Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Google to build cars.

Google to build self-driving cars http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-27587558

Guyana Research Trip for Carinlangs Students


Twelve first year students on the Caribbean Institute of Language Studies  (Carinlangs ) first year BA TESOL program  will be visiting New Amsterdam , Guyana as part of their Special Seminar primary research course. Four tutors  including Director Dr. Robby Morroy will accompany the students.
Carinlangs Dance Item

The group will be travelling overland and will spend three days. On Friday the students will meet and interview professionals in nine areas of life in New Amsterdam.

On their return the students will do a research paper and a PowerPoint presentation on a selected aspect of the life and culture of Guyana. a

The Ministry of Sports and Culture  in Guyana has arranged for Ms. Shaundrel  Phillips, the acting principal of the New Amsterdam Multilateral school to link up with the Carinlangs group.

The New Amsterdam Library has invited the students to visit the library on Friday at 11.00 am to meet and interact with children during their weekly story telling time.  Two of our students will read Surinamese stories in English for the group. Mr . France Olivera Carinlangs lecturer will assist these students

The Mayor of New Amsterdam, Mr. Henry will meet the Carinlangs students when they arrive on Thursday. They will then have a mini tour of the city.

On Saturday the group hopes to be able to visit the University of Guyana’s  Berbice campus at Tain. In the evening the group will hold a mini reception at Berbice Inn for all the people who assisted them on the tour.

The group returns to Suriname on the 1st June.

This research project completes the first trimester for the Carinlangs students who began their one year BA capstone program in March. The students have already demonstrated their presentation and event management skills in a brilliant joint production with Alphamax Academy and the Indian Cultural Center celebrating Tagore’s birthday on May 10.
Carinlangs MC with Ambassadors from India & Guyana and ICC performers.



Sunday, May 18, 2014

Golden Milk

http://themindunleashed.org/2014/05/golden-milk-simple-drink-change-life.html

Friday, May 16, 2014

Suriname aims for.25% stake in gold minem

http://www.ifre.com/suriname-shelves-bond-plans-eyes-us$200m-loan/21145309.article

Culture, dreams and sleep

http://mobile.nytimes.com/2014/05/14/opinion/luhrmann-to-dream-in-different-cultures.html?emc=eta1&_r=0&referrer=

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Columbus's Santa Maria may have been found.

Santa Maria Replica
More than five centuries after Christopher Columbus’s flagship, the Santa Maria, was wrecked in the Caribbean, archaeological investigators think they may have discovered the vessel’s long-lost remains – lying at the bottom of the sea off the north coast of Haiti. It’s likely to be one of the world’s most important underwater archaeological discoveries.
“All the geographical, underwater topography and archaeological evidence strongly suggests that this wreck is Columbus’ famous flagship, the Santa Maria,” said the leader of a recent reconnaissance expedition to the site, one of America’s top underwater archaeological investigators, Barry Clifford. 
“The Haitian government has been extremely helpful – and we now need to continue working  with them to carry out a detailed archaeological excavation of the wreck,” he said.
So far, Mr Clifford’s team has carried out purely non-invasive survey work at the site – measuring and photographing it.
Tentatively identifying the wreck as the Santa Maria has been made possible by quite separate discoveries made by other archaeologists in 2003 suggesting the probable location of Columbus’ fort relatively nearby. Armed with this new information about the location of the fort, Clifford was able to use data in  Christopher Columbus’ diary to work out where the wreck should be.

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Test Dates for Prospective AlphaMax Students

Saturday 17th May.
Saturday 5th July
Monday 25 th August.

Parents are free to come with students and view the school facilities. Someone will be assigned to show you around.

Orientation Day for new students -Saturday 30th August-10 a.m.

Important Final Term Dates at AlphaMax


AlphaMax AcademyTuesday 27 May PTA Meeting (Lower & Middle school).
Wednesday 28 May PTA Meeting(High School & GAC).

Re-registration for next year -Forms to be returned by Monday 2nd June.
Return of books-Monday 23rd.( Lower & Middle School)
& Tuesday 24 June. (High School)

Close of School/Awards Ceremony Friday 27 June
Graduation Saturday 28 June 10 am

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Columbus' Santa Maria found?

Columbus's Santa Maria wreck 'found' http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-27397579




A US underwater investigator has said he believes he has found the wreck of the Santa Maria, the flagship of Christopher Columbus's famed expedition.

