• MSN
  • Hotmail
  • More
    • Autos
    • My MSN
    • Video
    • Careers & Jobs
    • Personals
    • Weather
    • Delish
    • Quotes
    • White Pages
    • Games
    • Real Estate
    • Wonderwall
    • Horoscopes
    • Shopping
    • Yellow Pages
    • Local Edition
    • Traffic
    • Feedback
    • Maps & Directions
    • Travel
    • Full MSN Index
  • Bing
  • NBCNews.com
  • TODAY
  • Nightly News
  • Rock Center
  • Meet the Press
  • Dateline
  • msnbc
  • Breaking News
  • Newsvine
  • Home
  • US
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Travel
  • Local
  • Weather
Advertise | AdChoices
  • Recommended: Are 'lone wolf' attacks the new path to terror?
  • Recommended: Forbidden artist Ai Weiwei makes massive map of China out of baby formula
  • Recommended: 17 children 'burned to death' in Pakistan school bus explosion
  • Recommended: Zoo worker dies after tiger attack

First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

  • ↓ About this blog
  • ↓ Archives
    • Icons Email E-mail updates
    • Icons Twitter Follow on Twitter
    • Icons Feed Subscribe to RSS
  • 5
    Nov
    2012
    7:38am, EST

    Students hypnotized in preparation for South Korea's exam hell

    Kim Hong-Ji / Reuters

    A therapist hypnotizes students retaking the college entrance exams, during a meditation session at Deung Yong Moon Boarding School in Kwangju, South Korea on October 30, 2012.

    Reuters reports — Conversations between men and women are forbidden at the school on the outskirts of Seoul, where security cameras watch the students' every move. There is no access to television, the Internet, mobile phones or MP3 players.

    Welcome to the monastic life of a boarding school for students dedicated to spending nine months preparing to retake South Korea's college entrance exams, in the hopes of a place at the best college and a job for life at a top corporation.

    Kim Hong-Ji / Reuters

    A student retaking the college entrance exams attends class at Deung Yong Moon Boarding School on October 30, 2012.

    South Korea's exam hell is an annual event so full of pressure that many students are driven to despair, with some even taking their own lives. More than 50 percent of those between the ages of 15 and 19 who are suicidal have given "academic performance and college entrance" as a reason, says the national Statistics Korea. Read the full story.

    Previously on PhotoBlog: Chinese students face "the most pressure packed test in the world"

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

     

    5 comments

    The importance placed on education for education's sake is overblown around the world. It would be better to teach (if it can be taught) common sense and decency, rather than 'book learning' in any case. Intelligent people can pick up on subjects, but not everyone is cut out to be a top executive -- …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: asia, education, school, south-korea, exam, world-news
  • 19
    Oct
    2012
    2:43pm, EDT

    Pakistani girls endeavor for education

    All photos by Nathalie Bardou / AP

    Pakistani schoolgirl Nisha Nadeem, six, center, attends class in a slum on the outskirts of Islamabad, Pakistan, Oct. 11, 2012.

    Nathalie Bardou, AP — A teenage activist recently shot and critically wounded by the Taliban risked her life to attend school, but the threat from the militant group is just one of many obstacles Pakistani girls face in getting an education. Others include rampant poverty, harassment and the government's failure to prioritize education spending.

    Afghan refugee and Pakistani children, who were displaced with their families from Pakistan's tribal areas due to fighting between militants and the army, are examined by their teacher during their daily class to learn how to recite verses of the holy Quran, in a mosque, on the outskirts of Islamabad, Pakistan, Oct. 17.

    A displaced Pakistani student, seen through the window of school's classroom, sits on a bed during a break in a poor neighborhood on the outskirts of Islamabad, Pakistan, Oct. 19.

    Displaced Pakistani students chant a song with their teacher, not pictured, during school in a poor neighborhood on the outskirts of Islamabad, Pakistan, Oct. 19.

    Displaced Pakistani schoolgirls play in their school yard in a poor neighborhood on the outskirts of Islamabad, Pakistan, Oct. 19.

    A Pakistani protestor holds a candle and a poster that reads: "Are you with us or the Taliban? Long live Malala Yousufzai" and shows 15-year-old schoolgirl Malala Yousufzai, who was shot by the Taliban for speaking out in support of education for women, during a candlelight vigil in Islamabad, Pakistan, Oct. 11, 2012. Yousufzai risked her life to attend school.

    Related Articles:

    • Doctors: Girl shot by Taliban able to stand, communicate
    • Thousands rally in Karachi for Malala, 14-year-old Pakistani girl shot by Taliban
    • ‘Spy of the West’: Al-Qaida, Taliban struggle to justify attack on Pakistani teen

    Slideshow: Schoolgirl attacked by Taliban in Pakistan

    Fifteen-year-old Malala Yousufzai was shot by the Taliban for speaking out against Pakistani militants and promoting education for girls.

