Hey I just finished a school project for Social Studies. The assignment was to describe how Ghana is a developing country. Here is my final draft:
Hannah
Lybbert
Form 1A UJHS
Social
Studies Project
Due date: November 4, 2013
Ghana is
a Developing Country: Discuss
Ghana is one out of many
developing countries. Before I describe how Ghana is a developing county, I
will describe the word developing. When someone says something is developing it
means that something is changing in a specific way. You can also say that is
becoming stronger or improving. A euphemism for developing is poor. The reason
why people don’t say “poor” is because it sounds you don’t have anything useful
any more. But when you say developing it sounds like there is still a future to
life.
Compared to a developed
country, people live very differently in Ghana. The homes in Ghana are built out
of mud or a mixture of sand and cement because it is too expensive to pay for a
house made out of wood and cement. I have seen some partially built houses that
have collapsed from heavy rain fall, earthquakes etc. Mostly in the northern
part of Ghana, the roofs are made from straw.
People in Ghana also wear
different clothes. Some people wear torn shirts and shorts and some people wear
really nice dresses made with Ghanaian fabrics. Most people wear nice clothes
when out getting groceries or on walks but when people work, they (most of the
time) wear dirty clothes. When a lady goes to buy her eggs she is normally in
nicer clothes the the person she is buying her eggs from.
Another way I can tell
that Ghana is developing is that food, nutrition and health is not great but
still improving. Most people in Ghana grow their own food (e.g. Plantain,
tomato, pepper etc.) because they can’t afford to buy their own food. Also, if
people are only eating foods they can grow, they may not get all of the kinds
of food they need. Health in Ghana can also be pretty poor. Some families
cannot invest in their child’s or their own health because the money he\she is
getting from their job cannot pay for a person’s health.
Nutrition can also be a
problem, mostly in the northern part of Ghana. Children are most likely to
become malnourished because they are still growing and developing. Some
children suffer from diseases like kwashiorkor, which happens when a child is
not getting enough proteins.
Looking at education can
also help a person to know that Ghana is a developing country. A lot of people
in Ghana have good education. These people can grow up to be very smart, that
gives them many job opportunities. But sadly there are still some families that
cannot afford their child’s education. So some of these children, when they
grow up, are illiterate. When a person
can’t read or write they will not have a lot of good job opportunities, which
can make life really hard for these people. When a person does not have a good
job but has a family, he/she will not be able to pay for the basic needs of
their family.
I can also tell that
Ghana is a developing county by the condition of the roads and how some people
(mostly up north) don’t have electricity. Roads in Ghana can be very bad. They
are either made out of dirt or asphalt. When the roads are made out of asphalt
they normally have a lot of potholes. Some villages farther up north do not
have electricity. They don’t have fans or air conditioning, so they live their
lives very differently than people in Accra or Cape Coast do. More important
than being comfortable are things like lights at night for learning or
cleaning, cell phones and radios for communication.
You can also call roads,
gutters, electricity, and running water infrastructure, which is stuff that the
government provides for people. So when roads are built the government has to
pay for the building of the road. The government pays for this infrastructure
with tax money. However it is very difficult to collect taxes when the income
of their citizens is very little and is very hard to track. When they cannot
collect taxes, the roads are left unfixed (more potholes), and the water and
electricity is not provided because the government spends their little money on
the basic needs of the country.
What I have written about
falls into two different groups: how people
are poor and how the government is
poor. First I wrote about how people are poor by how they live and dress. Then
I wrote about how the government is poor by the infrastructure. I also wrote
about how the government is poor because people are poor and, in the opposite
direction, how people are poor because the government is poor.
I think
that Ghana is still developing and that developing is not easy. But I also
think that at some point in time Ghana will become a developed country.
A+ paper, Hannah! You are learning so much (and teaching me, as well).
ReplyDeleteI think you are developing. Not because you are poor but you are changing in a specific way. You are becoming wiser. Thank you for sharing and teaching me.
ReplyDeleteHannah, this is great. Any essay where you throw in the word "euphemism" is an impressive essay. Nicely done.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your paper Hannah. Were all the children in your class given the same assignment? What do you think a similar assignment would discuss if it were given in the US? I am very curious to read the papers of some of your peers. I liked reading your paper and seeing how/why Ghana is a developing country in your eyes.
ReplyDeleteAs a development economist dad, this almost brings tears to my eyes, Hannah! Way to think this through so well...very perceptive!
ReplyDeleteNow, you really have to blog about how the Social Studies class went when the class turned this essay in. That experience is truly ironic (another great word) and epitomizes something about what makes Ghana a developing country!
Great work Hannah! I learned a lot reading it! I can't wait to hear what happened when you turned this paper in.
ReplyDeleteThis is really cool, Hannah.
ReplyDeleteP.S. - I now know what kwashiorkor is. I feel enlightened. :)