I am a retired teacher who wrote 7 photocopiable books for Teachers and one book for children Union Jack Colouring Book.
The 7books covered Geography, History (Medieval/ Tudor/ Stuart), Travel and Transport, Myself and Events (this included diaries), Race Against Time Stories (SATS based), Church Dates for Children plus Nature and Seasons (including Sport). These 7 books have been mainly broken into a number of segments.
Challenging the Physical Elements, my Geography book, is complete.
I am a retired teacher who wrote 7 photocopiable books for Teachers and one book for children Union Jack Colouring Book.
The 7books covered Geography, History (Medieval/ Tudor/ Stuart), Travel and Transport, Myself and Events (this included diaries), Race Against Time Stories (SATS based), Church Dates for Children plus Nature and Seasons (including Sport). These 7 books have been mainly broken into a number of segments.
Challenging the Physical Elements, my Geography book, is complete.
Sanmoa was born in Chongqing, China in 1948. With the communists rising in power her family moved to Taiwan.
She was an avid reader which caused her to neglect some areas of other studies.
Her father educated her at home. and also hired other teachers. Her art teacher called herself Echo and she inspired Sanmoa to adopt the same name.
In 1967 she set off on a journey to US and Europe.Mastered both German and
Spanish.
Married Jose Maria Quero, an engineer, in 1973.He quit his job to become her travel partner. They went to the Sahara desert.
Stories of the Sahara, her first book, was a collection of travel essays -it eventually sold more than 10 million copies.
In her lifetime she visited 59 countries. She wrote 19 more books.
Tragically she committed suicide in 1991.
Sanmoa 's books continue to be red in many languages by readers all around the world.
Sources
Wikipedia
RISE: Extraordinary Women of Colour Who Changed the World by Maliha Abidi
Umm Kylthum and a B was an Egyptian singer, songwriter and film actress. She was active from the 1920s to the 1970s. In her native Egypt she is a national icon and has dubbed as The Voice of Egypt and Egypt’s** Fourth Pyramid.
She was the daughter of an imam who performed religious songs at local weddings. Having heard her father practising one day she asked if she could join his small, all male group. She stood in when her brother fell ill before a public performance.
Word soon spread about her enchanting voice and she received invites from near by villages- walking miles to reach the venue.
Her early concerts were controversial - some members of the community disapproved of gatherings for entertainment. Her father, for her safety and reputation, suggested she wore a boy’s coat and a Bedouin headscarf.
In the 1930s she moved to cosmopolitan Cairo where her reputation grew and grew.
Umm had a very strong contralto voice, the lowest female voice, with a range of over 7 octaves, and she performed without a microphone.
Her concerts lasted for hours. Audiences regularly requested encores of her favourite lines- she was known to improvise and never sang the same line exactly the same - she might change the scale or the emphasis !
For 40 years she broadcast a live concert on the last Thursday in the month.
She recorded over 300 songs over her 60 year career. One of her best songs Enta Omn has been covered and reinterpreted numerous times.
Umm embodied pan-Arab unity and her songs of love, longing and loss are still played in taxis, radios and cafes across the Arab world today.
Sources
Wikipedia
*RISE: Extraordinary Women of Colour Who Changed the World * by Maliha Abidi
Jameel Alia Jamil may be a beautiful woman but she wants us to think carefully about that.
As a child, born to a Pakistani father and a British Pakistani mother, she faced numerous health issues. As a teenager she had anorexia nervosa (14-17). Aged 17 she had a serious spinal injworldury after being struck by a car. Her recovery from the accident apparently changed her relationship with her body.
She is known for her Instagram account 'I weigh’
She realised that she had been conditioned to hate her body by a culture that profits from the self-loathing of young girls. She wants girls to be proud, for us to fell valuable…and look past the flesh on our bones.
In 2016 she relocated to the US. She hosts the TBS late-night game show The Misery Index and is a judge on Legendary.
Through her willingness to criticise her peers and the structure of the entertainment industry Jameela is a positive and visible role model for millions around the world.
Sources
Wikipedia
RISE: Extraordinary Women of Colour Who Changed the World by Maliha Abidi
Hayat is famous for making major contributions to point-of-care nedival testing and biotechnology.
She is ranked by Arabian business as the ninth most Influential Arab woman.
Hayat’s own inventions for Diagnostic for All include a Magnetic Acoustic Resonance Sensor, which can help diagnose illnesses on the spot- invaluable where advanced health care is scarce.
Mary was the first Native American female engineer -she was the great-grand daughter of the Cherokee chief John Ross.
She was also the first female engineer in the history of the LockHead Corporation - aeroplane builders.
1928 , aged 20, earned BA in Mathematics. 1938 earn MA in Mathematics.