    Launch slideshow

    NBC's Keir Simmons reports on an upbeat assessment from Malala Yousafzai's doctors.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    16 comments

    The problem ; 6th century education in the 21st century.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pakistan, education, world-news, islamabad, malala
  • 26
    Sep
    2012
    11:15am, EDT

    Lessons from abroad: Bulgaria pioneers new approach to ranking universities

    Courtesy of the Bulgarian Ministry of Education

    Sergei Ignatov, Bulgarian minister of education, has been pushing independent governing boards and outside accreditation for the nation's colleges and universities.

    By Tom Marshall, The Hechinger Report

    SOFIA, Bulgaria — Petar Stanchev is the kind of student Bulgaria needs to keep. Last year, according to the country’s Association of Private Universities, more than half of its college-bound students applied to institutions abroad.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The 23-year-old planned to remain in this mountainous, verdant patch of southeastern Europe. For two years, working toward a bachelor’s degree in journalism, he showed up for classes in sociology and media at the prestigious Sofia University. The problem was, his teachers didn’t.

    “I had a French teacher who didn’t come to lectures for weeks as though it was normal,” he said. “There were whole groups of us who were waiting for a lecturer who didn’t even bother to send us an email or let us know.” Finally, last spring, Stanchev got so fed up that he left home for university in the United Kingdom.

    Such problems have sparked a fiery struggle over the future of higher education here. Sergei Ignatov, the brash education minister of Bulgaria’s center-right government, is pushing a raft of market-based reforms aimed at raising quality, shining a light on moribund university programs, and stemming the tide of departing students. His most ambitious initiative is an online university ranking system, which allows students to figure out which programs will help them succeed in the job market.


    “I think this is the most transparent and clearly structured university ranking system I’ve ever come across,” said the late Cyrus Reed, former provost of the American University in Bulgaria. “It’s really a major step forward.”

    Bulgaria’s neighbors are also experimenting with different approaches to improve their higher-education systems. In Romania, the government placed video cameras in high-school exam rooms to combat cheating. Under the camera’s watchful eye, passing rates on the university entrance exam plunged from 81 percent in 2009 to an all-time low of 45 percent in 2011. At South East European University in Macedonia, each professor and staff member is critiqued annually under a rigorous quality control system. Bulgaria, which joined the European Union five years ago, has earned the most praise, however, including a mostly laudatory report from the World Bank.

    Q&A: How are Bulgarian universities trying to move past Soviet-style teaching?

    Still, Ignatov’s efforts have not been wholly welcomed. Critics fear that he wants to fully privatize the 274,000-student system, which includes 37 public and 14 private institutions. Protesters have haunted his three-year tenure, even carrying a black coffin with a mummy made to look like him. The stress, Ignatov said, made his hair fall out.

    Bulgarians have reason to distrust the free market, which has offered it a bruising ride since the fall of Communism in 1989. The country escaped the wars that accompanied the break-up of its western neighbor, Yugoslavia, but its economic output plummeted. According to World Bank data, per capita GDP fell from $1,845 in 1988 to $1,373 in 1997, measured in constant dollars.

    It took 15 years for GDP to climb back to its 1988 level, only to plunge again with the global economy in 2008. Even as budgets dried up and infrastructure crumbled, university enrollment rates have more than doubled since 1990. “All the quality of education in Bulgaria was destroyed,” Ignatov said of the post-Communist years. “We lost a lot of ground.”

    U.S. businesses look abroad
    In the late 20th century, Eastern Europe’s longest-serving ruler, Todor Zhivkov, presided over Bulgaria when its university system was a point of national pride. Tuition was free, entrance exams were tough, and the nation gained a reputation for technical excellence. Its graduates helped build the Eastern bloc’s first generation of personal computers, while the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences worked on satellite equipment and prepared cosmonauts for outer space.

    Hewlett-Packard was sufficiently impressed with the country’s talent pool that in 2006 it opened a global support center here, the Bulgarian capital. The company needed 4,000 highly trained employees, so it forged relationships with three universities, including the public Sofia University, training professors and building state-of-the-art computer labs. High-performing instructors earned bonuses and the company hired many students right out of college.

    Read more education analysis at The Hechinger Report

    One of them was Ivan Ivaylo, who was hired as an HP service delivery manager and program lecturer in 2008 following his graduation from Sofia University. There was initial skepticism about dropping Soviet-style lectures to learn from companies. Ivaylo recalled, “We had senior management from the university coming to see with their own eyes that this was working.”

    The results are clear: To date, the classes have trained more than 1,000 students, with other companies like Microsoft Corp. and Cisco Systems, Inc. developing similar programs. They have helped Bulgaria become a magnet for high-tech outsourcing.


    Follow @hechingerreport

    Sasha Bezuhanova, director of HP’s public-sector operations for Central and Eastern Europe, is eager to demonstrate the model’s potential. She envisions “an entire ecosystem around innovation” in which Bulgarian universities conduct research and companies like HP turn the results into marketable products — much as happens in Silicon Valley.

    But here, too, are obstacles. Under Communist-era regulations, the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences — not universities — held responsibility for high-end research. Last year, Ignatov got the law changed and began transferring funds to universities.

    But many students, including Stanchev, object to the move. “Why would we basically destroy the Academy of Sciences, which has many successful projects?” he asked. “Create the environment for research, but don’t destroy something that’s already working.”

