Getting the Best Engineering Role

Posted by admin on April 30th, 2009 — Posted in Education + Training, Science Hall, Tuition Infos

Mechanical engineering is thought to be one of the most universal of all the varied engineering fields of study, so if you graduate with a mechanical engineering degree, you have lots of mechanical engineering employment opportunities to choose from. An extended range of industries are available, such as energy production, heating systems, cooling system design, and also air conditioning design; automotive design, plant engineering and upkeep; pipes and pressurized systems. Mechanical engineering jobs may be as varied as positions in marketing, administrative or supervisory roles, and the food industry and production manufacturing. Just how much money should I hope to be netting? A salary study carried out in 2003 observed that mechanical engineering positions normally covers a $40,000 to $93,000 earnings band, training and experience being defining factors. An additional factor which may affect your earnings is the engineering sector you opt for. Finding a job: It is really important to put together a extensive and up to date CV. When you have produced a CV highlighting your education, it is time to get going and get out there. How can you find vacancies in the industry? Employment fairs: The engineering faculty in your university will normally receive information about job fairs in the surrounding area. These fairs should give you the opportunity to introduce yourself to the individuals responsible for recruiting. Gaining experience with an internship: Any university can extend support with internship placements. Graduating students are regularly engaged by companies where they have been an intern, internships could likewise have a strong effect on the wage you can hope for. Join groups: Participating in applicable groups or attending meetings opens up a way to discover much more about engineering, but additionally provides networking opportunities.

Read the papers: Companies who need engineers publish advertizements in the press similar to any firm. Check Out the papers regularly; post your cv; follow through. Persistence is necessary.

Utilize the world wide web: Post a comprehensive resume on all of the job search websites on the web. Log onto LinkedIn, build a portfolio and start making contacts. Use the power of the web to speed up your job hunt.

Getting the perfect vacancy will require tenacity and networking. Ensure that your name and resume are out there; follow up on every prospect; build your online presence. These are some of the actions you should take to discover the ideal position for you.

The Top Ten Tips On How To Get College Scholarships

Posted by admin on April 30th, 2009 — Posted in Education + Training

Finding money to help pay for college is a high priority for almost all college students. And one of the best ways to help pay for education costs is to get a college scholarship as it is basically money that you are being given and will never have to repay. But pursuing college scholarships should be done in an organized way if you plan on being successful, and here are the top 10 tips to help you get college scholarships.

1. Before applying to any scholarship program, be sure you thoroughly understand what the requirements for the scholarship really are, and only apply for the scholarship if you are sure that you are indeed eligible.

2. In filling out the application form for the scholarship, make sure that you fill in every single blank on the form without leaving anything out. If a particular section of the form does not apply to you simply indicate that on the form space provided. If you leave areas of the form blank, there is a good chance that your application will not succeed.

3. Be sure that you know what the directions are for applying for each scholarship program and that you follow them very carefully. Do not just send a generic pack of information to each scholarship program, or send extra information that they did not ask for.

4. One of the most important things that you can do to get your application noticed is to make sure that it is easily readable and neat. The best way to do this is to type out your application, but if that is not possible then be sure to print neatly so that it can be easily read. If the scholarship program has quite a few applications to go through, they will most likely just discard those that are difficult to read.

5. When writing an essay for any scholarship program, do your best to make it as personal as possible. Avoid long, dry recitations of information. Here is where you want the scholarship reviewers to get to know you as a person.

6. Before sending off any scholarship packet, make sure that you have made a backup packet just in case the first one gets lost in the mail.

7. Keep good track of all deadlines and make sure that you get your scholarship packet gets sent off well in advance so that it is not late.

8. Before sending off your packet have someone with good writing skills review it and make suggestions on any improvements that could be made.

9. Double and triple check your spelling and grammar to make sure that your packet is as error free as possible.

10. Avoid all scholarship scams that ask you for money in order to qualify for or be eligible for a scholarship.

If you follow the tips listed above for finding and applying for college scholarships, and then regularly apply to as many as you can, most likely you’ll be able to find the money that you need to pay for your college education.

