Visit to a blind student's school🧑🦯🧑🦯(community medicine)
Presentation England Project Comenius
1. ENGLAND
England is in north-west
Europe and is in the southern
part of Great Britain. It is an
island country and also part
of the United Kingdom (UK).
The capital city is London,
which is situated in the South
East of the country.
England is the largest country
in Great Britain and the UK.
It is sometimes, wrongly,
used in reference to the whole United Kingdom, the entire island of
Great Britain, or indeed the British Isles. This is not only incorrect but
can cause offence to people from other parts of the UK. (Nationality
of the British people).
Nearly 84% of the population of the UK lives in
England, mainly in the major cities and
metropolitan areas.
England - St. George and the Rose
The national flower of England is the rose.
The flower has been adopted as England’s emblem
since the time of the Wars of the Roses - civil wars
(1455-1485) between the royal house of Lancaster
(whose emblem was a red rose) and the royal house
of York (whose emblem was a white rose).
2. COUNTRY FACTS
Motto: Dieu et mon droit (God and my right)
Flag: Cross of St George
National Day: 23rd
April (St. George’s Day)
Population: Approximately 57,000,000 people
Nationality : English and British
Time Zone : GMT/UTC 0 Greenwich Mean Time
Climate: Temperate; moderated by prevailing southwest winds
over the North Atlantic Current
Major Cities: Birmingham, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Sheffield
Anthem
(Song):
God Save the Queen
Land of Hope and Glory
Currency: Pound Sterling (GBP - £)
Highest point: Scafell Pike 978 m (3210 ft)
Lowest Point: The Fens, 4.6 metres (15 feet) below sea level
Longest river: Thames (346 km)
The Severn is officially Britain's longest river as it flows
through both Wales and England.
Largest Lake: Windermere (14.7 sq km)
Highest
Waterfall:
Cauldron Snout (Cumbria) 60 metres (200 feet) high
3. Burton upon Trent
Our Home, Our School
Burton upon Trent is situated in the
Midlands and in the heart of the National
Forest in the county of Staffordshire. It is
the largest town in the National Forest and
is internationally known as the capital of
British brewing thanks to its excellent
water. There are Approximately 43,784
people living in our town. The River Trent
and the Trent and Mersey canal wind their
way majestically
through the town.
Burton is best known for its brewing industrial heritage,
home to over a dozen breweries in its heyday. Beer is still
brewed in the town.[3]
The town originally grew up around Burton upon
Trent Abbey, which was the most important religious centre in medieval
Staffordshire.
It is also famous all around the world for Marmite and
the very first jar was produced here in 1902. Marmite
is an off-shoot of the beer industry using brewers’ yeast
by-product to make the nutritious, rich in B vitamins
spread you legendarily either love or loathe.
4. BURTON UPON TRENT GARDENS
Stapenhill Gardens is a very popular local park, consisting of formal
gardens, open grassland and woodland plus a popular play area. The
site acts as a focal point for the community, with events held around
the swan.
THE ENGLISH COUNTRYSIDE AND GARDENS
England has hundreds of ancient cities, interesting market towns and
pretty villages which a man could spend a lifetime exploring and still
thirst for more. For many English people, it is not these Cathedral
cities of grandeur, or the historic towns of old that the appreciate
most, but the very land that gave these places life - that eternal
green, that mighty oak, that gentle flower bowing in the summer
breeze, those rolling hills of old with silver trickling
streams - the English Countryside is where his heart
truly belongs...
Most people picture the traditional English themed
garden as either a somewhat wild, flower-filled
cottage garden, or a carefully manicured formal
estate garden.
5. THE NATIONAL FOREST
The National Forest is one of the country's
boldest environmental projects, transforming
200 square miles in the centre of England. It
offers a range of unique funding schemes
designed to encourage tree planting and the
creation of wildlife habitats. Burton upon Trent
is in the very heart of the forest.
Eden Project
The Eden Project is a very popular
visitor attraction in Cornwall. Inside the
artificial biomes are plants that are
collected from all around the world.
This organization/charity teaches
visitors how important plants are and
also use gardening as a way of
empowering disengaged people.
Hope you have enjoyed reading about our country.
Ta-ra me duck!
(this is a typical Burtonian saying)