    Rankings use tax, employment data
    Ignatov is not afraid to challenge the status quo. He defends much-criticized university fee increases that were pushed through parliament without discussion. He dismantled a Soviet-era government commission that until 2010 held exclusive power to award doctoral degrees and professorships. Under the commission’s watch, one applicant returned from England bearing a newly minted degree from the University of Oxford, only to be informed he had to prove that such a university existed.

    Ignatov is also pushing university rectors to set up independent governing boards and seek outside accreditation, rather than rely solely on a national body that deemed more than 90 percent of Bulgaria’s universities “good” or “very good” in its first round of ratings.

    Ignatov is most proud of the online ranking system, unveiled two years ago. Reed, who served as provost of the American University in Bulgaria until his death from injuries suffered in a car accident in July, characterized the system as miles beyond the popular U.S. News & World Report rankings, because “in this case, they tell you exactly how they got it and they let you manipulate it yourself.” Users can also compare majors and programs according to their own priorities. Looking for professors who show up for class and forge relationships with students? Curious about which biology program is best at helping graduates find jobs? With a few clicks, students can find out.

    More from The Hechinger Report

    • Arizona charter school puts kids in cubicles with computers, test scores rise
    • Program aims to lure next-generation engineers, math whizzes into classroom
    • Nevada asks battered universities to solve its economic crisis

    Boyan Zahariev, program director for governance and public policies at the Open Society Foundations, a philanthropy run by George Soros, oversaw the creation of the ranking system. Zahariev’s team was frustrated by what they saw elsewhere: a hodgepodge of surveys that relied on subjective factors like a university’s reputation, rather than more objective measures of quality. Beginning in 2007, they began pursuing what some consider the Holy Grail of university ranking systems: solid information on student earnings following graduation. Armed with a government contract and extra funding from the European Union, they delved into a rich trove of government data on graduates’ tax payments and unemployment status.

    The data don’t include actual salaries or account for graduates who take jobs outside Bulgaria, but they do show which university programs place the most graduates in upper-income brackets within Bulgaria. Such information can be difficult to access in many countries, even among government agencies, Zahariev said. Bulgaria protects privacy by aggregating the data and using an identifying number rather than a student’s name.

    Some universities initially balked at requests for data on class size, library holdings, professor credentials and other factors in the rankings. But they knew they couldn’t stonewall a government project, and institutions often found that some of those details actually improved their rankings, Zahariev said.

    Read more education stories on NBCNews.com

    That information is balanced by 15,000 student surveys administered by an outside research firm. It’s one thing to know the student-teacher ratio or the size of the library collection, but the surveys offer a real-world contrast, said the program coordinator Anita Baikusheva. Does your professor show up for class and make herself available for conferences? How useful is that big library collection?

    The government is already using the ranking system to dole out precious supplemental funding. “My purpose is to introduce this more competitive way of financing universities, from excellent to bad,” Ignatov said. He added that though he doesn’t yet have the legal right to say so, “next year, maybe we’ll start to cut the finances of the bad institutions.”

    Don Westerheijden, an expert on student information systems at the University of Twente in the Netherlands who acted as a consultant on the rankings, believes Bulgaria’s new system deserves a close look by other nations, including the United States. He knows of no other system that uses government tax or employment data to estimate the earning power of a college degree.

    Stanchev, for his part, wishes the rankings had been in place when he was choosing a program — he might have chosen to remain in his native country.

    This story, "Bulgaria pioneers new approach to ranking universities," was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, nonpartisan education-news outlet based at Teachers College, Columbia University. It is one in a series focused on what the United States can learn about higher education from other countries.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Libya leader to NBC: Film had 'nothing to do with' US Consulate attack
    • Royal censorship? BBC 'sorry' for daring to report queen's comments
    • China brings 1st aircraft carrier into service, joining 9-nation club
    • Two baby gorillas rescued in Congo; escalation of smuggling feared
    • Taiwanese ships clash with Japanese coast guard over disputed islands
    • Stay informed: Sign up for our newsletter

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook


    5 comments

    "Sergei Ignatov, the brash education minister of Bulgaria’s center-right government, is pushing a raft of market-based reforms aimed at raising quality, shining a light on moribund university programs..." My daughter went on a six month foray overseas to study at a French university. Signed up …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: college, europe, education, bulgaria, hechinger-report
  • 7
    Sep
    2012
    11:42am, EDT

    Thousands in Hong Kong protest China's influence on new school curriculum

    Kin Cheung / AP

    Thousands of protesters turn out outside the government headquarters in Hong Kong, on Sept. 7. Parents, teachers and pupils along with activists in the former British colony continued their protest against the government's plan to introduce a new subject "Moral and National Education" into a new curriculum, starting from new school year.

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    A child holds a sign as protesters sit near the government's headquarters in Hong Kong on Sept. 7, during a protest against plans to introduce Chinese patriotism classes.

    Tyrone Siu / Reuters

    A man gets his head shaved as a sign of protest during a demonstration against the launch of national education outside government headquarters in Hong Kong on Sept. 7.

    Reuters -- Protests in Hong Kong ahead of an election on Sunday are posing a major test for the city's new leader as voter discontent fueled by anger over perceived meddling by Beijing threatens to shake up the political landscape.