Steadman Issenburg writes on many consumer related topics including education. You can find scholarships for minorities and scholarship essay samples and more by visiting our education website.

A Tribute To Maria Montessori

Posted by admin on April 30th, 2009 — Posted in Education + Training

“The only purpose of education is to teach a student how to live his life by developing his mind and equipping him to deal with reality. The training he needs is theoretical, i.e., conceptual. He has to be taught to think, to understand, to integrate, to prove. He has to be taught the essentials of the knowledge discovered in the past and he has to be equipped to acquire further knowledge by his own efforts.”

Ayn Rand, “The Comprachicos”

The state of education in New Zealand is a shambles. Parents who are concerned about the future well-being of their children are searching desperately for educational alternatives. The increased demand for private schooling and the dramatic rise in the number of home-schooled children provide an accurate measure of the growing degree of parental dissatisfaction with the current situation.

But unless responsible and well-meaning parents are armed with the philosophical knowledge to be able to choose a rational educational method for their children i.e., a type of educational method that will fully prepare their children for successful adult life then it is quite likely that the results will be just as disappointing for them as for those parents who have left their children’s education in the hands of the state.

There is no guarantee whatsoever that private or home-schooling per se will produce satisfactory results. It is one thing to opt out of a state system that not only stunts, but positively perverts a child’s intellectual and moral growth (see Editorial, Turning Minds to Mush, TFR #9); it is quite another to choose a rational alternative. This is why philosophical knowledge, because of its specially close ties to education, goes a long way in helping parents make the right choice.

The objective of this article, therefore, is to provide not only the knowledge, but also an introduction to a particular educational method that produces exceptional results.

The important thing for parents to be aware of is that all educational methods rest upon underlying philosophies. A type of education system that derives its methods and goals from a philosophy that is steeped in irrationality and collectivism will produce a certain type of individual (and society); conversely, a type of education system that derives its methods and goals from a philosophy that advocates and upholds reason and individualism will produce a completely different type of individual (and society).

It follows that in order to choose a rational education for your child, it is first necessary to identify an education method’s philosophical underpinnings if you want him to have every opportunity of fulfilling his potential as a human being.

To begin with and this cannot be stressed enough you must know that, ultimately, in order to allow your child to fully develop the potential power of his mind, you first have to know what potential power needs developing. It is only once this power has been correctly identified, and its function properly understood, that it will be possible to go about aiding its development. The power in question, the power that man uses to grasp the world around him, the power that is at the central core of his very nature, is reason.

Unlike the other animals, man is a conceptual being. It is his rational faculty, his ability to reason, that sets him apart. To possess the power of reason is to possess the ability to conceptualise; it is to possess the ability to build, hierarchically, beginning with the perceptual evidence, progressively higher-level concepts that presuppose earlier concepts. Reason is man’s sole means of cognition, his only means of knowledge. It is this power which has enabled man not only to survive, but also to progress. It is man’s capacity to reason that has taken him out of the caves and put him on the moon.

To grasp this point fully, imagine for a moment what it would be like if you lost your ability to reason i.e., to think. How would you take care of yourself? How would you perform a simple task such as tying your shoes? How would you structure your day? The answer to all these questions is that without the power of reason you wouldn’t be able to. You would be in exactly the same position as a new-born baby helpless, totally dependent on others to look after you.

It is the purpose of education, therefore, to ensure that the helpless, dependent new-born baby makes the successful transition to becoming an independent, mature adult, fully confident of being able to master the world in which he lives. The only way to do that is to provide him with an educational method whose explicit goal is to assist him in such an achievement by developing his power of reason.

The good news for parents is that there IS such a rational educational method. It is known as the Montessori Method, named after Maria Montessori, the Italian Doctor of Medicine who developed her methods while working with mentally retarded children at the turn of this century. Her results with those children were so spectacular that they caused her to wonder what was holding so-called normal children back to the levels she was attaining with her retarded children.

