó que el objetivo es cumplir con 190 días de clases · El calendario completo se difundirá a fines de esta semana.
“El comienzo de clases es el 2 de marzo”, aseguró Müller al dar un adelanto de lo que será el calendario escolar 2022 en la provincia de Entre Ríos, que se conocerá en forma completa a fines de esta semana.
Apuntó también que “el receso escolar será entre el 11 y el 22 de julio” y destacó que se establecerá “un calendario escolar que cumpla con lo acordado en el Consejo Federal de Educación, que es tener 190 días de clase”.
· Revinculación
Müller destacó además que el CGE trabaja en la revinculación de alrededor de 8 mil estudiantes entrerrianos que actualmente no están concurriendo a la escuela. “En muchos casos, por motivos previos a la pandemia, sobre todo a nivel secundario. Pero en otros tiene que ver con la crisis que provocó la pandemia, que terminó de empujarlos fuera del sistema”, explicó el funcionario.
Recordó que, debido a la restricción de actividades por la pandemia, durante los últimos dos años “muchos estudiantes tuvieron una desvinculación de diferentes grados a su escolaridad y su trayectoria escolar”. Pero destacó que “a partir de la voluntad del gobernador Gustavo Bordet de volver prontamente a la presencialidad, esa situación se fue revirtiendo”. Afirmó que también aportó el apoyo que desde el CGE se dio al alumnado para la revinculación. Por eso remarcó: “Estamos haciendo un balance positivo a esta altura del año”.
“Hoy vemos como desafío terminar este trabajo de revinculación de 8 mil estudiantes”, destacó Müller en declaraciones a la prensa, y remarcó: “Eso es lo que nos preocupa y nos ocupa hoy”. (APFDigital)
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Under the government of Joh Bjelke-Petersen, Queensland experienced far-reaching restrictions on civil
liberties, including the effective banning of street marches and extensive police enforcement, conditions that catalysed
widespread civil rights protests and student activism.
Severe floods such as the 1974 flood caused extensive damage and prompted major changes in water management, including the construction of Wivenhoe Dam.
Wartime conditions reshaped daily life, from rationing and rapid military
construction to social pressures that culminated in incidents
such as the Battle of Brisbane in 1942. General Douglas MacArthur established his headquarters in the city
at MacArthur Chambers, and large numbers of American and Australian personnel were stationed throughout the metropolitan area.
The city suffered two destructive fires in 1864, which destroyed much of the early commercial centre and
led to new building regulations favouring brick over timber construction.
The national broadsheet Australian Financial Review, also owned by Nine, is sold in print in Brisbane.
Its sibling papers, The Sydney Morning Herald and Melbourne’s The Age are sometimes sold in print in Brisbane in small numbers.
The Brisbane Times is Brisbane’s second major local news source, owned by Nine, and is online
only.
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