Sastanaqqam presented a Masterstroke event at the VOCO hotel in Dubai

Coming straight from North Africa, the Sastanaqqam team accomplished the feat of a successful event in Dubai.

On Monday, 10/10/2022, the Nomads of Sastanaqqam presented at the VOCO hotel in Dubai, an absolute masterstroke for a first event, having a simple objective: a first contact and a brief presentation about the ecosystem of the company. The return of the public was unprecedented!

What is Sastanaqqam?

Sastanaqqam is a project that launched as a result of NFTs going mainstream.

The project started when Sastanaqqam explored how to switch from a traditional business model — in art and art collecting — to a decentralised one using blockchain technologies.

From this vision was born a range of projects to be developed around this, such as the Wallet, native token (Blue Token), Marketplace, NFT RentalPlace, Virtual Museum, Staking Platform, and P2E Games. In this, other articles, Whitepaper and Pitch Decks, Sastanaqqam explore every aspect of the project in more detail: showing you what you can experience and benefit from on the Sastana Platform.

What’s Sastanaqqam’s Vision & Goals?

Artwork should be accessible to everyone, and artists should have a much wider audience. At  Sastanaqqam, they want to make that vision a reality. Sastanaqqam is more than just a project. It’s an ecosystem. Within that ecosystem are five parts.

Everything in this ecosystem is connected through the Blue Token — their native crypto-token — and crypto-based Wallet. Here are the five parts of the ecosystem, and we will explore each one of

them in more details below:

• NFT Rental Place

• NFT Marketplace

• Virtual Museum

• Staking Platform and Launchpad (Staking-as-a-Service)

• Blockchain-based P2E Games

The goal for every part of the project, every individual business unit, is to grow and manage them the traditional way while leveraging modern technology. Sastnaqqam wants every aspect of the business to be sustainable on its own, with the aim of becoming profitable within 12 months.

In turn, this will make the overall project stronger and Blue Token viable as a stand-alone cryptocurrency. Only then Sastanaqqam will seek external investment after reaching growth milestones. Sastnaqqam is building the business to make it more valuable and useful for customers, users, artists, art promoters, games players, and business clients and partners within its expanding artistic ecosystem.

About Sastanaqqam 

As the project is still in development, final returns are not available.

On the other hand, all Sastanaqqam projects have their own showcase site with their Whitepapers inside as well as a panoply of social networks.

According to the editors, Sastanaqqam has not finished surprising us, let’s look forward to this promising Web 3.0 project !

 

Art of the Americas Presented at Florida International University

 Florida International University introduces Art of the Americas.

Twenty-four scholars around the globe and a myriad of world-class artists collaborated with a South Florida art teacher to reach out to children with art from their cultures (Venezuela, Colombia, Chile, Peru, Brazil, Argentina, Cuba, Puerto Rico, Haiti, Dominican Republic, Mexico, Guatemala, and the United States). On June 22-23, Florida International University’s Kimberly Green Latin American and Caribbean Center will host Rebecca Hinson who will present “Creating the Children’s Book Series Art of the Americas and How You Can Create Yours,” in Room 220 of the MMC Green Library from 1:00-4:00.

For four years, LACC has funded the development of Hinson’s twelve South American children’s art books for grades 3-8 under their U.S. Department of Education Title VI NRC grant. As a part of the grant, Hinson partners with F.I.U. and Miami-Dade County Public Schools to provide professional development for teachers June 22-23.

“My kindergarten art student, Tomas, never smiled, never spoke, and never looked you in the eye. For years, I tried everything to reach out to him, but nothing worked,” stated Hinson. “In fourth grade, I taught his class about the art of Tecún Umán, a Maya prince who fought against the Spanish conquistadors. At the end of that class, Tomas rose up out of his seat. He walked over. He looked me in the eye, and he said, ‘Thank you.’ Of all the things that I had tried, it was the art of his own culture which spoke to his heart. At that point, I realized how powerful art was and felt that it should be shared. In 2010, I wrote Tecún Umán and dedicated it to Tomas Reynoso Juan, my inspiration.

“When children migrate to the United States they sometimes feel ashamed of who they are and where they came from,” stated Hinson. “Often schools lack materials which reflect their cultures of origin. My 48 children’s books instill pride in newcomers and teach them about their new country, the United States of America. I just released free audios (with pictures) of six South American books and eighteen other Caribbean, Central American, and North American books in their entirety through Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter. Follett School Solutions, Amazon, and I sell printed books in English, Spanish, and Haitian Creole.”

