The Need for More Physical Education in Colorado Schools has UNC Alumni, Faculty and Doctoral Students Leaping for Change

The Need for More Physical Education in Colorado Schools has UNC Alumni, Faculty and Doctoral Students Leaping for Change
The Need for More Physical Education in Colorado Schools has UNC Alumni, Faculty and Doctoral Students Leaping for Change

Once a week, a group of nine-year-old students get up from their desks, form a line
and walk down the hall to the gymnasium at Jackson Elementary in Greeley. There they’ll
begin a short game of tag for less than 10 minutes to get the blood flowing and then
jump right into a fitness activity. The activity is not a typical, run-around-the-basketball-court
kind of workout though, the students participate in a card-game-turned-exercise circuit.
 

“We play UNO Fitness,” said UNC alumnus and physical education teacher at Jackson
Elementary, Jioni Reliford ‘12.

For nearly a decade, Reliford has been finding new, impactful ways to incorporate
health into his students’ days. For example, in UNO Fitness, Reliford created a board
explaining what the meaning of each UNO card has transformed into. The ‘skip’ card
means skip one lap, any blue card means head over to the jump ropes, a red card means
go to the curl-up station and so on.
 

UNO

Fourth grade students at Jackson Elementary playing UNO Fitness

“We’re really trying to make these fitness activities fun in a way that the students
are not really relating it to working out,” Reliford said. 
 

After the fitness activity comes a lesson focus where a sport or activity is highlighted.
Recently, it was hockey. Reliford first showed his students a short video of a young
female playing the sport to encourage everyone to participate and explain the terminology.
 

“It gives them background information. We have a lot of students in Greeley from different
countries and they may have never heard of hockey,” Reliford said. “So, if I start
by saying ‘we’re going to work with the puck’ they’ll have no clue.”
 

Reliford’s goal is to incorporate life lessons into his physical education class plans
to go along with movement, heart rate and fitness zones. He even incorporates literacy
learning when he asks his students to spell ‘dribble’ while dribbling a soccer ball
or hockey puck. Reliford learned the importance of well-rounded health and how to
teach it while he was attending the University of Northern Colorado (UNC) as a Sport
and Exercise Science student.
 

“A lot of people have the stigma that we’re in here just playing dodgeball, but it
was amazing at UNC because we had outdoor adventure courses and different tactical
game approaches that taught us physical education is much more than that,” Reliford
said.

HockeyJioni Reliford teaching one of his fourth grade students hockey skills

Hockey videoJioni Reliford showing one of his fourth grade classes a video on hockey

GymFourth grade students at Jackson Elementary playing UNO Fitness

quick warm-upFourth grade students at Jackson Elementary participating in a quick warm-up

As a teacher preparation institute, those in UNC’s College of Natural and Health Sciences
take pride in pushing for more physical education classes to continue to evolve like
Reliford’s, though there is an uphill battle to overcome.

Push to Require More Physical Education Hours in Colorado Schools

Regardless of his hard work and thoughtful curriculum, Reliford’s students only have
physical education once a week, a schedule many experts feel is not enough to combat
increased rates of childhood obesity or provide necessary benefits to cognitive ability
and brain development. 

“We’re one of only four states in the nation that has no requirement for physical
education K-12,” said 
Jaimie McMullen, Ph.D., associate professor in the School of Sport and Exercise Science.

McMullen is one of many faculty members working toward more consistent state-wide
physical education policies.
 

“Right now, some kids will get physical education every third day because it will
rotate with art and music or once every six days,” McMullen said. “In some Colorado
middle school cases though, students never take physical education.”
 

McMullen says this depends on how a school frames its electives. If students are allowed
two electives per trimester for example, and a student chooses to take band and a
foreign language class, which are full-year electives, there is no time left for physical
education.
 

“So, in six through eighth grade when their bodies are changing, they never learn
about health, wellness, teamwork and communication,” McMullen said. 

McMullen is also a member of the Society of Health and Physical Educators (SHAPE Colorado).
The organization recently advocated for a piece of legislation that had bi-partisan
support, that will determine how beneficial quality physical education is for students.
The pilot program is called Health and Wellness Through Comprehensive Physical Education.
McMullen, her colleagues and doctoral students are currently two years into the evaluation
of the program. 

