Schools in plantation: Best Plantation Schools | Plantation, FL School Ratings

Опубликовано: July 18, 2023 в 4:19 am

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Plantation Elementary / Homepage


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Plantation Elementary

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  • Monday, June 12, 2023
    More than 100 eligible graduating seniors from the Class of 2023, who receive services from HEART, participate in a celebration where they are equipped with dorm room essentials as they embark on their post-secondary education or military journey.


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  • Thursday, June 8, 2023
    Congratulations to the class of 2023, we celebrate YOU by honoring your outstanding accomplishments.


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  • Tuesday, June 6, 2023
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  • Friday, June 2, 2023
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  • Thursday, June 1, 2023
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  • BCPS Parent Survey
  • Safety, Security & Emergency Preparedness
  • Need Help Now
    • Your First Call For Help (24 Hrs) – DIAL 211
    • Anonymous Tips – CALL 754-321-3500
    • Bullying – Call School Administrator
    • Lifeline – CALL 1-800-273-8255
    • Suicide Prevention – DIAL 211
    • Suicide Prevention (BCPS) 754-321-1590
    • Mental Health and Wellness
    • Mental Health – CALL 754-321-1590
    • Physical Health – CALL 754-321-1590
    • CareDox – CALL 754-321-1575
    • Student Support
    • Attendance
    • Discipline Matrix
    • Need Academic Help – Call Guidance Dept.
    • Need Classroom Help- Call School Administrator
    • Important District Numbers
  • Get Involved With Your Child
    • Free District Mobile App
    • Naviance – College & Career Planning
    • Pinnacle Gradebook
    • Right To Appeal
    • Single Sign-On
    • Volunteer
  • School Improvement Plan (SIP)
  • School Resource Locator
  • FL Department of Education School Report Card
  • Registration, Boundary, and Transportation
    • Boundary Process
    • Online School Forms
    • Registration
    • School Boundary Maps
    • School Choice
    • School Feeder Patterns
    • School Locator
    • Transportation
  • Student Volunteer Forms
    • Student Volunteer Information
    • Volunteer Application Form
    • Student Volunteer Log Sheet (PDF)
  • Food and Nutrition
    • Free and Reduced Lunch
    • Menus
    • Online Meal Payments
  • Online School Payments
  • Programs
    • Exceptional Student Learning Support (formerly ESE)
    • ESOL
    • Gifted and Talented
    • Head Start / VPK
    • Title 1
  • Academics
    • Graduation Requirements
    • Free Microsoft Office Student Advantage
    • Gifted and Talented
    • Florida Standards Assessments (FSA)
    • End-of-Course Assessments (EOC)
  • Selected Policies
    • All Policies
    • Attendance
    • Anti-Bullying
    • Code of Student Conduct
    • Discipline
    • Emergency Codes Prevention & Preparedness
    • Progression Plan – Policy 6000. 1
    • Homework
    • Tobacco
  • District Information
    • District Website
    • District Advisories & Committees
    • Now Hiring
    • Legislative Information

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Burning Africa. Kenya and Uganda. Part 4. African school and tea plantation LIPTON TEA

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school and tea plantation LIPTON TEA.

The education system in Kenya is implemented according to the following scheme: 8 years of primary school, 4 years of secondary school and 4 years of higher education. Schools are separate for girls and separate for boys. I happened to be in a school for boys. By the way, the set of subjects is quite impressive. Here they teach languages, religious studies and crafts, and this is not a complete list. The end of each stage is accompanied by the passing of exams, followed by the issuance of a certificate. Further, secondary education can be obtained in a private, public or church school. Good students and excellent students go to public school. Three students find a place in a church school. And studying in a private school is very expensive. In the classroom, students sit at almost homemade desks.

And here is the photo:

The students were happy to see us.

Photos of teachers:

After visiting the school and getting to know the teachers and students, I went to the LIPTON TEA tea plantation.

The tea plantation is called KERENGA.