You can see and hear the 24 books on Instagram:

https://www.instagram.com/rebeccahinsonpublishing/?hl=en

Hinson’s titles were written for practical application in the K-12 art, history, reading, social studies, ESOL, and foreign language classrooms, with text-dependent questions for each title. Spanish editions were written by Claudia Battistel Tomada, Ph.D. and Gabriela Escobar Rodríguez, Ph.D. Haitian Creole titles were written by Jacques Pierre.

Liesl B. Picard, Associate Director of the Kimberly Green Latin American and Caribbean Center of the Steven J. Green School of International and Public Affairs of Florida International University stated, “I appreciate Rebecca’s continued partnership. I am excited to support her efforts and look forward to our continued work to promote Latin America and the Caribbean.”

“Many thanks to Liesl Picard and F.I.U. for their continued support,” stated Hinson. “I love working with M-DCPS teachers. They are very scholarly. They show up ready to work!”

“A depth of gratitude goes to my amazing editors, John Robuck, and Richard Lederer. Many thanks to Claudia Battistel Tomada, Gabriela Escobar Rodríguez, and Jacques Pierre for writing fine Spanish and Haitian Creole editions. Many thanks to the gracious scholars who guided me along the way: Marjorie Agosín, Simone Athayde, Roy Bartolomei, Guillermo Duberti, Laura Duberti, Laurent M. Dubois, Brian D. Farrell, Nora Erro-Peralta, Philippe Girard, Richard Lederer, Mary Ellen Miller, Reynaldo Ortiz-Minaya, Walter Paul, Bianca Premo, John Robuck, Inés Quintero, Michael E. Smith, Stuart Schwartz, Orin Starn, Rebecca Stone, Tomás Straka, and Edward Z. Wronsky,” stated Hinson.

“If we teach students about where they come from, reading and math scores increase. Every group and every student must feel part of the education process,” stated Dr. Bernadette Kelley.

“Can culture drive academic achievement? As a teacher, I understand that a child’s connection with their culture is a powerful tool,” stated Rebecca Hinson. “If a child sees their culture honored in my classroom, it makes school a place where they belong. If a child sees affirming representations of their culture in my classroom, it is a mirror which says, ‘I can succeed here.’ My books reflect and validate the identities of students from South America, Central America, the Caribbean, and North America, and provide a window for students to explore other cultures.”

Why multicultural art books? The best indicator of future high school graduation is this. Does a child read on grade level by the end of third grade? Of all the large urban school districts in Florida, M-DCPS has the highest third grade reading scores, in-spite of the fact that 50% of their students were born outside the U.S.A. “As educators, we understand that culture is a great motivator, especially in a county as diverse as ours,” stated Bob Brazofsky, Executive Director, Social Sciences, M-DCPS. “Exploring their heritages through authentic art excites and entices our students.”

Purchasing books for Palm Beach County School District, Dr. Cathy Pressey stated, “These books and text-dependent questions perfectly align with the Reading Standards of Informational Text and Literacy in History/Social Studies. They are an amazing resource for all students as they meet the challenges of these standards.” She said Hinson had covered cultural groups that large publishers had overlooked, “but they are definitely important.”

“These Central American, Caribbean, and South American stories tap into the prior knowledge of our immigrant students, who are learning English as a second language,” stated Mike Riley, retired Principal of South Grade Elementary in Palm Beach County, Florida. “When students see a familiar picture on the page, it supports engagement and adds meaning to their reading. The U.S.A. books also start from the ground up as they build background knowledge of U.S. history for our ELLs. The text-dependent questions challenge students to delve deeper in their comprehension of the text.”

“A book with 24 pages is less intimidating to ELL students,” stated Angela Gonzalez of the School District of Palm Beach County. “These titles are useful for close reading, read-alouds, shared reading, guided reading, and independent reading.”

Over ten percent of public school students in the United States are designated as English Language Learners. The reading achievement gaps between ELL and non-ELL students in the National Assessment of Educational Progress were 36 points at the 4th grade level and 44 points at the 8th grade level. Hinson’s books implement best practices for increasing reading comprehension of ELLs to bridge these learning gaps.

“My goals are to jump start ELLs out of the silent phase by tapping into their prior knowledge, instill pride in students’ identities by addressing their cultural disconnects, and increase ELL academic performance and graduation rates,” stated Hinson.

“Our students scour the shelves for Hinson’s books,” stated Media Specialist Sarah McKnight of the School District of Palm Beach County. “Our statistics show that their titles have high circulation rates which continue to rise.”

The U.S. Department of Education awarded LACC’s 2018 proposal, designating it a National Resource Center (NRC) and granting it a Foreign Language and Areas Studies Fellowship (FLAS) for four years. Both grants allow LACC to continue its support of research, training, and access to scholarship funds for languages and understanding of Latin America and the Caribbean. This is the thirty-ninth year LACC has been named an NRC since its founding 43 years ago.