    This time round, Hong Kong's legislature will have a more democratic flavor - it has been expanded from 60 to 70 seats, with just over half of them to be directly elected.

    But the results are likely to reflect a recent upsurge in anti-China sentiment, which has been exacerbated by a plan for a school curriculum extolling the achievements of the Chinese Communist Party.

    Thousands of people have demonstrated outside government headquarters for the past week demanding the school program be scrapped, forcing Leung Chun-ying to cancel what was to have been his first major international engagement as Hong Kong's leader at an Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in Russia.

    On Friday evening, the crowds swelled further as tens of thousands of ordinary citizens, many dressed in black, denounced the curriculum as Communist Party propaganda which glossed over the darker aspects of Chinese rule, hitting a nerve in the former British colony that remains proud of its freedoms 15 years after London handed it over to Beijing.

    "I am really scared (about) this national education," said a retired fireman in the crowd with his five-year-old grandson. "They really aren't talking the truth. They are telling a lie to the children."

    The protests have included hunger strikes and the parading of a replica of the Goddess of Democracy statue which was erected in Beijing's Tiananmen Square during the 1989 demonstrations and crackdown.

    Continue reading.

    Tyrone Siu / Reuters

    Thousands protest against the launch of national education in schools outside government headquarters in Hong Kong on Sept. 7.

    Kin Cheung / AP

    Mother ties a black ribbon on her son's arm to demand withdrawal of the national education plan at a primary school in Hong Kong, on Sept. 7.

    Kin Cheung / AP

    Students show the placards reading "Withdraw" during a demonstration outside government headquarters in Hong Kong, on Sept. 7.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

    9 comments

    Way to go, people from Hong Kong, I am proud of you!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, hong-kong, education, protest, world-news
  • 4
    Sep
    2012
    7:27am, EDT

    Hong Kong protests grow against China 'brainwashing' in schools

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    Students set up a banner in front of the Central Government Complex in Hong Kong on September 4, 2012 as students and teachers protested for a sixth straight day against plans to introduce Chinese patriotism classes. Protesters at the government headquarters said they would not vote for parties that supported "national education", which they say is a bid to brainwash children with Chinese Communist Party propaganda.

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    A student on hunger strike, left, has his blood pressure checked in front of the Central Government Complex in Hong Kong on September 4, 2012.

    Reuters reports — Thousands of protesters surrounded Hong Kong's government headquarters on Monday over a plan to introduce a pro-China school curriculum that they describe as an attempt to brainwash students.

    More news and analysis from China on Behind the Wall

    Chanting "No to brainwashing education. Withdraw national education", some 8000 people denounced a Hong Kong government-funded booklet entitled "The China Model" they say glorifies China's single Communist party rule while glossing over more brutal aspects of its rule and political controversies. Read the full story.

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    Students shout slogans in front of the Central Government Offices in Hong Kong on September 3, 2012.

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images

    Students paint banners in front of the Central Government Complex in Hong Kong on September 4, 2012.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

     

    2 comments

    The same thing is happening here. Except it is Obama and the Liberals who are indoctrinating the kids.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, hong-kong, asia, education, protest, world-news
  • 12
    Aug
    2012
    6:51am, EDT

    Report: Paper reveals Taliban softening stance on girls' education

    Shah Marai / AFP - Getty Images

    Schoolgirls walk in the village of Istalif north of Kabul in May, 2012. Afghan girls have been legally free to attend school since the Taliban was toppled in 2001. But vicious militant attacks, a lack of adequate facilities and teachers, and a tradition which holds that girls belong in the home are some of the obstacles which they need to overcome.

    By F. Brinley Bruton and wire reports

    Leaders of the Afghan Taliban have pledged to promote women's education as part of an apparent attempt to restart peace talks with the West, according to a document seen by a British newspaper.

    "Women are also a big part of our human society," the document shown to The Sunday Times states. (Newspaper operates behind a paywall).


    "The Islamic emirate will create a level ground for women's education in light of its constitution," according to the document written in Pashto, the language spoken by the vast majority of the Taliban's members, the newspaper reported.

    During its years in power, the austere and deeply conservative Sunni Muslim Taliban shuttered girls' schools and stopped women from working outside the home.  Now, millions of Afghan girls attend school, but vicious militant attacks, a lack of adequate facilities and teachers, and a tradition that holds that girls belong in the home stop many others from getting an education. 

    A crowd is seen cheering after watching the public execution of a woman accused of adultery. Warning: Viewers may find this video disturbing.

    The paper obtained by The Times could not be independently verified and it was not thought to be directly linked to peace talks.  However, it did show current thinking among the leaders of the group, according to the newspaper.

    The newspaper reported that a go-between who claimed to have links to the Quetta shura -- the Taliban's leadership council based in neighboring Pakistan -- had provided it the policy paper. 

    Afghan police commander leads defection to Taliban

    Last week, the Obama administration, in a move aimed at reviving Afghan peace talks, reportedly sweetened a proposed deal under which it would transfer Taliban detainees from Guantanamo Bay prison in exchange for Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl, the only U.S. prisoner of war who is being held by Taliban allies in Pakistan.