In 1907, she founded the first Casa dei Bambini (Children’s House) where she applied her methods to children of normal intelligence. Her successes led to the opening of other Montessori schools, and although many intellectuals were (and still are) vehemently opposed to her approach and even more so to the underlying philosophy of her approach (as they are to anything that provides a foundation for, or aspires to, individual excellence and achievement) her radical methods were widely acclaimed by the general public.

The reason the Montessori Method is so successful is that it is based on the true nature of Man. Dr Montessori did not have a preconceived theory of education into which she attempted to fit the child (unlike other educationalists such as John Dewey); she did not project a type of individual she wanted to create. Instead, she followed the “inner dictates of the child” to guide her in aiding the child’s natural development to his full potential.

She was fully aware that Man’s nature is that of conceptual being, and that the nature of the young child is such that he actively strives to perfect his conceptual faculty as it evolves. Her method works because it advocates and upholds the advancement of a child’s reasoning power as its foundational and philosophical cornerstone.

Specifically, it is Ayn Rand’s philosophy of Objectivism, which upholds reason as Man’s only means of knowledge, that can provide the theoretical foundation for the Montessori Method. Rand herself paid tribute many times to Maria Montessori’s genius in the field of education.

Both Maria Montessori and Ayn Rand saw man as, to quote Aristotle’s definition, the “rational animal.” In his book Maria Montessori: Her Life and Work, E. M. Standing eloquently encapsulates Maria Montessori’s view of reason: “In the first place it is the intellect or reason which sets us free from the never ending prison of the present moment in which animals live, dominated entirely from moment to moment by their instincts.”

In an almost identical reference to reason in her major work on education, “The Comprachicos,” Ayn Rand states: “Deprived of the ability to reason, man becomes a docile, pliant, impotent chunk of clay, to be shaped into any subhuman form and used for any purpose by anyone who wants to bother.”

Both Maria Montessori and Ayn Rand clearly recognised the central role of reason in Man’s life. Whereas the genius of Ayn Rand was to construct a fully integrated philosophy with reason as one of its central tenets, the genius of Dr Montessori lay in the fact that she devised a systematic, integrated educational method which all but guarantees the child’s proper conceptual growth.

Although Dr Montessori’s personal philosophy was a mix of Western religion and Eastern mysticism, her methods automatise in the child thinking methodology entirely consistent with Ayn Rand’s theory of concept-formation. Those who are interested in the more technical aspects of concept-formation are strongly urged to read Ayn Rand’s ground-breaking work, Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology. This book has major implications for education, as it provides the key to understanding how a rational mind functions, and therefore how a forming mind should be guided as it goes through the various developmental stages.

Through scientific observations of children (conducted in an environment where the children were free to act spontaneously), Maria Montessori gained first-hand knowledge of the developing stages of the conceptual faculty; specifically, she observed how the children acquired conceptual knowledge.

She recognised their intense interest in the qualities of things; she recognised their capacity to isolate qualities or ideas and their ability to form abstractions of such things. She was well aware “of this tendency of the child?s mind to draw off from material objects their intangible essences, thus building up a store of abstract ideas. These ideas reflect the ESSENTIAL nature of the confused flux of merely sensorial impressions that ‘big, booming, buzzing confusion’ of which Professor (William) James spoke” (E. M. Standing, Maria Montessori: Her Life and Work).

It needs to be pointed out that “the first five or six years of a child’s life are crucial to a child’s cognitive development. They determine, not the content of his mind but its method of functioning…” (Ayn Rand, “The Comprachicos”). Also like Rand, Dr Montessori understood well the importance to the child of these crucially formative years. In a quote which mirrors Ayn Rand’s thoughts she said, “There are many who hold, as I do, that the most important period of life is not the age of university studies, but the first one, the period from birth to the age of six. For this is the time when man’s intelligence itself, his greatest implement, is being formed.”

To that end, and by way of an introduction, this article will be restricted to dealing with those aspects of the Montessori Method as they apply to the child of 2 6 years of age. (It should be noted that Maria Montessori devised her system to educate the child from birth through to twelve years of age.