1949 obtained professional certification in engineering.
She began her career teaching maths and science for 9 years.
In 1941 relocated to California to seek work after the US joined WW11.
In 1942 Lockhead hired her as a mathematician.
She worked for Lockhead from 1942 until her retirement in 1973. She is best remembered for her work on aerospace design.
She was one of the 40 founding engineers of the renowned and secretive Skunk Works (Advanced Development Programme) team responsible for many aviation innovations ( eg. P-38 Lightning -then the world’s fastest aeroplane) and aerospace innovations (egs. Poseidon and Trident missiles).
In the 1950’s she was a founding member of the Society of Women Engineers.
When she retired she continued to recruit young women and Native American youth into engineering careers.
She lived to the age of 99.
She was held in such high regard her picture was placed on the reverse of the 2019 Sacagawea Dollar.
Nawal El Saadawi wrote numerous books on the subject of women in Islam.
She was described as Egypt’s most radical woman.
Nawal was founder and president of the Arab Women’s Solidarity Association and co-founder of the Arab Association for Human Rights.
She studied medicine in Cairo and New York. She was appointed Director General of Health Education at Egypt’s Ministry of Health. She remained in post until she published Women and Sex -in which she criticised FGM (Female Gential Mutilation) - aged just 6 she had under done FMG.She was expelled.
As a psychiatrist she had special insight into the traumas and injustices Egyptian women faced daily. Her writing empowered women but proved unacceptable to Egyptian political and religious authorities. She was imprisoned for a time and wrote Memories from the Women’s Prison (1983) using toilet paper and an eyebrow pencil .
Nawal was a prolific writer writing both non-fiction and fiction.They were translated into many languages. ( Selected works)
She fled Egypt in 1988 when her life was threatened. She returned to Cairo in 1996 where she stayed until her death in 2021.
They call me a wild and dangerous woman. I speak the truth. And truth is wild and dangerous Nawal El Saadawi
Sources
Wikipedia
Rise: Extraordinary Women of Colour Who Changed the Worldby Maliha Abidi
Negin is a female conductor leading the Zohra - the first all female orchastra in Afghanistan.
Being a girl, under Taliban rule, she could never share her passion with her family. He first steps were in secret until she finally revealed her passion to her father who supported her…
She was sent to an orphanage called the Afghan Child Education and Care Organization (AFCECO). Aged 13 she was selected for the Afghanistan Institute for Music by musicologist Ahmad Naser Samast. Half the students are street kids or orphans.
Talented and hard working she learned to play the lute-like robab and the piano. , She also studied singing before becoming a conductor.
In 2017 they performed outside Afghanistan for the first time at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. They have since been on tours to Switzerland and Germany.
I will never accept defeat. I will continue to play music. I do not feel safe but when people say 'That is Negin Khpalwak ’ that gives me energy.
Sources
Wikipedia
RISE:Extraordinary Women of Colour Who Changed the World by Maliha Abidi
Mazian is Malaysians first astrophysicist whose work has pioneered her country’s participation in space exploration.
In 1975 she earned a B Sc.(Hons), followed by being the first woman ever, in 1981, to gain a Ph.D in Physics both from the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand (founded in 1869)
She has helped create the curriculum at the national university.
In 1990 Prime minister Mahathir bin Mohamad placed her in charge of the Planetarium Division of the P.M. 's department.
From 2007-2014 she served as the director of the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs in Vienna.
In 2017 she was named director of the International Science Council (ISC) Regional Offi ce for Asia and the Pacific.
From May 2023 she is a Non- Executive of HKATG, a mostly China funded satellite program.
Mazian has received many honours during her ling her lifetime. ( See honours)
She is a female astrophysicist in a male dominated field.
She believes that her unyielding passion has played the biggest role in her success, keeping her focused only on putting her country on th map for space exploration.
Sources
Wikipedia
*Rise: Extraordinary Women of Colour Who Changed the World ***
by Maliha Abidi
Haydes Mercedes Sosa, sometimes known as* La Negra (The Black) because of her darker completion and dark hair, was popular throughout Latin America and many other countries outside the region.
Her root in Argentina is Folk Music. She became one of the preeminent exponents of El Nuevo cancionero. With her first husband, Manuel Oscar Matus they were key players in the mid-60s.
She gave her voice to songs written by many Latin American songwriters. Her voice made people hail her as the* voice of the voiceless ones.*
After the military junta of Jorge Videl in 1976 she faced threats against her family. In 1979 after a concert in La Plata she was searched, arrested on stage along with her audience. She was released through international intervention.
Banned in her own country she moved first to Paris then to Madrid.