According to the Colorado State Health Department, more than 1 in 4 children in Colorado were overweight or obese in 2013.

In 2014, the Colorado Child Health Survey found only 45.2{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of Colorado kids, aged
5 through 14, exercise for 60 minutes every day.

“It will look at what will happen when schools are able to implement what we determined
to be quality physical education, which is physical education taken daily, or at least
225 minutes a week for middle schools and 150 minutes a week at the elementary level,”
McMullen said.
 

The legislation states, not only does physical education instruction reduce childhood
obesity and foster a lifetime commitment to physical activity and healthy lifestyles,
but a 2007 study by the Institute of Medicine found that physical activity also has
a positive impact on cognitive ability and brain development, insomnia, depression,
anxiety and avoiding tobacco use. 
 

Young

Rep. Mary Young visiting one of  Jioni Reliford’s class at Jackson Elementary

Until results from the evaluation are released next year, McMullen and SHAPE Colorado
are working to keep this topic running through legislators’ minds. They invited Representative
Mary Young, who is the vice chair of the House Education Committee, to Jackson Elementary
to witness the impressive practices Reliford is applying in his physical education
classes.

As a master teacher, [Jioni Reliford’s] physical education class is a symphony of
physical activity, social interaction and cooperation interwoven with reading and
math literacy. Who would have thought tag, Uno Fitness and learning how to use a hockey
stick would achieve those goals?” Young asked.
 

The recognition of Reliford’s dedication to providing quality physical education is
what McMullen was hoping for, but the race continues.
 

“If every teacher was like Jioni Reliford, we’d be in a much better place, but his
students don’t see him every day, so imagine how great it would be if they did,” McMullen
said. 
 

UNC’s Active Schools Institute Partnering to Develop Expanded Framework for School
Physical Activity Promotion 

Beyond the K-12 classroom, UNC faculty, staff and students have been invested in improving
the quality of physical education and physical activity opportunities for K-12 students
in Colorado and beyond through their Active Schools Institute (ASI). Part of the only physical education graduate program in the state and housed
in UNC’s School of Sport and Exercise Science, the ASI conducts research and community
engaged scholarship in the area of school physical activity promotion. And they recently
formed a strategic partnership with a national organization called Active Schools.

The movement was established as part of Michelle Obama’s Let’s Move campaign. UNC and I have been involved since early on,” Director of UNC’s Active Schools Institute and Associate Professor in the School of Sport and Exercise Science, Brian Dauenhauer, Ph.D., said. “Currently, I serve on their strategic advisory council, so being in a leadership
role with the organization allowed us to already have those connections in place.
This strategic partnership sort of built off of those relationships.”

The goal of the two-year partnership, which is set to conclude in summer 2023, is
to help the national organization transition into its next version, informally referred
to as Active Schools 2.0.
 

One of the key features of the 2.0 version is that it’s very much directed by evidence-based
practice, with the idea being that we take what we know from the research, and we
help schools, teachers, and administrators put it into action in a way that aligns
with what the evidence says really impacts kids the most,” Dauenhauer said. 
 

UNC doctoral students were brought on board to do some of the research and to help
synthesize what the evidence says about school-based physical activity.
 

“We’re pulling information out of different articles on what is a promising practice,”
said Lisa Paulson, a doctoral student in UNC’s Physical Education and Physical Activity
Leadership program.

“Physical inactivity amongst youth is one of the most troublesome issues,” added Taemin
Ha, who is also a doctoral student in UNC’s Physical Education and Physical Activity
Leadership program. “We need to keep the conversation of how important physical activity
is going and release more evidence, which will hopefully result in more kids becoming
more active and have a happier life.”
 

The UNC Active Schools Institute is planning on co-hosting a virtual conference this
August to introduce the field to the new Active Schools framework and will host an
in-person conference in summer 2023 to officially launch Active Schools 2.0.
 

“We intend to provide professional development for folks and create a culture of what
active schools can look like,” Paulson said. “Our primary goal is to educate people
and build a community so kids can have more opportunities for physical activity.”

