Aprendo con Servindi is Servindi’s new virtual educational platform, designed with a pedagogical approach and criteria for progressive learning.
Servindi, February 17, 2021. - In the search for a solution to adapt the training processes affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, Servindi developed the virtual educational platform “Aprendo con Servindi”.
This tool, developed in the virtual space, represents an effort to find a technological outlet to strengthen indigenous peoples through distance training.
The platform is designed with a pedagogical approach and criteria that will allow participants to interact autonomously and progressively, according to their personal schedules and possibilities.
For the methodological adaptation to the virtual format, Servindi developed a package of graphic tools and resources, dynamic and ludic progress evaluation tests.
The Untold Truth Of Easter Island Shutterstock
By Richard Milner/Feb. 15, 2021 9:12 am EDT
Rapa Nui, or Easter Island as it was called by Dutch explorer Jacob Roggeveen, is a small, 63-square-mile island at the southeast tip of what is referred to as the Polynesian triangle (Hawaii is at the northernmost tip, and Aotearoa New Zealand in the southwest). The size of the island, with its rocky coasts shorn yet green hilltops, belies the size of its complex history and home as one of archeology s largest, most enduring mysteries: the moai, its standout feature that most know as those big head statues.
Indigenous displacement and our complicity
The Mro community held protests against the proposed hotel construction at the Kapru Bazar area in Bandarban on November 8, 2020. Photo: Collected
If you were forced out from your ancestral land today, where would you go? How long could you walk in your torn sandals? Where would you sleep as developers transformed the space shared by your siblings into a luxury suite for travellers willing to spend Tk 18,000 per night? How would you console your hungry children? What do you tell your old mother traumatised from generational conflicts?
The construction of a five star hotel and tourist spot in Bandarban by Sikder group will wipe out six villages of the Mro Indigenous community. The project will acquire about 405 hectares of land, levelling down hills, clearing forests and disrupting natural water sources.
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