The tea grown here goes to the LIPTON TEA brand:

“In Africa, the largest producer and exporter of tea is Kenya. As a former British colony, Kenya received a culture of tea production from the British, who in 1903 in Limuru the first plantation of the Assam tea plant. Then, through the efforts of local tribes, plantations arose in the mountainous regions of Kericho and Nandi.
After the Second World War, the British began to expand tea production here, but there was a struggle for the country’s independence, which ended with the proclamation of Kenya in 1964 as a republic. In the same year, the Kenya Tea Development Authority was established, and over the years, tea production, along with coffee production, has been developed into a leading agricultural and export industry. It relied mainly on small private property in the circle of local tribes and grew at a rapid pace.
The history of Kenyan tea growing dates back to 1903, when the first tea plantation was founded by the English colonizers. But only in 1925 the country was able to put tea production on an industrial basis. In this, she was helped by the English companies Brook Bond and James Finley, who began to invest capital from India in local tea growing.
Today, the Tea Council of Kenya directs the activities of nearly 270,000 smallholders who grow tea on over 110,000 hectares of tea plantations. In total, about 2 million people are directly or indirectly employed in the tea industry. The volume of tea produced annually reaches 240 thousand tons.
The main tea plantations are located on the plateaus on both sides of the Great Rift Valley. Here, in the south-west of the country, on plantations around the tea capital of Kenya, the city of Kericho, at an altitude of 1500-2800 meters above sea level, nature has created excellent conditions for vegetation. Warm rains and increased air humidity caused by the nearby Lake Victoria contribute to the year-round growth of tea bushes. Tea is harvested regularly throughout the year, every 17 days.
The consistent high quality of Kenyan tea is one of the main reasons for its steady growth in popularity. At 19In 1996, Kenya took away the laurels of the world’s largest exporter from Sri Lanka. It produced 257.4 million kilograms of tea, offering 244.5 million kilograms for export, one million more than second place Sri Lanka. Basically, Kenyan tea is produced using CTC technology, and only a small number of teas are produced using traditional technology. Today, Kenya holds the third place in the world in terms of black tea production, behind only India and Sri Lanka.”

After visiting a tea plantation and buying a few packs of tea, I went towards Lake Victoria…

Read more articles about Kenya:

Burning Africa . Kenya and Uganda. Part 1. Nairobi

Burning Africa. Kenya and Uganda. Part 2. Nairobi National Park

Burning Africa. Kenya and Uganda. Part 3. Great Rift Valley and Pelican Lake

Burning Africa. Kenya and Uganda. Part 5. Lake Victoria and the Equator

Gastronomic delights of Israel and Africa OR what I ate

Burning Africa. Kenya and Uganda. Part 8. Kenyan province

Burning Africa. Kenya and Uganda. Part 9. Faces of Africa

Burning Africa. Kenya and Uganda. Part 10. Happy End

Burning Africa. Kenya and Uganda. Epilogue. Africa in pictures

Tags: Kenya

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  • Why Africa? Hello Nairobi!

    If you are fed up with the daily routine and the work has got in your throat so that you no longer have the strength to endure it, then, as smart psychologists advise, urgently …

  • Burning Africa. Kenya and Uganda. Epilogue. Africa in pictures

    I saw pictures of Africa in Tomsk and felt a little melancholy, remembering my most distant journey. Read other articles about Kenya:…

  • Burning Africa. Kenya and Uganda. Part 10. Happy End

    And finally, finishing my trip to Africa, I would like to show you one video. It conveys the spirit of Africa very well. I hope you love…

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  • Why Africa? Hello Nairobi!

    If you are fed up with the daily routine and the work has gotten so hard that you can’t endure it, then, as smart psychologists advise, urgently …

  • Burning Africa. Kenya and Uganda. Epilogue. Africa in pictures

    I saw pictures of Africa in Tomsk and felt a little melancholy, remembering my most distant journey. Read other articles about Kenya:…

  • Burning Africa. Kenya and Uganda. Part 10. Happy End

    And finally, finishing my trip to Africa, I would like to show you one video. It conveys the spirit of Africa very well. I hope you love…

Basic information | Municipal general educational budgetary institution secondary school No. 78 of the city of Sochi named after Kulikov Nikolai Yakovlevich

Full name – Municipal educational budgetary institution secondary school No. 78 of the city of Sochi named after Kulikov Nikolai Yakovlevich

Abbreviated name – MOBU SOSH № 78 im. Kulikova N.Ya.

Date of establishment of the educational organization – 1963

The founder of NGO is the Administration of the city of Sochi (354000, Sochi, Sovetskaya st., 26). All information can be obtained at the link www.sochiadm.ru

Head of UON – Medvedeva Olga Nikolaevna (264-70-24), head of LTOUON – Gnusareva Anastasia Ivanovna (270-25-19).

On behalf of the Sochi city administration, the functions of the Founder are carried out by:

  • Department of property relations of the Sochi city administration in terms of providing MOBU secondary school No. 78 with property;
  • Department for Education and Science of the Administration of the City of Sochi (Sochi, Yunykh Lenintsev St., 5) in terms of determining the structure, goals and objectives of the MOBU secondary school No. 78 in Sochi.