— written by Sydney Kern and Alani Casiano, a junior English major at UNC

Man with knife at elementary school surrenders to SJPD

Man with knife at elementary school surrenders to SJPD

A gentleman with a huge knife walks on a wall to a San Jose faculty. May perhaps 4, 2022 

A tense, several hours-extensive standoff among San Jose police officers and a guy armed with a knife unfolded at an elementary university on Wednesday.

The drama was solved peacefully, but there experienced been a lockdown on the campus of Empire Gardens Elementary Faculty, on North 21st and East Empire streets in San Jose.

Mom and dad started buying up their young children at the school a small little bit later on than the typical 1:50p.m. dismissal time. Continue to, San Jose law enforcement reported the ordeal ended the way they desired.

“That is why we have the methods in this article. Which is why we have the men and women. That’s why we have our cell disaster assessment team,” claimed department spokesman Sgt. Christian Camarillo.

The problems started out just right after 11 a.m.

“Driving this faculty, there is a creek, which is regarded to have a lot of homeless men and women,” explained location neighbor Vicky Carlos.

SEE ALSO: San Jose law enforcement main ‘disappointed’ with legal habits of officers

Many others mentioned the gentleman, appeared to be unhoused and struggling a psychological wellness episode. They claimed he walked on to the campus of 300 students with an 18-inch knife and began swinging the weapon, and shouting incoherently in Spanish.

“Concerns are (for the) students. Faculty is in session. Appropriate now every probable source we have is below dealing with this individual,” explained Camarillo.

The university was placed on lockdown, with the K-via-5th grade pupils retained in their classrooms. Administrators notified some mothers and fathers of the ongoing menace by phone.

“And the place of work termed me for my daughter, never appear in these days. Since that guy has the knife,” explained guardian Marlo Sarantes, as he stood with his kindergarten-aged daughter and viewed the functions from a nearby sidewalk.

Uniformed police officers surrounded the man, although associates of the law enforcement cellular crisis assessment crew began speaking to him for several hours.

“Ah, not much too concerned. I suggest there are a good deal of police all around. So, that’s what they are trained for. So I’m not that concerned about it,” explained dad or mum Elaina Ornelas, as she waited in her SUV near faculty grounds.

Law enforcement disaster experts, as properly as county clinicians, continued negotiating with the male – using a bullhorn, to inevitably influence him to place the knife down, and surrender. Officials reported this deployment labored to perfection.

“We never want to pressure a confrontation. We want a tranquil resolution,” reported Camarillo.

The male is becoming held on the misdemeanor demand of brandishing a deadly weapon on school grounds. He’ll undergo a psychological wellness evaluation, to ascertain his extensive-phrase needs.

Rockville Centre school officials announce appointment of new superintendent | Herald Community Newspapers

Rockville Centre school officials announce appointment of new superintendent | Herald Community Newspapers

Rockville Centre faculty officers declared on Tuesday that they prepare to appoint Matthew Gaven as the district’s subsequent superintendent at the Board of Education meeting on Wednesday.

Gaven, of Backyard City, will consider about the position on July 1, when Interim Superintendent Robert Bartels returns to his place of assistant superintendent for small business and personnel. Gaven now serves as the deputy superintendent in the Mineola General public Schools, a position he has held for the previous 3 yrs.

“I have been privileged with a profession path that I believe has entirely ready me for the situation of superintendent of educational institutions, and it is an honor to get started this stage of my experienced journey in the very-regarded Rockville Centre schools,” Gaven claimed in a statement. “I eagerly appear forward to introducing myself to the employees, families, and broader group, and can not hold out to be component of the group of amazing gurus who are helping to guidebook the district to even larger heights.”

Gaven has labored in Mineola colleges due to the fact 2006. He started out as an elementary faculty principal and went on to turn into a middle college principal, director of pupil staff, director of technology, assistant superintendent of curriculum, instruction, assessment and technological know-how and then deputy superintendent. He started his profession as an elementary faculty instructor in the Backyard garden City Public Educational facilities, and went on to serve as an elementary faculty assistant principal and principal there.

“This is a wonderful exclamation issue on a meticulously executed look for process,” Board of Schooling President John O’Shea stated in a assertion released by the district. “Our Rockville Centre school group was completely associated and contributed considerably to the function of our search consultants and the Board of Instruction. We are profoundly grateful for this group-pushed method and thank our lots of people and employees customers who volunteered their time and ideas in the exertion to secure our upcoming district chief.”