Author Rebecca Hinson is a graduate of Duke University and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. She leads workshops in teaching literacy through multicultural art. Editor John Robuck is a journalism graduate of the University of Georgia. Editor Richard Lederer is the author of 40 books about language, history, and humor. He is the founding co-host of A Way With Words on Public Radio.

Story Sources:

Rebecca Hinson

561-267-5756

Liesl Picard

Associate Director of the Kimberly Green Latin American and Caribbean Center (LACC)

Steven J. Green School of International and Public Affairs

Florida International University

305-348-2894

Bob Brazofsky

Executive Director

Social Sciences

Miami-Dade County Public Schools

305-505-8400

305-995-1982

Angela Gonzalez

Teacher

Palm Beach County School District

561-543-6932

Claudia Battistel Tomada, Ph.D.

Spanish Translator

954-504-2736

Jacques Pierre

Haitian Creole Translator

330-235-4571

Associates:

Marjorie Agosín, Spanish, Ph.D., Indiana University

Simone Athayde, M.A. Ethnobotany, University of Kent

Claudia Battistel Tomada, Ph.D. in Spanish, Florida International University

Roy Bartolomei, M.A. in History, Harvard University

Guillermo Duberti, Doctor of Juridical Sciences, Universidad Nacional de Rosario

Laura Duberti, M.A. in International Relations, Universidad de Belgrano

Laurent M. Dubois, Ph.D. in Latin American and Caribbean History, University of Michigan

Gabriela Escobar Rodríguez, Ph.D. in Spanish, Florida International University

Brian D. Farrell, Ph. D. in Zoology and Botany, University of Maryland

Philippe Girard, Ph.D. in Latin American and Caribbean History, Ohio University

Richard Lederer, Ph.D. in Linguistics, University of New Hampshire

Mary Ellen Miller, Ph.D. in History of Art, Yale University

Reynaldo Ortiz-Minaya, Ph.D. in Sociology, Binghamton University

Walter Paul, Ph.D. Physics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Jacques Pierre, M.A. Kent State University

Bianca Premo, Ph.D. in History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

John Robuck, B.A. in Journalism, University of Georgia

Inés Quintero, Ph.D. in History, Central University of Venezuela

Michael E. Smith, Ph.D. in Anthropology, University of Illinois

Stuart Schwartz, Ph.D. in History, Columbia University

Orin Starn, Ph.D. in Anthropology, Stanford University

Rebecca Stone, Ph.D. in History of Art, Yale University

Tomás Straka, Ph.D. in History, Andrés Bello Catholic University

Edward Z. Wronsky, Jr., AIA, Master of Architecture, University of Pennsylvania

Contacts:

Rebecca Hinson

rebeccahinson@rebeccahinsonpublishing.com

561-267-5756

Lindsay Dudley

305-348-2894

Rebecca Hinson Publishing

Rebecca Hinson

561-267-5756

www.rebeccahinsonpublishing.com

ContactContact

Categories

  • Art
  • Arts & Entertainment
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  • Children & Youth
  • Education
  • Hispanic & Latino
  • K-12 Education
  • Publishing

Smt Annpurna Devi presented National ICT Awards to 49 teachers across the country


Union Minister of State for Education Smt Annpurna Devi presented National ICT Awards to 49 teachers across the country.


Speaking on the occasion, Smt Annpurna Devi said that the National Education Policy-2020 emphasizes on the extensive use of technology in teaching and learning processes, removing language barriers, increasing access for DIVYANG students along with educational planning and management.


She informed that the Information and Communication Technology [ICT] intervention under Samagra Shiksha also has a component to provide IT infrastructure to schools and Teacher Education Institutes (TEIs) to facilitate innovative use of ICT in school and teacher education leading to improved quality in all the spheres of school and teacher education.


Smt Annpurna Devi highlighted that the flagship projects to bridge the digital divide include DIKSHA, ePathshala, ICT Curriculum for teachers and students, School MOOCs on SWAYAM (Study Webs of Active Learning for Young Aspiring Minds), PMeVIDYA (One Class One Channel) and NISHTHA (National Initiative for School Heads’ and Teachers’ Holistic Advancement) integrated teacher training programme through online mode. These initiatives help in enhancing the access and outreach of technology irrespective of any social, political, economic or geographic barriers, she added.


She appreciated the role of teachers in nation building and mentioned that Guru’s are given utmost respect in Indian Society. She congratulated all the teachers being awarded today for their diligent efforts and innovation in the field of education and promoting the outreach of technology in their schools even during the COVID pandemic situation.