Barry Clifford said evidence "strongly suggests" a ruin off Haiti's north coast is the Santa Maria.

Mr Clifford's team has measured and taken photos of the wreck.
Replica of Columbus's Santa Maria

He says he is working with the Haitian government to protect the site for a more detailed investigation.

The Santa Maria, along with the La Nina and La Pinta, were part of Columbus's expedition in 1492, which explored islands in the Caribbean in an attempt to find a westward passage to Asia.

The flagship was lost during the expedition, shortly before Columbus returned to Spain.

"All the geographical, underwater topography and archaeological evidence strongly suggests that this wreck is Columbus's famous flagship, the Santa Maria," said Mr Clifford.

Excellent Professional Tagore Performance

AlphaMax Academy students put on an excellent, professional performance last night in the Tagore celebration of Gitanjali.

Eight dancers trained by Mrs.Kawita Thani thrilled the audience with their skill and stage finesse. Surinamers were proud that students from all the major Suriname communities could master the cultural dance from another country.

Reann Kersenhout -GAC 2014 class as well as AlphaMax 2014 graduating class joined Randy Esajas also a 2014 graduate and Daniel Kolf to give intensely focused powerful dramatic presentations of Tagore ' s poetry that left many marveling at the acting skills of Suriname ' s young people in English.

Parents were impressed that the school's director, dance/drama tutor and five other members of staff were fully involved with the production and either performed or worked alongside the student team.

The three ambassadors and other distinguished guests asked the school to convey their congratulations on a thoroughly professional performance.
Members of the audience also praised the smooth, flawless collaboration between AlphaMax, the Indian Cultural Center and Carinlangs.

Friday, May 9, 2014

AlphaMax Academy Convincing winner of Happy Spelling Bee Contest

Tamia Hoppie- AlphaMax Champion Speller
AlphaMax Academy convincingly emerged as the English-school winner of Suriname’s National English Spelling Bee Competition last night at the Congreshal in the capital city of Paramaribo.

The major educational event that attracted a full hall of students, teachers, team supporters, and parents – about 750 in all – was organized by Stichting Leren voor een Goede Toekomst (Foundation for a Better Future).

Two AlphaMax scholars successfully captured both the first and second English-school prizes in the fourth and final round of a hotly contested event in which a total of 43 contestants from 22 schools competed for top honors.

The participating schools in the English spelling competition were divided into Dutch-speaking institutions and English-speaking ones.  There were four participating English-curriculum schools facing off in the May 8th finals that saw competitive spelling among primary school, middle school and junior secondary school students, namely from:  the AlphaMax Academy, the Caribbean Education Institute of Suriname, Christian Liberty Academy, and Suriname International School.

After three rounds of spelling a wide range of words graded according to levels, the original field of fourteen (14) English-curricula contestants was whittled down to 8 students – five (5) of whom were AlphaMax scholars, two (2) from Christian Liberty Academy, and one (1) from the Caribbean Education Institute of Suriname.  The five AlphaMax scholars who made it to the final round were Graciella Kenswil, Joanna Daher, Andrea Lau, Noor Patandin, and Tamia Hoppie.

Following the fourth and final round, the Queen Spelling Bee, and winner of the first prize in the English schools, was Tamia Hoppie, AlphaMax junior high school student.  Her performance was an impressive 100%.  Joanna Daher of the Academy’s middle school program emerged as the runner-up Spelling Bee, taking home the second prize.

The National English Spelling Bee Competition is a ground-breaking visionary initiative of Drs. Monique Brown, the Director of the Stichting voor een Goede Toekomst.
Runner up Joanna Daher with the Venezuelan Ambassador to Suriname


Dr A. Murugesan and Kenneth Biervliet – until recently the Director of Education in the Ministry of Education of Suriname – were the specially invited Guests of Honor to distribute the trophies and gift prizes to the winning students and school coaches.

Dr Murugesan is an international artist from India.  Following a career as an economist, English Literature teacher, and human resource director, Dr Murugesan currently resides in Suriname with his spouse, the Ambassador of India.

It is the second time the AlphaMax Academy has won the English National Spelling Bee top honors in Suriname.  The Academy won the first competition in June 2013, at the Congreshal in Paramaribo.