    Neera Tanden of the Center for American Progress talks about the growing outrage over a video of Taliban militants executing a 22-year-old woman accused of adultery. Tanden also shares her thoughts on Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's powerful plea for the rights on women in Afghanistan.

    The revised proposal, a concession from an earlier U.S. offer, would alter the sequence of the move of five senior Taliban figures held for years at the U.S. military prison to the Gulf state of Qatar, sources familiar with the case told Reuters.

    Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

     The three-page document shown to the Times also seemed to be making assurances to the Afghan army, which has received extensive training from the United States, saying it was effective in "guaranteeing national security," the Times said. 

    It did warn that a Taliban-led government would "prohibit" the military from meddling in politics, the newspaper added.

    Afghan bomber kills senior Army leader, 2 majors


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    According to the Times, the paper "shows a clear desire by the Taliban to enter a political process when NATO combat troops complete their withdrawal at the end of 2014, and sets out a plan for an electoral system which, it says, would ensure fair representation for minority ethnic groups." 

    Minority ethnic and religious groups -- in particular Shiite Hazaras -- were brutally oppressed by the Taliban, which was ousted by U.S.-backed Afghan forces 2001.   

    The document also said the Taliban opposed terrorist groups such as al-Qaida, which it sheltered in the years leading up to the 9/11 attacks on the United States. 

    Karzai: a ‘prisoner in his palace’?

    "We condemn terrorism ... and consider it our duty to fight terrorism and corruption," the document stated, according to the newspaper.

    "Our poor nation is the victim of this terrorism," the paper added.

    Afghanistan is not only one of the world's poorest nations despite billions in foreign aid spent there since the Taliban was toppled, it is also considered to be one of the most corrupt, according to Transparency International. 

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Powerful earthquakes strike Iran, killing at least 180, destroying villages
    • US, Turkey explore no-fly zones over Syria
    • Olympic heroes turn tourists as London 2012 end nears
    • 'There will be no winner in Syria,' UN chief warns
    • Three US special ops troops killed, Afghan officials say
    • Body found at home of missing UK girl's grandmother
    • Day at Olympics well worth $1,000 for family of four, NJ fans say
    • Notorious Colombian druglord arrested, headed to US for trial
    • Who'll win the gold medal for partying? Olympians let hair down
    • One year after London riots, a family still grapples with fallout

     

    97 comments

    I have a bridge in Brooklyn for sale.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: army, taliban, al-qaida, nato, education, corruption, girls, featured, schooling, pashto
  • 1
    Aug
    2012
    11:57am, EDT

    A Ramadan day in the life

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    Muslim boy Sabir Ali, aged 8, looks across Kathmandu from a balcony during the Islamic fasting month of Ramadan at the Jamia school in the Nepali capital on July 27, 2012.

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    Mohamad Udin Sekh, aged 12, a Jamia school pupil from Janakpur village in eastern Nepal.

    Narendra Shrestha of the European Pressphoto Agency reports — The fasting month of Ramadan is a testing time for the young students of the Jamia Gaushia Ahsanual Barkat Islamic boys' school in Kathmandu, because they have to refrain from consuming food and drinking water from sunrise until sunset. About 30 students from around Nepal as well as neighboring India are accommodated, many of them from poor families. 

    Their everyday ritual for the month begins at around 3 a.m. when they wake and freshen up for sehari (or suhoor), their morning meal. At around 4:30 a.m. they attend morning prayer, a process that is repeated at 1, 5, 7 and 8 p.m.

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    Schoolboys read textbooks at the Jamia school.

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    Boys attend the afternoon prayer.

    During the day the students attend their regular classes but according to Mohamad Aslam, a school official, the boys are less interested in studying than usual and the teachers do not force them to attend. Hence, most of the time they play, chat and read the Quran. After sunset, they sit together for aftari (or iftar), the evening meal. 

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    A schoolboy sleeps with an Islamic textbook covering his face.

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    A group of boys play in a courtyard of the Jamia school.

    Each student pays 2,000 to 3,500 Nepalese Rupees ($22 to $39) per month to cover tuition, food and accommodation at the school, which offers education from nursery to eighth grade. Apart from Islamic studies, Urdu and Arabic language classes, the school also provides English and math classes. After completing their education, two students each year get the opportunity to travel to Egypt for higher education.

     

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    The boys pray before eating 'aftari' (or iftar), the evening meal with fruits, vegetables and sweets, which breaks their daily fast.

    Narendra Shrestha / EPA

    The boys prepare to go to bed.

    Related content:

    • Dawn to dusk Ramadan fasting challenges Muslims in Arctic
    • Google brings Ramadan traditions online
    • Tennessee Muslims feel blessed this Ramadan
    • More pictures of Ramadan on PhotoBlog

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

     

    4 comments

    This story is crap and imaginary one! MSNBC should maintain some standards and not publish these sorts of imaginary BS stories, which are completly opposite of realities. By now most non-Muslims know the dangers from followers of Isalmic cult!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: muslim, ramadan, religion, education, nepal, south-asia, islam, world-news, featured, kathmandu
  • 16
    Jul
    2012
    8:00am, EDT

    Teachers end up in detention after Kashmir protest

    Mukhtar Khan / AP

    Indian policemen detain a Kashmiri teacher during a protest in Srinagar on July 16, 2012.

