Cambridge Day 2025 - one of the leading events for English language teachers in Southeast Europe - takes place today at the Balkan Hotel in Sofia. For the 19th consecutive year, the conference, organised by Klett Bulgaria Publishing, gathers experts and teachers from Bulgaria and abroad to share innovations and approaches to further develop foreign language education in the country.
The event will feature discussions, lectures and workshops with guest speakers and specialists from Cambridge University Press & Assessment who will share practical tips from their experience. Participants will have the opportunity to explore the latest methods and educational resources for teaching English, as well as best practices that are transforming the learning process.
The event will also include the award ceremony for the national finalists of the international English language competition, Kangaroo Global Linguistics.
The Speaker of the National Assembly Natalia Kiselova will today award the winners of the 32nd Children's Easter Festival in the Serbian town of Bosilegrad. The children will compete in three categories – for the strongest, most beautiful and most..
A colorful Easter celebration under the slogan “Let’s sing and dance on Easter, on the square” will take place today in the open air in the town of Stara Zagora. A number of folklore groups and singers from the region will take care of the good..
Sugar artist Mariya Ozturk's latest masterpiece - a model of St Peter's Basilica in Rome - prompted us to reach out to our fellow Bulgarian during the bright holiday season. Though she’s been straddling life between Bulgaria and Istanbul for years, she..
The group cycling tour along the tourist route of the Black Sea Route Epic Tour 2025 started today . According to the extreme sports website 360mag.bg, a..
Students block the entrances to the Radio and Television of Serbia For 12 days now, students and citizens have been blocking the entrances to..
A new book "Bulgarian communities in Albania and Kosovo. Socio-political processes and demographic consequences (1913-2024)" was..
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