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FOASE D/A /J. S.S

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the headmaster
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WELCOME TO FOASE D/A JSS

Welcome Message

Welcome Message

 

On behalf of our learning community welcome to Foase District Assembly Junior High  School and our new web site!

We believe that central to your child's success and well-being is the partnership between home and school. We are sure the web site will enable us all to communicate more effectively and share information and ideas about how we develop as a school.

We hope you enjoy and participate in this exciting new development.

 

The Head Master

Mr. Kankam Mensah Peter


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students pictures
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The Headmaster of Foase District Assembly Junior High School
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students mixing up paint
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Some students in my school
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Some Students under a project work in my school
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my partner school st thursby community college
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picture of my students

STORIES

STORIES

 

An Angel Visits  Mary

There was a girl named Mary who lived in a village called Nazareth.

She was going to marry a carpenter named Joseph.

Mary was a wonderful girl.

One day, an angel  came to her.

"Greetings.  The Lord is with  you!"  the angel said.  "You will have a son and you will name him Jesus."

Mary was so surprised.

Mary knew that God had sent the angel to her.

"How can this happen?"  Mary asked.

The angel answered, "The Holy Spirit will make this happen.  Your child will be the son of God."

"Let it be done to me as God wishes,"  Mary said.

Wow!

Can you imagine that?

What would you have done?

What would you have said?

Do you think Mary trusted God?


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Information Technology Teacher
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DO YOU KNOW THEM?

FONTS AND CASTLES IN GHANA

FONTS AND CASTLES IN GHANA


The Forts and Castles of Ghana

BY EXCOBA KANKAM

In the absence of any physical landmarks of this historical journey into chaos, other communities of African people may seek refuge in collective amnesia as a natural defence against the unbearable trauma of the savageries of the slave trade. But for the people of Ghana, there can be no escape from a historical reality as palpable as the slave castle. Ultimately, Ghana's Pan African consciousness reaches far into a fractured, deeply wounded collective unconscious that insists on being uncovered so that it may be healed back to wholeness. The slave forts and castles are the most immediate though confusing gateway into the collective unconscious. To contemplate and, above all, to penetrate the puzzling, even frightening mystery of these monuments of enslavement is to come to terms with our history of fragmentation, the basis of Pan African consciousness and struggle..

Elmina - 1482.Built by the Portuguese, is the first of the slave castles. I ask questions. The more I try to find out, the less I learn. There is broad confusion as to how many castles there are in Ghana. In West Africa.

Castles. These military forts which served as administrative centers for colonial government and the administration of the gold and slave trade, including the temporary housing of items of trade: guns, beads, alcohol, cloth from Europe and, sine qua non, gold and human flesh from Africa's interior.

n Elmina I find one small book,Forts and Castles of Ghanaby Albert van Dantzig, and one small pamphlet,The Castles Of Elminaby Tony Hyland of the Department of Architecture, University of Science & Technology, Kumasi.

In her prescient manner, Nia somehow strikes up a conversation with Albert van Dantzig who just happens to be passing through at that time. I am upstairs in the little gift shop, feeling prideful because I have purchased these two writings and a few other books about Ghana. When I descend the steps clutching my catch, Nia introduces me to Mr. Dantzig. He is seventy some years old, from Holland, now living in Ghana. We talk briefly. He autographs his book for us.


 


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schol computer lib under construction
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my sch level 2 boys
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art by Sandra
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my loving students

Welcome to Ghana

Welcome to Ghana


Early European Contact and the Slave Trade



When the first Europeans arrived in the late fifteenth century, many inhabitants of the Gold Coast area were striving to consolidate their newly acquired territories and to settle into a secure and permanent environment. Several immigrant groups had yet to establish firm ascendancy over earlier occupants of their territories, and considerable displacement and secondary migrations were in progress. Ivor Wilks, a leading historian of Ghana, observed that Akan purchases of slaves from Portuguese traders operating from the Congo region augmented the labor needed for the state formation that was characteristic of this period. Unlike the Akan groups of the interior, the major coastal groups, such as the Fante, Ewe, and Ga, were for the most part settled in their homelands.





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some of my students in group
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happy students
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some whites in ghana
:: Science News for Kids
Science News for Kids is a fun Web site with timely articles for kids of all ages. Check it out at www.sciencenewsforkids.org. Science News for Kids is a project of Science News (www.sciencenews.org) and Science Service (www.sciserv.org), a nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing the understanding of science through publication and educational programs.
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GREAT KING IN GHANA

GREAT TO BE A TEACHER

GREAT TO BE A TEACHER

Hello to you all,

I am a teacher of Foase D/A J.H.S and my students will like to collabrote with other students about the culture and school life and i will like o tel you that come and meet a class and a teacher.

 The school can be found in Ghana which is located on the West  of Africa. We  have a population of 210 students and more of them will like to meet new pals and also to meet students to share ideas about culture and school life with them.

This project is been done by me and my students. and we will like to correspond with other schools. with this project soon.

 

Please if your really intrested you send me the tacher a mail on this e pal address

excoba2005@epals.com and you will meet this great students that are willing to be there for you in all that you may do.

 

 


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my school campus


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