In 1982 she returned to Argentina from her exile in Europe
In her lifetime she sang with performers across several genres and generations, folk, opera, pop and rock. ( See blue writing on page 3 of notes).
She sang in the most prestigious buildings - Carnegie Hall and the Sistern Chapel to name just 2.
She received 8 Latin Grammy awards ( 2 posthumously)
Mercedes had a career which nearly spanned 6 decades. Aged 15, in 1950, she won a singing competition.
In later years she suffered from recurrent endocrine and respiratory problems. She was still singing in 2009, the year she died, from multi organ failure.
Her body was placed on display at the National Congress building in Buenos Aires for the public to pay their respects President Fermandez de Kirchner ordered 3 days of national mourning. Mercedes was cremated on 5th October.
She lived her 74 years to the fullest She had done practically everything she wanted, she didn’t have any type of barrier or any fear that limited her
* Fabian Matus - her son
Sources
Wikipedia
Rise: Extraordinary Women of Colour Who Changed the World by Maliha Abidi
Na Hye-sok’s art name was Jeongwol.
She was a pioneering Korean Feminist writer and painter, She was both the first female professional painter and writer in Korea.
She created some of the earliest Western-style painting in Korea. She also published feminist novels and short stories.
She rejected the traditional** Good Wife, Wise Mother**
** Kyonghur* was her major written work (1918) concerned a woman’s self discovery and her subsequent search for meaning as a ’ new woman’.
Na had her first painting exhibition in 1921. She participated in many exhibitions -some sold for 350 won (US $3,000 today).
On 10th April 1920 she married Kim Woo-young. He divorced her in 1931 on grounds of infidelity. She lost her children and property
Despite the divorce and disgraced reputation she continued to paint and write.
In 1931 she published A Divorce Testimony. Her views were regarded as scandalous and shocking. She had advocated ‘test marriages’ to avoid a repeat of her unhappy marriage . Korean Confucian culture considered premarital sex taboo. This ultimately ruined her career.
She died destitute and alone on 10th December 1948 in a charity hospital. The location of her grave is unknown.
She became known as a feminist because of her criticism of the institute of marriage in the early 20th century.
She has recently been acknowledged In Korea for her artistic and literary accomplishments. Soel Arts Centre in 2000 opened a retrospective exhibition of her works.
Sources
Wikiped
RISE: Extraordinary Women of Colour Who Changed the World by Maliha Abidi
Tom Pidcock and Bethany Shriever have just been named. 3.2.2024
Included:-
Official sheet
6 Phrase and Voc. sheets ( all slightly different)
Sheet on Mountain Biking
Poetry Aid
2 ‘blanks’ for best copy
2. Word searches -with answers)
2 profiles from Wikipedia for Tom Pidock and Betn Shriever
Hope ,these sheets prove useful.
The official sheet will be lengthened and more profiles added as more competitors are revealed in the coming days/weeks.
I have put together some information about the Olympic Sailing in Paris 2024.
The event form to fill in
Phrase and Vocab sheet
Poetry Aid
Brief info about the 10 sailors
Brief word search
Profiles on 5 of the sailors
Info about the 49er and the Nacra17
Art idea
Hope there is something useful there to use.
Word search added
I have downloaded the Canoeing sheet for Canoe Slalom and Kayak Cross’
There is a Phrase/ Vocabulary sheet and a Poetry Aid sheet…
3 sheets created years ago - sheet 1 would be good for differentiated work.
There is information on all 4 of our experienced Olympic canoeists -Adam Burgess , Joe Clarke, Kimberly Woods and Mallory Franklin.
I have included:-
the form sheet to fill in
Phrase and Vocab. sheet
Poetry Aid
‘comic strips’ -4
Information about the modern Pentathlon
profiles about the 3 competitors mentioned so far Joe Choong
Olivia Green
Kerenza Bryson
Muriwhenua, to give him his full first name, may have been born with a hole in his heart but he had a whole heart for Jesus.
Muri’ s uncle was the Maori bishop of Aotearoa and his mother, Meriana, hoped he would become an Anglican clergyman. Muri, on the other hand, desired to be a leader of a dance band!
Aged 16 he went to Auckland to finish his schooling. He stayed at the United Maori Mission where Charlie Bennett was the minister. Charlie impressed Muri with his sincerity and genuineness. He attended a YMCA meeting and was asked, ‘Why don’t you receive Christ?’ He replied, ‘All right , I’ll give it ago’.
Slowly a change in heart and mind happened. He read biographies of famous preachers and evangelists. In January 1954 Jim Duffecy, an Open Air Campaigner (OAP), landed in Auckland. Muri inspired by Jim gained confidence to take his own aggressive and unorthodox style to his own people.
An OAP branch was opened in New Zealand - Muri was one of its first evangelists. He went to the USA but his heart was giving him problems.
