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Full-Text Articles in Education

Pax Populi: Empowering Afghans Through Virtual Tutoring, Lara Chuppe Nov 2022

Pax Populi: Empowering Afghans Through Virtual Tutoring, Lara Chuppe

Purdue Journal of Service-Learning and International Engagement

I began tutoring two Afghan high school students through Pax Populi as a service-learning component of HONR 39900: Virtual Abroad Central Asia. This semester, I will be assisting Purdue students with developing successful tutoring partnerships with Afghan refugees through Pax Populi. The non-profit Pax Populi seeks to empower Afghans through virtual, one-on-one English tutoring. Originally, the program matched young people living in cities across Afghanistan with volunteer tutors, but in light of the Taliban’s rise to power, the organization is now working to provide virtual English lessons to newly arriving Afghan refugees. Many of the refugees speak little English. They …


Teaching English In Afghan’S Schools And Its History, Samadi Nooria Jan 2022

Teaching English In Afghan’S Schools And Its History, Samadi Nooria

Mental Enlightenment Scientific-Methodological Journal

This article illustrates the history of teaching English language , the current situation of educational system in Afghanistan and the usage of different teaching methods in Afghan schools from points of view of famous scholars. It is clear traditional teaching has along history in Afghanistan and used for centuries, so it is very difficult to bring changes in this system and it is hard to change with new methods.


Religious Extremism And Terrorism In The Public And Political Life Of Afghanistan, Abdukarim Ergashevich Pardabaev Jan 2022

Religious Extremism And Terrorism In The Public And Political Life Of Afghanistan, Abdukarim Ergashevich Pardabaev

Mental Enlightenment Scientific-Methodological Journal

The withdrawal of troops on February 15, 1989 did not trigger, as expected, the beginning of the pacification process in Afghanistan, but, on the contrary, prompted the opposition to intensify hostilities. The Afghan war ended, seriously changing the world, both politically and economically. The USSR left the political arena, leaving behind a scattered state, immersed in the many-sided problems of the state. Russia, as a successor to the USSR, could not adequately continue the foreign policy line. For example, neither the UN nor the Russian The Foreign Ministry did nothing to get the United States and Pakistan to implement the …