She further said that the recent budget announcements by the Govt. of India have provided further impetus to all the digital education initiatives.  Launching of 200 DTH TV channels, 750 Virtual labs in science and mathematics, transforming teachers as digital teachers are some of the new budget announcements of our Govt. for 2022-23.


Recognition given in the form of National Award for school teachers for use of ICT in Education indirectly contributes to motivate teachers to use ICT extensively and significantly in their classrooms through content-pedagogy and technology together.


NCERT adopts a rigorous process in inviting online applications through a dedicated portal, online self nominations by prospective candidates, receiving nominations from state/UT/Organizations level authorities, organization of National level jury meeting for final selection through jury, which is being done in a transparent manner.


It has now been envisaged to extend this Award to the Teacher Educators (School Complexes, CRCs, BRCs, BIETs, DIETs, CTEs/IASEs, SCERTs/SIEs, SIETs, SIEMAT etc. and for the States & UTs for their best practices.


These ICT Awardees are also being bestowed with a responsibility to function as ICT Ambassadors in widening the outreach of ICT in Education through their continuous efforts by mentoring other teachers and also develop entrepreneurial skills among the students in order to develop a skilled workforce.






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MJPS/AK




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Dangers of the Mind Presented 1st Virtual Black SEL Matters Summit

A Virtual Summit that Highlighted and Elevated Educators and Voices Of African American People In The Social-Emotional Field

DURHAM, N.C.Nov. 1, 2021PRLog — Dangers of the Mind recently hosted its 2021 Black SEL Matters Summit: State of Emergency on America’s Youth, virtually from Tuesday, September 28th – Thursday, September 30th from 4:00p.m. to 6:00p.m EST each day, expanding the national reach of this anticipated summit and introduced a memorable interactive experience that empowered attendees for years to come.

The three-day virtual summit gathered Social Emotional Learning (SEL) and Mental Health Specialist, Students, Educators, Influencers, and Community Leaders. The main focus was to create a healthy dialog around policy, critical race theory, and ways to expose social-emotional learning to surrounding communities and its key stakeholders.

“Throughout the nation there has been an uprise of violence in our communities and as students returned back to school,” said Dangers of the Mind Founder and Event Host, Kristen Hopkins. “This conference established some grounding moments of reflection to allow every African-American person to understand the vital need to embed Social-Emotional Development in the home and in our communities. This call-to action prompted some of the leading voices including one of the founders of Social-Emotional Development, Dr. James Comer,  MD, MPH. These voices came together to answer the call and create dialogue around new exciting strategies for implementing Social-Emotional learning in Black Communities.”

This event consisted of five powerhouse panel sessions covering an array of topics, including five 30-minute sessions; the Black Mental Health Panel, Superintendent Panel, Community Panel, Athletes Panel, and a College Panel, inclusive of several diverse speakers from various industries including mental health professionals, education, sports and entertainment, and community involvement. Each panel discussion touched on practical ways to incorporate social-emotional learning in your school, work, home, or community.

Keynote Speaker Dr. James Comer,  MD, MPH, one of the world’s leading child psychiatrists and a legend in the Social-Emotional Learning space, set the tone for the entire summit. His address stated the importance of working collectively to build a system of strong black leaders and ways to expose and sustain SEL in black communities. Dr. James Comer,  MD, MPH commented, “We need economic power and sociopolitical understanding to survive in this work.”

Attendees walked away with tools to be ReSELient™, overcoming obstacles with Social-Emotional Learning skills. Each panel taught attendees key ways to activate a growth mindset and understand how intentionally practicing social-emotional learning will transform communities. In addition to examining the current SEL landscape, the summit featured special recognition of community leaders daily, highlighting six awardees to receive the Black SEL Award. The Black SEL Awards Gala is set to take place sometime in 2022 where attendees will receive their awards.

Key sponsors of this year’s summit included Dangers Of The Mind, Extol Ministries, The Urban Assembly, Dream It. Own it. Master it. Foundation, T3 Diversity Solutions, Juvenile Justice Institute, and The Chris Baker Foundation. Proceeds generated from tickets sales is helping build the capacity for the Dangers of the Minds Education Fund. To donate to the education fund click here (https://dangersofthemind.com/blackselmatters/).

Click here (https://lightroom.adobe.com/shares/abe4822b4fdb4900a241fe…) to view images from the summit. To watch the recap video of the summit click here (https://youtu.be/IXsSp4HWiCo). For additional information about Dangers of the Mind and the Black SEL Matters Summit visit DangersoftheMind.com, or follow the conversation on @Dangersofthemind and @BlackSELMatters social platforms.