On returning home he went to hospital - given a 50/50 chance of surviving an operation. No operation until 17 years later! Those 17 years were fruitful ones for evangelism.
In 1963 he married Ena. She was a loyal support and strength until the end.
In 1970 he went to the Solomon Islands - the Charisma of Revival. There there was a new breath of the Spirit. ( See notes)
In 1972 there were the Jesus matches (See short note).
Muri was a prophet of God,singularly devoid of airs and graces, and worldly ambition. He took the Gospel of Christ to the Maoris -his brothers and sisters.
Sources used
Ambassadors for Christ editor J. D. Woodbridge - contributor David Stewart
World Press - Donald Daily Victoria University of Wellington Library
Mohammed is the Founding Executive Director of Ahidhula Swanirvar Sangstha.
He lives in Bangladesh which lies on a huge river delta where 3 rivers meet the sea. The country is low lying and flooding is now more frequent and severe due to climate change. It is estimated the country will permanently lose one fifth of its land under water.
In the monsoon season children could not get to school. He had a dream to build floating schools.
He studied Architecture. Once he had finished his studies he set about creating a charity. No money came forward so he collected waste - like plastic and glass. It took 4 years, by recycling waste, to buy 4 traditional boat hulls. In 2002 his first floating school was launched.In 2004 he received his first international funding.
He now has 26 floating schools
8 other countries now have floating schools
Source Earth Heroes
Andrew and Pete, both surfers, came up with an idea to collect rubbish out of the sea. They invented/created a ’ seabin’ a rubbbish bin designed to clean up litter from open water.
The team hope that in the future seabins will be able to trap microfibres.
They hope to recycles the plastic waste to make future seabins.
They hope to have them in the open ocean by 2027.
Sources
wikipedia
Earth Heroes by Lily Dyu and Amy Blackwell
Isatou initiated a recycling project called One Plastic Bag in Gambia.
She noticed that the main streets of N’jau in Gambia were plagued with high piles of trash consisting of all forms from discarded plastics , tins, tyres, house waste and especially plastic bags were surrounded with puddles of water and malaria infected mosquitoes.
Isatou brought to life the idea of recycling plastic bags to make purses that could be sold for money. Plastic bags were collected, dried out and then torn into small yam like threads called ‘plam’. These threads would be weaved together to make small hand held bags, It took 10 plastic bags to make a bag.
Initially they were ridiculed but it worked. The money generated meant women living in poverty were now able to take care of their families.
N’jau Recycling and Income Generation Group (NRIGG) was born.
Today they recycle other waste to make jewelry, beads, armchairs, stools, even compost!
Today Isatou works with more than 11,000 people and NRIGG is based in 4 separate communities across The Gambia
She has travelled the world to share her story. Her village is now clean and tidy.
Sources
Wikipedia
Earth Heroes by Lily Dyu and Amy Blackwell
Chewang from Ladakh in India, who had a diploma in civil engineering (1960), noticed a small stream in his yard had frozen solid under the shade of a group of popular trees, though it flowed freely elsewhere in his yard.
He realized that the flowing water was moving too fast to freeze while the sluggish water beneath the trees was slow enough to freeze.
Seeking money for his idea villagers and officials thought he was pagal or crazy.
Based on this he created an artificial glacier by diverting a river into a valley, slowing down the stream by constructing checks. The next spring the villagers were amazed to find it worked.
The artificial glaciers increase the ground water recharge, rejuvenating the spring and providing water for irrigation
By 2012 he had built 12 artificial glaciers (there are now15)
The largest one is in Phuktsey village - 1000ft long, 150ft wide and 4 ft in depth.
Source
Earth Heroes by Lily Dyu and Amy Blackwell
Rok Rozman, a former Olympic rower, who is concerned about climate change, has dedicated his life to protecting wild rivers.
Too many rivers have had dams built on them.- Dams destroy the natural environment. To build a dam, hydroelectric dams especially, a valley is flooded to create a reservoir, destroying the plants and animals which live there, plus the homes and communities of the inhabitants would be lost…
At a rivers conference, without stopping to think, he announced that he and his friends would paddle the affected rivers the following spring.It was to be called the Balkan Rivers Tour.
The kayakers tour, which lasted 39 days, began in April 2016. Rok and his friends were joined by 500 kayakers and 1,500 activists from 18 countries- some for days , others fro weeks. TV , radio and newspaper reporters followed the tour - the stories of the local inhabitants were finally heard.
On the last day Rok, in Tirana, Albaniia’s capital city gave a speech. The police stopped him from delivering his kayak to the Prime Minister.
Source
Earth Heroes by Lily dyu & Amy Blackwell