Alla Schwartz, a German teacher at Monroe High School who immigrated to the United States eight years ago from Ukraine, was the recipient of one of those gestures this week.
The majority of their classmates had evacuated on the first day of Putin's assault, but five of them had nowhere to go because their parents reside in seized territory. With the help of reporters from The Sun and The Daily Telegraph the trapped children were driven 30 miles north to Zaporizhia.
According to the Irish Mirror, a young Ukrainian girl has started school in Ireland after fleeing her war-torn country. Last week, Zlata Vynnyk who survived Russia's bombings began class for the first time at St Joseph's National School in Coolock, Dublin, yesterday.
The Russian Ministry of Education presented schoolteachers with "information for a social studies session" this week. The two-page paper, which instructors are presumably supposed to read aloud in their students before showing a video of President Vladimir Putin, should have been titled "disinformation." In the event of inquisitive children, assistance is offered.
The government passed numerous normative laws on Monday to help refugee children from Ukraine who have fled to Romania. Such that, they will have the same rights as Romanian students at schools.
As sanctions take effect, private schools have asked the government for clarification on whether they may collect school money from some Russian parents.
A substitute teacher in Virginia has been removed from the classroom after expressing support for Russian President Vladimir Putin's decision to attack Ukraine, according to district authorities.