Easter Monday in Bulgaria: Tradition and Family Visits
Orthodox Easter Monday is the day following Easter Sunday and is observed across Bulgaria as part of the wider Easter celebration within the Orthodox Christian tradition
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Florida Today
Second-grade students at Gemini Elementary in Melbourne Beach are pen pals with students in Bulgaria, communicating through the collaborative online learning platform, Glogster.
Deborah Ruscillo set up her class with a Glogster account, which is similar to Facebook but can be accessed only by her students, their classmates and their pen pals in Bulgaria.
Students learn such technology skills as setting up homepages, downloading pictures, videos and clip art, and communicating online with their pen pals.
"They were so excited about this project and spent free time at home working on their glogs," Ruscillo said.
Before corresponding with their pen pals, the second-graders had been "glogging" for several months and developing personal "glogs" about themselves with pictures, videos and clip art. They could use premade Glogster materials, as well as download personal sources from home or school.
Ruscillo hit upon the idea of Glogster pen pals and with the help of Greg Cross, one of eight Brevard Public Schools teacher-technology integrators, contacted Glogster headquarters in Boston. From there, Ruscillo's class was linked with a fourth-grade class in Bulgaria.
The teacher at the Bulgarian school is using the Glogster technology to help teach English to her students. The Bulgarian pen pals attend Fifth Primary School in the area of Stara Zagora in central Bulgaria.
Brazen Bulgarian gangs "terrorise the elderly and rob them over their life savings with increasingly aggressive phone scams nettling millions of euros," according to an AFP story.
The prospect of US President Donald Trump's moving closer to Russia has scrambled the strategy of "balancing East and West" used for decades by countries like Bulgaria, the New York Times says.
Bulgarians have benefited a lot from their EU membership, with incomes rising and Brussels overseeing politicians, according to a New York Times piece.
German businesses prefer to trade with Bulgaria rather than invest into the country, an article on DW Bulgaria's website argues.
The truth about Bulgaria and Moldova's presidential elections is "more complicated" and should not be reduced to pro-Russian candidates winning, the Economist says.
President-elect Rumen Radev "struck a chord with voters by attacking the status quo and stressing issues like national security and migration," AFP agency writes after the presidential vote on Sunday.
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