Gaven is a lifelong resident of Lengthy Island and life in Back garden Metropolis with his wife, Marie, and their three young children, Emily, 20, Patrick, 19, and Katie, 17, together with their pandemic pup, Sully. Matt and Marie can normally be located on the athletic fields through the weekends observing all 3 kids perform lacrosse at both of those the high university and collegiate ranges. When lacrosse year is around, Matt and Marie love shelling out time calming at the seashore with family members and pals.

The board’s final decision will come in the wake of previous Superintendent June Chang announcing his resignation final summertime, just far more than just one year into a five-12 months settlement with the board. Even though Chang did not publicly disclose his explanations for leaving, he confronted significantly adversity right after having over for Dr. William Johnson, who experienced served as superintendent for 34 decades just before retiring in 2019. Chang experienced to navigate the district by means of the coronavirus pandemic in his initially 12 months on the position, and offer with the ongoing controversy more than masking district learners.

In addition, last July, the school board voted, 3-2, against his recommendation to rehire South Aspect High School girls’ varsity soccer mentor Jennifer Abgarian — Newsday’s All-Extended Island girls’ soccer Coach of the Calendar year in 2020 — and her assistant, Chris Aloisi. The board then voted to hire Jude Massillon to swap Abgarian, but Massillon resigned immediately after just 1 week. In a letter to the board, Massillon, who is Black, explained he obtained various anonymous cell phone calls, several of which he explained as “racially derogatory.” He was replaced by Judi Croutier, a district teacher and a former highly thriving mentor of the soccer crew.

The procedure that resulted in Gaven’s appointment was led by an unbiased search guide. Dialogue teams and surveys had been carried out by the group, which resulted in a candidate profile that served manual the board’s look for. The board then held interviews with seven of the top rated-ranked candidates and conducted abide by-up interviews with a variety of finalists, along with history and reference checks.

O’Shea claimed that the board was amazed with Gaven’s assortment of school leadership experiences in Mineola and his familiarity with neighborhood expectations of the general public schools.

Gaven and the Board of Education have agreed on a 3-calendar year deal that operates by means of June 30, 2025. Annual evaluations by the board and conversations with the superintendent will figure out potential compensation raises. The contract also consists of fringe gains that are commensurate with college district management compensation in Nassau County. A copy of the agreement will be designed available on the district’s web page immediately after approval by the Board of Education and learning.

Gaven retains a expert diploma in instructional administration from Hofstra College, a master’s in computing and schooling from Teachers Higher education, Columbia University, a master’s in elementary education and learning from Hofstra and a bachelor’s in background from Providence College or university.

A number of changeover situations will be held for Gaven to meet up with with faculty neighborhood associates prior to the start of his employment on July 1, and 1 of the first orders of business involving the Board of Training and Gaven and his administrative workforce will be the growth of objectives for the 2022-23 university calendar year.

Home-schooling: A Yorkshire father shares what life is really like teaching children at home

Home-schooling: A Yorkshire father shares what life is really like teaching children at home

Almost 50 for each cent more people elected to home educate all through Covid 19 in Leeds, which means that they elected to take their young children out of faculty.

Given that the beginning of the pandemic, Sheffield Council also saw hundreds extra deregistrations – the most important solitary maximize the council has at any time seen.

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Pre-Covid 19, households cited panic and deficiency of disability provision as their explanation for home educating.

Ian Thursfield runs the Zero Waste retail outlet Leeds Refills with his family

Now, Covid-19 and anxiousness are the most popular reasons given for homeschooling but there are even now a large number of moms and dads who did not make clear why, in accordance to Sheffield City Council.

Yorkshire father-of-a few, Ian Thursfield, 34, preferred to be certain his small children expert holistic baby-led learning and had been not below “constant stress” at college.

Ian explained that his eldest baby, Imogen, 7, is authorized to pick out what she would like to discover every day.

He explained: “She gets to socialise each and every day with young ones of all ages in all environments, not just kids her very own age in a classroom.

“We did not want the kids to be under the consistent tension of examinations and screening – that for a extensive time are only screening the university – on a very slim curriculum.