    Police in Indian-controlled Kashmir detained dozens of government teachers during a protest on Monday, The Associated Press reports. The teachers had taken to the streets demanding a hike in salary and regularization of their jobs. 

    Tauseef Mustafa / AFP - Getty Images

    A teacher holds a placard during a protest in Srinagar on July 16, 2012. 50 Rupees equals $0.90 USD.

    Fayaz Kabli / Reuters

    A Kashmiri government teacher inside a police van after he was detained during a protest in Srinagar on July 16, 2012.

     

    7 comments

    The worst part is that after Romney and his Republican cronies hear about this, their Education Initiative will be to outsource American teaching to India for 90 cents a day!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: india, labor, education, protest, kashmir, south-asia, teacher, world-news, srinagar
  • 12
    Jul
    2012
    1:50pm, EDT

    Ex-pats rush to aid Syrian students abroad

    Courtesy of Mohamad al-Tabbakh

    Mohamad al-Tabbakh, a recipient of emergency education funds from Jusoor, stands outside the Arkansas Technical University Library, where he attends graduate school.

    By NBC News’ Joanna de Boer

    CAIRO – When the violence broke out in Syria, Ayham Ahmad’s parents and brother fled their home in Aleppo, Syria’s largest city with a population of 2.9 million, for neighboring Turkey. They wanted to spare their youngest son from having to enlist in the Syrian Army and turn his gun on his countrymen.

    Ahmad, 26, had left Aleppo before the conflict began to attend Syracuse University in New York to pursue a graduate degree in computer science, an opportunity not available in his own country.

    With his family unable to support him, the future he had worked so hard to achieve was in jeopardy as a result of the conflict. 

    He went to the international office at Syracuse University for guidance and they recommended that he apply for emergency funding from an organization aptly named “Jusoor” in Arabic or “Bridges” in English.  

    Their response was immediate. “It was a very good feeling when somebody called me to tell me I would be able to receive funds [for tuition], to know that people cared about my education. They really do care. I don’t know what would have happened without the funds.” His parents were relieved and grateful. At least one dream would not have to be sacrificed.

    The financial miracle was the result of the work of expatriate Syrians who decided to take action to help their fellow citizens caught in the crossfires of the conflict.

    “In Syria my mother was a professor at the University of Aleppo, my father was a mechanical engineer and my brother was studying law,” said Ahmad, in a phone interview. “But now [my brother] had to stop his education and they cannot work. My parents are living off their savings [in Turkey]. The situation is deteriorating every day. They cannot return to Syria without putting the whole family in danger.”  

    Just like the other approximately 100,000 Syrian citizens, according to the UN Refugee Agency, who have been forced to flee their country because of the violent conflict between President Bashar al-Assad and anti-government forces that began in March 2001, Ahmad’s family faces an uncertain future.  

    A cause everyone believes in: education
    “We wanted to do something. The situation in Syria was urgent, people really want to help but don’t know how. Jussor is an outlet,” said Dania Ismail, co-founder of Jussor and a Dubai resident, in a phone interview. “We don’t take sides on politics or religion, and people appreciate having a way to help without getting entangled with politics.”

    Ismail and her colleagues knew they wanted to focus on what unites people rather than on what divides them.

    Courtesy Jusoor

    Attendees view art in Dubai at an auction hosted by Jusoor aimed at raising funds for Syrian students studying abroad on May 25, 2012.

    “Jusoor has brought the Syrian community together behind a cause that everybody believes in: education,” explained New York based co-founder Rania Succar.

    Their mission is to mobilize the expatriate community to invest in the next generation of Syrians who are studying or want to study abroad.

    “We asked what we could do in the shortest possible time to help make that happen. It was so hard to get involved at the time. Jusoor was a way for us to make a difference in the short-term as well as the long-term,” said Succar, a Harvard graduate, over the phone.

    Members provide mentorship for those who want to study overseas and need guidance, they raise emergency funding for those caught midway through their foreign studies with no access to funds due to sanctions and job loss, and solicit scholarships for talented students who face a life of fear and danger if they stay home. In order to raise funds, they held an auction of donated Syrian artwork in Dubai and have reached out to potential donors. 

    The mentorship program, which is currently working with about 90 applicants, matches Syrian students who want to study abroad with those who have already worked their way through the maze of standardized tests, college selection and visa applications to gain admission overseas.

    “It is a very simple thing you are giving these students by joining the program: time,” said Ismail.

    Jusoor’s Emergency Aid program has had the largest impact. Jusoor has partnered with the Institute of International Education to raise $50,000 to support 50 Syrian university students studying in the U.S. with emergency financing to help them continue their education when the crisis in Syria undermined their financial support.

    “It has been the most impactful thing we have done,” said Ismail.

    ‘Syrian students are not left alone’
    Mohamad Al-Tabbakh, a 28-year-old graduate student from Aleppo, received emergency funding to continue his emergency management studies at Arkansas Technical University.  

