Upload
elodia-arvelo
View
218
Download
1
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
capacitación
perfeccionamiento
EDUCACIÓN
FUTURO
congresosentrevistas
clasificados
empleados
cuil-cuit Anses
subsidio
mayorista
precios ganancias
NBI
Necesidades básicas insatisfechas
PAMI
Programa de asistencia médico integral
Crisis familiar
bienestar
humildad solidaridad dignidad
educación
vocación
pública privada
desarrollo
Clases sociales
Trabajo infantil
alta
media
baja = pobres = carenciados
indigentes Extrema pobreza
Trabajo informal
En negro indocumentados
China
pobreza
Población numerosa
ParaguayPerúBolivia
Maltrato laboral
indemnización
agrupaciones Conflictos laborales
Huelga, paro
manifestación
salarios
crisis
hospitales
sociedad
esfuerzotrabajo
seguridad
policía
Working at home
Women sewed clothes or made things such us gloves or brushes.
They worked for fifteen hours a day.
In middle class families, men earned enough money to pay for the family food.
Homeless families were sent to a workhouse. Many people had to live there together. Families were split up. They met only once a week for one hour.
factories
When people worked at home they made their children help. Working in factories was very risky.
They didn't earn enough money, they worked in bad conditions, there was illegal child work and children were tortured.
They earned (15p.) a week, mothers too.
During Queen Victoria‘s reign, workers were often treated like slaves.
Children had to work up to 12 hours a day.
In 1842 they made new laws which prevented women, girls and boys under 10, from working in mines.
mines
Some children worked as chimney sweeps, and to do this they had to climb up inside the chimneys.
Younger children were called trappers.
1838 people were killed in mines
No es bueno para un país que haya chicos trabajando
porque afecta su futuro.
El trabajo hace que un país crezca.
El trabajo modifica la vida de los individuos.
Lo ilegal afecta de mala manera a toda la sociedad
Busquemos soluciones entre todos.
Solos no podemos, somos parte de la sociedad.