Ian is also father to Elanor, 4, and Oren, 3 months, and claimed Elanor is not completely ready for college owing to spectrum challenges for which she is at the moment staying assessed.

Several mom and dad and carers who aided their youngsters with their schoolwork during the pandemic may possibly experience like they received a style of what household education and learning would be like.

But Ian, who runs Leeds Refills Zero-Waste retail outlet in Hyde Park, mentioned that is a typical misconception.

“People imagine Residence Ed is what universities built them do about lockdown,” he said. “This couldn’t be more from the truth, as that was structured understanding above a entire working day.”

He claimed the major taboo nevertheless is the fantasy that children miss out on socialising if they property teach.

Ian added: “The little ones socialise with more young ones than those in university, and all various ages.”

He said that dwelling instruction family members help a single an additional.

“The community in Leeds is charming and we all aid every single other out. We share guidance and experience with our mastering,” he included.

What does a 7 days in the life of a residence educating family members seem like?

Ian said other than a pair of set gatherings this sort of as trampolining, clip ‘n climb, and sports activities day, “it’s all advertisement hoc that folks organise as just one off situations.”

Every single spouse and children is different but Ian’s center youngster goes to nursery Monday-Thursday when he homeschools his eldest.

He explained: “Monday is our ‘relax day’ so a minor little bit of on the web mastering but no rush, often some household swim and some video games.

“Tuesday involves swimming for both the oldest and center baby, gymnastics for the center little one and trampolining for the eldest.

“Wednesday is a nature stroll for the eldest (although I do the job) and some understanding with mum.

“Thursday I do a cycle experience and family members swim with the eldest and go to a cafe for food. In the afternoon they both equally slumber at grandad’s.

“Friday they invest with grandad and do big days out with him while I am in the shop.

“Saturday is the eldest’s gymnastics and athletics day for both of them. Center boy or girl does dance course and then we devote the day in the store as a spouse and children,” explained Ian.

He stated that his youngsters give comedian reduction in the shop, they entertain other children and his eldest Imogen can do the weighing and calculator.

“Sunday is junior park operate and possibly absolutely everyone is in the shop or they all relax at house though I work,” added Ian.

Have you made the decision to home teach your baby? What is a week in your life seem like? Tag us @yorkshirepost @sophiemeilan

4 lessons from online learning that should stick after the pandemic

4 lessons from online learning that should stick after the pandemic

A single of the a lot of adjustments COVID-19 introduced those in education was an practically quick change to on the internet understanding.

Overnight, institutions scrambled to preserve training transferring, although bridging the bodily length involving instructor and learner. Usually educated instructors created valiant attempts to change to electronic by recording classes, submitting movies and creating breakout rooms, making use of what ever technology they had available.

These endeavours resulted in digitally mediated physical school rooms making use of the world-wide-web — not online schooling.

While these two alternatives audio the identical, they are not. Bridging physical length through technologies by yourself does not handle additional adjustments needed to address learner wants. Putting up elements on line, recording lectures and discussions them selves never develop a coached, collaborative and supported learning surroundings.

So what have we definitely learned about on the web instruction? And what do we do now?

Online learning isn’t new, and classes can be drawn from existing analysis and expertise. Athabasca University — where we are all professors — pioneered the world’s very first on the net MBA, M.Nursing and M.Ed progams over 28 a long time in the past. And right now, it’s 1 of Canada’s major on the web universities.

The experience of on the internet pioneers highlights four distinctive areas of on the web studying that ought to stick submit-pandemic: discovering to understand online, creating online instructing with objective, blending area and time on the web and continued disruption with AI.

1. Learning to study on line

The pandemic highlighted that one-measurement-fits-all instructional strategies fail to deal with college student desires. More youthful learners could seek out physical spaces to encourage socialization, with supervision and instructor-led content material supply. Other folks, like Athabasca’s mainly adult learners, price the usefulness of connecting with classmates and instructors on line during situations of their picking out.

Frequent inequities like very poor accessibility to the world-wide-web, absence of economic assets and necessary digital competence plague on line studying. Nonetheless, on line training offers entry for pupils going through geospacial obstacles to regular lecture rooms, and even further problems of inequality are resolved by using multi-modal length schooling, fiscal support structures and orientation on how to learn on the web.