Location: 354202, Sochi, Tsentralnaya St., 93a

School hours: Monday – Saturday from 8. 00 to 17.00

The school works in one shift. Grades 1-9 – a five-day school week, grades 10-11 – a six-day school week.

tel/fax (862) 274-12-41

E-mail: [email protected]

Place of educational activity: 354202, Sochi, Tsentralnaya st., 93a

consisted of four classrooms. The corridor served as a gym. Every year, the parents added two classrooms to the school. In two or three years, they managed to build four classrooms, a dining room, a canteen and a kitchen. But still there was not enough space, it was necessary to erect a new building.

By the decision of the Krasnodar City Executive Committee, the Lazarevsky district passed to the city of Sochi and school No. 5 became school No. 78. The state ensured the construction of a new school in Golovinka. Money was allocated from the budget only for materials. It was decided to build in an economic way. The whole team, the whole school was involved in the construction: children, their parents, teachers. The school began to be erected on the site where there used to be a tobacco plantation. According to the project, the school was to be built for three years, and the project was completed in more than a year. At 19The construction of the school was completed in 1963.

The first director of Golovinka School No. 78 was Khlechas Suli Muratovich, who was the initiator of the construction.

In the 1970s and 1980s, labor and vocational training was a priority at the school: during two years of study, students received the specialties of a car mechanic and a driver.

09/26/1995 – secondary school No. 78 was established in the municipal educational institution “Secondary (complete) secondary school No. 78” (decree of the head of the administration of the Lazarevsky district of Sochi dated September 26.1995 registration number 1015).

06/14/2000 – the municipal educational institution “Secondary (complete) general education school No. 78” was renamed into the municipal educational institution “Secondary school No. 78″ (order of the MU “Registration and Licensing Chamber of the City of Sochi” dated 14.06.2000 No. 2409).

11/14/2005 – the municipal educational institution “Secondary school No. 78” was renamed into the municipal educational institution secondary school No. 78 in Sochi (Decree of the Head of the city of Sochi dated November 14, 2005 No. 3287).

12/31/2010 – the name of the municipal educational institution “Secondary School No. 78” was changed to the municipal educational budgetary institution “Secondary School No. 78 of Sochi” (Decree of the Administration of the City of Sochi dated December 31, 2010 No. 2412).

05/22/2019 – the name “Municipal educational institution secondary school No. 78 in Sochi” was changed to “municipal educational budgetary institution secondary school No. 78 in Sochi named after Nikolay Yakovlevich Kulikov” (Decree of the Sochi city administration dated 05/22/2019city ​​No. 786).

04/20/2022 – the name “Municipal educational institution secondary school No. 78 of Sochi named after Kulikov Nikolai Yakovlevich” was changed to “municipal educational budgetary institution secondary school No. 78 of the city of Sochi named after Nikolai Yakovlevich Kulikov” (decree of the administration of the municipality of the urban district of the city-resort of Sochi Krasnodarsky edge dated April 20, 2022 No. 1135).

The school was named after Nikolai Yakovlevich Kulikov, an honorary worker of general education of the Russian Federation, who was awarded six medals of the USSR and Russia, as well as medals of “People’s Recognition and Pedagogical Labor”. N.Ya. Kulikov, a teacher with half a century of teaching experience, enjoyed well-deserved respect, authority and honor in the Lazarevsky district: three generations of residents went through his lessons in labor education, exactingness, responsibility and patriotism.

In 2017, a major overhaul of the school foyer was carried out, and in 2018, the 2nd and 3rd floors, recreation areas, classrooms, the sports hall and the facade of the school were renovated.

During the 55 years of the history of the school, it was headed by respected people of the Lazarevsky district:

– Khlechas Suli Muratovich;

– Petr Alekseevich Spiridonov;

– Shalney Nikolay Lvovich;

– Polskaya Galina Petrovna;

– Ganicheva Galina Sergeevna;

– Adamyan Lyudmila Alekseevna;

– Pashkova Vera Nikolaevna;

– Yakunichkin Alexey Petrovich;

– Gvasheva Fatima Ramazanovna;

– Kochergina Natalya Evgenievna;

– Kuznetsova Marina Vilievna.

Veteran teachers who have contributed to the education and upbringing of many generations of students still work at the school:

– Savina Lyudmila Alekseevna;

– Eremenko Elena Anatolyevna;

– Khusht Kerim Makhmudovich.

MOBU secondary school No. 78, Sochi im. Kulikova N.Ya. not only provides knowledge, but also helps children adapt in society, learn to resolve conflict situations, behave correctly in a team, and build friendly relations.