    “When Jusoor provided this scholarship it was in a very professional way. They did not ask what my attitude to the crisis was, or my background. It was given to me as a Syrian student only, without any other considerations. That was wonderful. For me as a student, Jusoor and the emergency funding they provided made me feel like Syrian students are not left alone.”

    For students like Ahmad, the opportunity to study in the U.S. is priceless. 

    Courtesy of Malda Takieddine

    Malda Takieddine, a recipient of emergency education funds from Jusoor, attends graduate school in Seattle Washington.

    "The U.S. provides the best education; it is advanced. Sadly in Syria the education is on a whole different level. Education is one of the reasons why the students were part of the [Arab Spring] uprising,” said Ahmad. “We demanded a better education. I am so happy to be able to continue in the U.S. and not lose this opportunity that I have right now.” 

    Ahmad returned to Syria shortly after the crisis began and took to the streets with other young protesters in the struggle for a better quality of life.

    “As a student I was part of the uprising in Syria. We were peaceful protesters; the only thing I took to the street was a bottle of water, so that I would never lose my voice.” Ahmad was fortunate and left Syria before the situation deteriorated. He has not been able to return since.

    Al-Tabbakh would like all Syrians to share the freedom he now enjoys in Arkansas. “In America I am free, I can do anything. Here I have the freedom Syrians are fighting for.”


    Follow @msnbc_world

    Malda Takieddine is trying to look beyond the bombed-out buildings and besieged neighborhoods in Syria to a day when she can help create a lush and landscaped future for her country. Takieddine, a 25-year-old graduate student studying landscape architecture at the University of Washington, also received emergency aid from Jussor.

    “I will return to Syria after things calm down. I want to work in landscape architecture. We [Syrians] definitely need this,” said Takieddine. "This is the only thing we can do now. The most important thing for Syrian people is to build our education in order to build our future. It is crucial to the process of development.” 

    Along with Al-Tabbakh and Ahmad, Takieddine intends to join the mentorship program to help other hopeful applicants have the same chance at a bright future, despite a bleak present.

    NBC News Charlene Gubash contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Briton charged with fraud over bomb detectors
    • China offers bounty for piranhas, dead or alive
    • Avalanche kills at least 9 in French Alps
    • North Korea mystery woman: A possible new first lady?
    • Tsunami debris adds to 'Great Pacific Garbage Patch'
    • Guantanamo detainee who served bin Laden returns to Sudan

    Follow World News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    23 comments

    Just a reminder that we Americans have a precious country that foreigners sometimes appreciate even more than we do. America still remains a beacon of light to millions abroad. Let's put aside our political differences and focus on this great gift of a country.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: education, syria, students, scholarships, featured, ex-pats, joanna-de-boer
  • 8
    Jun
    2012
    7:22am, EDT

    A day of anxious waiting for parents in China as students take college entrance exams

    AP

    Parents wait outside a closed gate of a school where their children are taking the annual national college entrance exams in Fuyang, in central China's Anhui province, June 7.

    Carlos Barria / AFP - Getty Images

    Parents wait outside the Shanghai No.1 High School during the first day of the China's annual national college entrance exam in Shanghai June 7,

    AFP - Getty Images

    Chinese parent wait as their children take the tough college entrance exams or Gaokao, in Wuhan, central China's Hubei province on June 7.

    Carlos Barria / AFP - Getty Images

    A happy mother greeting her daughter after finishing the first day of the tough college entrance exams or Gaokao, in Beijing, June 7.

    Carlos Barria / Reuters

    A student and her father leave Shanghai No.1 High School after finishing China's annual national college entrance exam in Shanghai, June 8.

    Carlos Barria / Reuters

    A student and her mother leave Shanghai No.1 High School after finishing China's annual national college entrance exam in Shanghai June 8.

    More than 9 million students sat China's notoriously tough college entrance exams with "high-flyer" rooms, nannies and even intravenous drips among the tools being employed for success, and with just 6.85 million university spots on offer this year, competition for the top institutions is intense, and attempts to cheat are rife -- 1,500 people have been arrested on suspicion of selling transmitters and hard-to-detect ear pieces.   

    More photos on PhotoBlog of Chinese students taking their entrance exams in 2011.

    2 comments

    China is really coming of age... and in the last 2 decades the population is reaping the benefits of good government while we are suffering from just the opposite.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, education, students, world-news, entrance-exams, college-exams
  • 17
    May
    2012
    6:37am, EDT

    Quebec moves to restore order as striking students clash with police

    Rogerio Barbosa / AFP - Getty Images

    A student protester in a panda suit confronts a policeman in downtown Montreal on May 17, 2012. The students are striking over a planned tuition hike of 82 percent or over $1,700 as part of the government's efforts to rein in a budget deficit.

    Reuters reports — Quebec's government moved late on Wednesday to end a sometimes violent 14-week mass student strike in the Canadian province that officials fear could harm the economy and deter tourists.

    Rogerio Barbosa / AFP - Getty Images

    Policemen aim a teargas gun.