Read more:
Online mastering for the duration of COVID-19: 8 means universities can increase fairness and entry


Emergency on the web education employed blunt-edged instruments, ignoring student and system distinctions. The pandemic takeaway, on the other hand, is the value of planning all pupils to master, whether or not online or in a actual physical classroom.

2. Creating on the internet teaching with reason

Top quality instructing and learning style and design have to integrate energetic, engaging roles for particular person college students, whether designed for common or length schooling.

Significant educating varies by setting and necessitates diverse methods. On line system and teaching layout is learner instead than content centred, incorporating substantial engagement in collaborative finding out teams that fosters lively finding out.

Creating effective on the internet system supplies demands an tactic involving both equally instructors and expert system developers and will take months alternatively than weeks. Training course supplies are painstakingly detailed, and consist of writing anything the instructor would be expecting to say in a bodily classroom, plainly describing all training course needs and linking students to readings, video clip and on line assets.

For the reason that of the pandemic, instructors experienced to translate classroom delivery into technological know-how-mediated shipping — it worked for some, but was not conveniently customized to exclusive learning requirements.

Technological instruments, mixed with unbiased and joint working opportunities, should really be introduced again to the actual physical or hybrid classroom in conjunction with on the net pedagogical approaches that increase lively, collaborative mastering and learner-created selections.

A young girl sits with her notebook in front of a laptop with her teacher providing a lesson
The pandemic disclosed how schooling methods can change.
(Giovanni Gagliardi/Unsplash)

3. Blending house and time on the net

Pandemic education and learning popularized the vocabulary of “synchronous” and “asynchronous” studying. Synchronous replicated actual physical classrooms as a result of real-time, digitally mediated training, although asynchronous meant working independently, generally with resources designed for a bodily classroom. Moving forward we need to believe about how timing and presence impacts finding out.

At Athabasca, college students arrive together in time and place by blended, collaborative, synchronous and asynchronous on the web studying. Instructors coach college students separately at a student led pace.

This is distinct from standard undergraduate school rooms, wherever college students take up product on a fixed timetable. Our graduate programs use paced programming, necessitating students to get the job done independently whilst often coming jointly in active on the web dialogue.

A lot more adaptable educating makes it possible for college students to receive teacher assist when they want it. Developing in synchronous, collaborative learning allows for reflection, rather than real time responses.

4. COVID-19 started the disruption, AI will carry on it

The pandemic revealed how education approaches can change right after instructors experienced to research for progressive approaches to make improvements to university student learning results outside the house the physical classroom.

At Athabasca, a virtual co-operative software allowed us to introduce a co-op program in the middle of a pandemic.

College students accessed a simulated perform working experience in a paced framework, irrespective of locale. They were equipped to practise functioning as a team, problem resolving, conflict resolution, ethical reasoning and leadership though performing on an assigned job. Learners been given instant, detailed comments from an AI coach, allowing for for intensive experimentation and revision to grasp ideas honed in reflective discussion with the instructor.

Analysis indicates that adopting online and AI applications wants to be deliberate, coupled with supportive electronic infrastructure and highly responsive scholar help. Planned very carefully and taken together, these measures enhance on traditional techniques by generating instruction actually open, accessible and inclusive.

Now, the dilemma for all educators need to be: How do we capitalize on COVID-19 initiated alter to create far better training programs for the long run?

This is an up-to-date edition of a story at first printed Could 1, 2022. It clarifies emergency on line education and learning manufactured it difficult to deal with pupil variations.

Educational Games Industry Market Investment Analysis

Educational Games Industry Market Investment Analysis

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Key Varieties Coated K-12 Academic Video game University Instruction Activity Adult Training Recreation Aged Schooling Game Big Applications Protected High quality-oriented Education and learning Assessment-oriented Training

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The yr-more than-calendar year expansion for 2022 is approximated at XX{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} and the incremental advancement of the industry is predicted to be $xxx million.

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Jucheng, Hongen, Wisedu, LeapFrog Enterprises, Kingosoft, Kingsun, Beijing Education Star Technologies, Guangdong Dongtian Electronic Know-how, Zhengfang Application, The Finding out Business, IntelHouse Technological innovation, Scholastic, Neusoft

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