James Edward Charles Webber
  • Male
Share 

James Edward Charles Webber's Friends

James Edward Charles Webber's Discussions

Special needs provision and its accessibilty for schools in Asia
3 Replies

Started this discussion. Last reply by William M Tweedie Nov. 29, 2007.

 

James Edward Charles Webber's Page

Latest Activity

Comment Wall (1 comment)

You need to be a member of TEACH - Teaching and Education in Asia: Communities of Hope to add comments!

Join this Ning Network

At 1:14am on November 19, 2007, William M Tweedie said…
Welcome James Edward Charles....that's going to cause me problems, being the two thumbs typer I am. What shall we call you? (besides Your Highness!)
It's the end of the academic year here in Malaysia so everybody but District staff are off on holidays 'til the New Year and I will be getting sorted out with a new place to live (possible in a new city) before I start my doctoral studies in Jan. So it may be a bit lonely here at TEACH for a while, but please feel free to read the discussions I started and post any questions or comments. We all look forward to some lively ones in the New Year. Good opportunity to get some local teachers on board! Glad to have you with us. - William [How did your parents miss that king! Oh! wrong country <:-).]

Profile Information

In which Asian country are you working in education?
l
Do you work in
other?
What is your role in education?
Secondary School Teacher
If you are a Foreigner (non-native to the country where you currently work/study), what is your nationality?
brit
About Me:
worked in several large secondary schools in the north of England
and also a range of special schools ,
coached gymnastics,

interests rugby union, walking, skiing ! four times
music, soul. easy listening, dance

James Edward Charles Webber's Photos

Loading…

James Edward Charles Webber's Blog

James Edward Charles Webber

China's farms struggle to meet growing demandI stood in Zhang Meidi's cabbage patch, kicking the dir…

China's farms struggle to meet growing demand

I stood in Zhang Meidi's cabbage patch, kicking the dirt with my boots.
Urbanisation and the creeping desert in the north mean China is losing 25m acres of farmland a year

The first frosts would arrive soon but for now the soil was dark, crumbly and rich. Not like the hard mud around Shanghai or the dry, sandy soil of Beijing. This is China's bread basket. Wheat has been grown here for thousands o
Continue

Posted on January 9, 2008 at 1:05am —

 
 

About

Badge

Loading…
 

© 2009   Created by William M Tweedie on Ning.   Create a Ning Network!

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service

Sign in to chat!