2014 Spelling Bee Champion Tean with teacers.

The winners of the Queen Spelling Bee title in the Dutch-school competitions were students from Geyersvleit Mulo (Junior Secondary) school and O.S. Reeberg (Projekt) Primary School.  Students from both schools emerged as the champion and runner-up – taking home the first prize trophies and second prize medals.

This year the first round of the National English Spelling Bee competition had attracted 24 Dutch and English schools.  The first-round spelling competition was run-off in January, earlier this year.

The AlphaMax students who made it to the finals of the Spelling Bee competition were  Graciella Kenswil, Joanna Daher, Andrea Lau, Noor Patandin, Lakiesha Despo, and Tamia Hoppie.  Their Academy’s English teachers and Spelling Bee Coaches included Simone Griffith, Sharon Hoppie, Vijoya Taylor, and Kawita Thani.

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

AlphaMax Academy has Tagore bust garlanding ceremony

In a simple but elegant short ceremony distinguished guests including Indian Ambassador to Suriname Mrs. M Subashini garlanded the bust of Rabindranath Tagore in the courtyard of AlphaMax Academy in Paramaribo, Suriname on Tagore’s birth anniversary –the 7th May.

Rabindranath Tagore is India’s best-known writer and artist. He is the first non-European winner of the Nobel Prize and is the only known person to have written the national anthems for two different countries.

Rabindranath Tagore has had a profound influence on India’s philosophy and educational thought. He founded the influential Visva-Bharati University.
In the early twentieth century when travel was not easy he visited many countries lecturing on his ideas for a national education based on the lives of the people living in that nation. In his book The Discovery of India, Jawaharlal Nehru wrote, "He (Tagore) has been India's internationalist par excellence, believing and working for international co-operation, taking India's message to other countries and bringing their message to his own people."

India has commemorated his spreading of India’s ideas to many countries by assisting in the setting up of statues and busts in more than 20 countries.
Suriname was honored to be one of a dozen countries that received busts of Tagore on the 150th anniversary of his birth in 2011. AlphaMax Academy was selected as the place in Suriname where the bust was placed because of the Academy’s commitment to Tagore’s ideals. Several time a month Tagore’s poem “ Where the Head is Held High” from his Nobel Prize collection “ Gitanjali” is recited by the school’s community at their morning assembly.

The ceremony began with the singing of the national anthems of Suriname and India. Devesh Chaturdevi Indian Cultural Center musician then sang an enchanting Tagore song in Bengali. The audience warmly applauded his sincere rendition.

The Indian Ambassador, the head of the Indian Cultural Center, the first secreatary of the Indian Embassy , ICC staff and other senior members of the AlphaMax Community then garlanded the bust. The AlphaMax staff and students then recited Tagore’s “ Where the Head is Held High.”

Mr. Sean Taylor made a short speech in which he said that Tagore not only belonged to India but to countries like Suriname which cherished his ideals.
This part of the ceremony ended with brief remarks by the Indian Ambassador who expressed her deep appreciation of AlphaMax Academy’s commitment to Tagore’s ideals.

The audience then went to the school’s major auditorium for a short presentation. This consisted of a harvest dance “ Pous Utsav” by seven female AlphaMax students. Mrs. Kawita Thani of AlphaMax and Carinlangs choreographed this dance item.

Three members of the school’s drama group—members of the class of 2014 Reann Kersenhout (also member of the 2014 GAC class), Randy Esajas and Senior student Daniel Kolf did dramatic renditions of three poems from Gitanjali.

The audience applauded both the dance and the readings. The dance created a happy successful mood and the intense charged presentations of the poems stirred the audience with the emotional power of Tagore’s work

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Tagore bust at AlphaMax Academy

Rabindranath Tagore was born on May 7th, 1861, and died on August 7th, 1941.

Tagore bust at AlphaMax Academy in Suriname.
The Tagore bust at the AlphaMax Academy is one of a dozen effigies unveiled worldwide to mark the 150th Birth Anniversary Celebrations worldwide. Tagore is the author of one of the anthems students and teachers of the AlphaMax community use daily in school assemblies.
Suriname's First Lady speaking at the unveiling of Tagore bust. 

The Tagore Bust-unveiling ceremony  was done on June 4th, 2011. Suriname’s First Lady Ingrid Waldring-Bouterse unveiled the bust with Ambassador K.J.S. Sodhi. 