Montessorians have since expanded on her work to include the teenage years for which, before her death in 1952, Dr Montessori left only a basic outline.)
Dr Montessori’s Aristotelian view of reason (and her in-depth studies of the educational methods of Seguin and Itard) led to the development of her specially designed SENSORIAL MATERIALS which are a feature of all Montessori classrooms. She believed in Aristotle’s dictum that “there is nothing in the intellect that was not first in the senses,” and knew that the refinement of the child’s senses and clarity and precision of his perceptions would affect his ability to conceptualise. By means of a sensorial education she sought to provide the child with the means to exercise his ability to compare, contrast and discriminate, to classify the goal being the child’s acquisition of what she referred to as an “ordered mind.”

Designed to encourage individual rather than co-operative effort (reason is an attribute of the individual), the sensorial material takes the young child step by cognitive step from the perceptual (concrete) to the conceptual (abstract) level, allowing the “child’s mind to draw off their (the materials’) intangible essence.”

This process is imposed on him by the self-correcting nature of the material its inbuilt “control of error,” which only ever allows for one correct answer, making it evident to the child if he makes a mistake (teaching him in the process that reality is not malleable, that things have identity); this demands from him absolute cognitive precision, and rewards him with absolute cognitive certainty. These materials are deliberately designed so that all their attributes are the same except for the single attribute that the child is to focus on.

For example, in teaching a child the concept “colour,” the child is introduced to the “colour tablets.” These tablets are all the same size, weight, shape etc.; they differ in one aspect only colour. Because of the elimination of non-essentials as well as isolation of the quality (concept) being taught, the child must focus on the particular quality being isolated. The child quickly learns to pair colours of the same hue, and in so doing, makes it possible for the Montessori “directress” to label each quality for him.

Later, shades of each colour are introduced, and concepts such as light, lighter, lightest, and dark, darker, and darkest become readily apparent to the child so that “when the child has recognised the differences between the qualities of the objects, the teacher fixes the idea of this quality with a word” (Maria Montessori, Dr. Montessori’s Own Handbook).

The wide range of sensorial materials, which teach concepts such as length, size, musical pitch etc., are placed in the classroom on child-height shelves where the child can reach them without adult assistance (promoting independence).

Within certain limits, the child is then free to work with the material as he chooses. I say “within limits” as (and this is a point of which certain critics of a Montessori classroom should take careful note) the child is free neither to take material from another child who will be working with it on his private mat nor to insist that the other child share the material with him (which has obvious ethical implications).

He may not interfere in any way with the work of another child; instead, he must wait until the material is returned to its assigned place on the shelves. The child is also prohibited from selecting materials from the shelves which are too advanced for his level of cognitive development.

In a Montessori classroom the child works at his own pace with the teacher keeping detailed notes of individual progress. This is done to ensure that intellectual progression is based on certainty not layers upon layers of mental fog; it ensures that the child is not introduced to material demanding higher levels of abstractions before he has a firm grasp of the lower levels abstractions which they rest upon.

For example, the child would never be given shades of colour to grade before being able to match hues; he would never be given a word to read before being able to sound out each individual letter. Why not? Because like Ayn Rand, Maria Montessori grasped the hierarchical nature of knowledge, the obvious implication being that any knowledge presented to the child should follow such logical progression. Instead of ending up as a head full of scrambled and disparate facts, the child’s mind becomes ordered. “The little child, who carries within him a heavy chaos, is like a man who has accumulated an immense quantity of books, piled up without any order, and who asks himself: ‘What shall I do with them?’ When will he be able to arrange them in such a fashion as to enable him to say: ‘I possess a library.’?” (Maria Montessori, The Advanced Montessori Method 1). He will be able to arrange them when he develops, to use Dr Montessori’s words, an “ordered mind.”

The sensorial materials, with their sequential and hierarchical presentation, are but one aspect, albeit a crucial one, of the Montessori classroom. Like every other feature of the classroom, which Maria Montessori referred to as “the prepared environment,” they serve a specific purpose. At the central core of that purpose is the attempt to assist and guide the child in the formation of his rational faculty.