    Premier Jean Charest said his government would shortly unveil legislation to ensure students could freely attend classes, although he did not give details. He did not address speculation that the bill would allow strikers to be fined.

    "It is time calm was restored ... the current situation has gone on for too long," Charest said in a late-night statement to reporters.

    Some 155,000 people - more than a third of the college and university students in the predominantly French-speaking province - are striking to protest against a steep rise in what are some of the lowest tuition fees in north America. Read the full story.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Rogerio Barbosa / AFP - Getty Images

    Rogerio Barbosa / AFP - Getty Images

    Policemen restrain a student protester.

     

    15 comments

    I can see why Canada would want to raise tuition.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: canada, economy, student, strike, education, police, protest, americas, quebec, world-news, montreal
  • 16
    May
    2012
    4:57pm, EDT

    Italian university to switch to English-only classes

    By Sevil Omer, NBC News

    One of Italy’s leading universities will switch to teaching in the English language, saying the institution was left with “no other choice” in order to compete worldwide.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Politecnico di Milano announced it will offer most of its degree courses only in English as of 2014, the BBC reported. The decision has sparked protest among some professors, with one likening the move to a "dictatorship," according to the University World News.

    Politecnico di Milano, known for its architecture, engineering and science programs, has about 36,000 students.


    "Universities are in a more competitive world, if you want to stay with the other global universities -- you have no other choice," the BBC quoted the university's rector, Giovanni Azzone, as saying. "We strongly believe our classes should be international classes -- and the only way to have international classes is to use the English language."

    Nic Mitchell, a public relations consultant focused on higher education, told the BBC that more than 4,500 university courses are being taught in English in continental Europe.

    At least 285 professors signed a petition this week protesting the Politecnico di Milano decision, arguing the imposition of English as unconstitutional.

    “The point is that English is being imposed on students as a kind of linguistic dictatorship ... and what we might call ‘low-definition’ English (the English of conferences and so on) is also being confused with the ‘high-definition’ language of teaching," Politecnico Professor Emilio Matricciani said, according to the University World News.

    He added: "Speaking Italian to our countrymen is like watching a movie in color, high definition, very clear pictures. On the contrary, speaking English to them, even with our best effort, is, on the average, like watching a movie in black and white, with very poor definition, with blurred pictures."

    Word spread fast on social network sites, with people commenting in English and in Italian.

    “Beginning of the end for Italian. The Politecnico di Milano will teach only in English. Non scholae sed vitae discimus,” Dan McDougall posted on his Twitter account.

    Alex Morrison wrote: “Politecnico di Milano to teach all classes in English - what a great place to study - sign me up for a PhD now!”

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Veterans to return war medals in protest
    • 'Mama bear' sued by church over online criticism
    • Mother of homeless man beaten by cops gets $1M settlement
    • US has 55 daily encounters with 'suspected terrorists'
    • Video: Dad of sole plane crash survivor: It's a miracle

    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    37 comments

    You gotta love it - here in America everybody is speaking all kinds of languages, yet in other countries they do it and never look back.....why can't America just pass an English only law and stop all this nonsense: press 1 for english, 2 for spanish, etc. etc. etc.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: education, bbc, italian, milan, english-only, politecnico, azzone
Newer postsOlder posts

Browse

  • featured,
  • world-news,
  • syria,
  • europe,
  • china,
  • afghanistan,
  • world,
  • middle-east,
  • israel,
  • pakistan,
  • egypt,
  • iran,
  • updated,
  • russia,
  • uk,
  • north-korea,
  • africa,
  • london,
  • military,
  • assad,
  • france,
  • protest,
  • environment,
  • al-qaida,
  • britain,
  • taliban,
  • italy,
  • nuclear,
  • terrorism,
  • india,
  • asia,
  • germany,
  • japan,
  • vatican,
  • economy,
  • human-rights,
  • crime,
  • south-africa,
  • mexico,
  • pope
Also
Advertise | AdChoices

Sevil Omer

Archives

  • 2013
    • May (195)
    • April (275)
    • March (432)
    • February (332)
    • January (323)
  • 2012
    • December (332)
    • November (332)
    • October (313)
    • September (360)
    • August (362)
    • July (310)
    • June (351)
    • May (427)
    • April (404)
    • March (427)
    • February (347)
    • January (284)
  • 2011
    • December (357)
    • November (3)

Most Commented

  • 'Leave our lands': Man knifed to death in suspected London terror attack (1241)
  • Sweden riots: Cops seek reinforcements, US citizens warned (1177)
  • UK mom calms man with blood-soaked knife after suspected deadly terror attack (1003)
  • Slain London soldier was 'loving father' who served in Afghanistan (783)
  • Sweden stunned by third night of rioting (632)
  • Wife of slain British soldier says she thought he was 'safe' back in UK (544)
  • North Korea fires more missiles, condemns US and South for 'war measures' (514)

Other blogs

  • The Body Odd
  • Cosmic Log
  • Red Tape Chronicles
  • PhotoBlog
  • US News
  • Open Channel

NBCNews.com top stories

3147,10
© 2013 NBCNews.com
  • World news on NBCNews.com
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Help
  • Site map
  • Careers
  • Closed captioning
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Advertise