One of the highlights of the Tagore bust-unveiling ceremony was the ICC-sponsored Bihu Dance Troupe which had travelled from Assim, India, to perform. This was their premiere performance in Paramaribo.

Tagore Ideals on Education


The curriculum at AlphaMax Academy is strongly influenced by the ideals of India's celebrated poet and artist Rabindranath Tagore.
Tagore Bust in the courtyard at AlphaMax Academy

From its inception in September 1998, teachers and students of the Academy have recited, often daily, those memorable words which first appeared in Tagore’s world-famous and respected collection of poetry, "Gitanjali."
            
 Where knowledge is free             
 Where the world has not been broken up into fragments by narrow domestic walls         
 Where words come out from the depth of truth              
 Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection               
 Where the clear stream of reason has not lost its way into the dreary dead sand of dead habit              
 Where the mind is led forward by Thee into ever-widening thought and action      
 Into that heaven of free, my dear beloved God, let us all awake”.

First Lady of Suriname speaking at the  unveiling of Tagore monument
On June 4th 2011 Suriname’s First Lady Ingrid Bouterse Waldring unveiled the Tagore monument, a sculpted bronze figure of Tagore, which has a plaque that bears this inspiring prayer.This monument, a gift from India to Suriname, is one of several worldwide. AlphaMax Academy is proud to be the custodian of Tagore's bust for the people of Suriname.

In 1918, Tagore founded Visva Bharati University – an international center of Culture and Humanistic Studies.

Tagore considered the lack of education to be the main obstacle in the way of national progress and at the root of all its problems. He thought that the basic objectives of any worthwhile national education system were to promote, creativity, freedom, joy, and an awareness of a country’s cultural heritage.

Therefore he worked assiduously towards developing an appropriate system of national education. He felt that each nation was different and this fact should be reflected in its system of education.

Some of his salient thoughts on this topic were:
“In every nation, education [should be] intimately associated with the life of the people.”

“Let the students gather knowledge and materials from different regions of the country, from direct sources and from their own independent efforts.”

“We must try to understand how [our native] genius express[es] itself… Unless we try to put these together and discover the integrating factors behind these diverse streams of thought and make them a subject of study at our universities, we would only be borrowing knowledge from abroad. The natural habitat for knowledge is where it is produced. The main task of universities is to produce knowledge, its dissemination is its secondary function. We must invite those intellectuals and scholars to our universities who are engaged in research, invention or creative activity.”

To help foster and enrich the holistic formation of its young scholars, from its inception, the Academy has devoted four of its five school days to left-brain academic and ratiocinative development and activities, and one full school day to right-brain creative endeavors.

An unswerving resilient insistence on the latter is vintage Tagore, who like his Occidental contemporaries, Rudolf Steiner and Maria Montessori deplored lop or one-sided child/human development at the expense of a willful fostering and guidance of creative gifts and skills.  Indeed it is through the latter that the inner ‘child’ is nurtured and brought to a ripe maturity.

To illustrate how important contact with nature was to the life of the educator and poet, during one of his many travels to lecture in the West, Tagore wrote:
“I wish I could be released from this mission.  For such missions are like a  mist that envelops our souls – they seem to shut us off from the direct touch of God’s world…  The springtime has come – the sky is over-flowing  with sunshine.  I long to be one with the birds, and trees and the green  earth.  The call comes to me from the air to sing, but, wretched creature  that I am, I lecture – and by doing it I ostracize myself from this great world of songs to which I was born.”
New York, March 18th, 1921.

On Mat 7th 2014 there will be a garlanding of Tagore's Bust at AlphaMax Academy.

Carinlangs and AlphaMax Invite you to celebrate Tagore's birth anniversary



First Lady of Suriname with Former Ambassador of Suriname in front of Tagore bust at AlphaMax Academy.

You are warmly invited to a Celebration of Rabindranath Tagore’s Gitanjali:” An Evening of Poetry, Music & Dance” on Saturday, May 10th, 2014 at  7 p.m.

This special evening of celebration for India’s most  prolific and best known artist takes place at the AlphaMax Educational complex - Stanvastestraat 18-24 (Zorg en hoop).


The program is being done by the Caribbean Institute ofLanguage Studies (Carinlangs®) and AlphaMax Academy in collaboration with Indian Cultural Center and Embassy of India.
Read a book on Tagore.