And while it is certainly true that the primary motive of a Montessori education is to develop the child’s rational faculty, that is not to say, as so many of the system’s critics do, that other aspects of the child’s education are neglected or overlooked.

In fact it is precisely because of the development of the rational faculty that these other aspects become possible. For example imagination and creativity, which, contrary to conventional wisdom, are a direct extension of the fact that “imaginative creation has no mere vague sensory support; that is to say, it is not the unbridled divagation of the fancy among images of light and colour, sounds and impressions; but it is a construction firmly allied to reality… The creative imagination cannot work in vacuo. The mind that works by itself, independently of truth, works in a void” (Maria Montessori, Advanced Montessori Method).

A Montessori education also teaches the child to take responsibility for his action. This is achieved by giving him clearly defined and reasonable rules to follow where the consequences for breaking them are both known in advance and consistently upheld (objective law). He is taught not only to make full use of his time but also always to complete work that is begun (instilling in him the virtue of productivity). He is taught to respect the rights of other children by never interfering with their work unless it is at the express invitation of another child (teaching him that all interaction between people should be of a voluntary nature).

Insofar as the classroom is a microcosm of society, one of the most striking features to any observer of a Montessori classroom is how well the children get along with one another. A typical scene in the classroom is the sight of a number of industrious children happily going about their work, independently or together, in a spirit of real benevolence towards one another.

It is therefore both surprising to and frustrating for Montessorians that by far the most frequent criticism of Montessori education is that not enough emphasis is placed on the “socialisation” of the child. At the deepest root, these critics are philosophically opposed to the Montessori method because they are philosophically opposed to reason. This criticism manifests itself, on an ethical level, in a profound hostility towards independence and individualism. It manifests itself in the attitude of those who love to accuse someone of being “too sure of himself who does he think he is?!”

Yet this is one of the many positive hallmarks of a Montessori educated child; he is “sure of himself.” It is precisely because he is so sure of himself that he has no desire to succumb to group pressure or obey its whims. Of course, critics then label him “anti-social.” “He needs to be socialised,” they say knowing full well that what they really mean is, “he won’t sacrifice himself to my (or our) desires.”

John Dewey, the founder of the school of philosophy known as Pragmatism and the father of modern education (known as progressive education), was one such critic openly hostile to reason and independent thought. “The mere absorbing of facts and truths is so exclusively individual an affair that it tends very naturally to pass into selfishness. There is no obvious social motive for the acquirement of mere learning, there is no clear social gain in success thereat” (John Dewey, The School and Society).

The progressive schools, which follow in Dewey’s philosophical footsteps (and whose strands of philosophical thought are heavily entwined in New Zealand’s education system) socialise the child by discouraging individual effort and immersing him in the group, or, to use Ayn Rand’s words, by “throwing him to the pack.”

Montessori helps the child develop socially by aiding each child’s personal development primarily, by encouraging independence and self-reliance, knowing that these lead to a high level of self-confidence and self-esteem. The progressives, in direct contrast to the Montessorian emphasis on reason and individualism, promote anti-reason and collectivism.

They do so by such methods as only having materials in the classroom which are too heavy for any one child to carry by himself, or by insisting that all learning is done as part of a group project. Or, to use a particularly vicious home-grown example of the application of such monstrous methods, by implying that a cow’s stomach is wherever the group deems it to be. (Don’t laugh, this sort of thing really happens.)

Unlike Montessorians, the progressives don’t teach respect for another’s property; instead, the child is taught that property is communal. In a progressive school, instead of being taught to think for himself, the child is encouraged, in true democratic fashion, to conform to the dictates of the majority. In such an environment it is only a matter of time before truth, to the child, becomes whatever the group decides that it is.

The inevitable result of such socialisation is not a society of capable and productive individuals who think for themselves, but a society of dependents who, to repeat Ayn Rand, are ready “to be shaped into any subhuman form and used for any purpose by anyone who wants to bother.” It does not require much imagination to project the future shape of any society made up of such types. In fact, one need look no further than at most of the current local crop of near-illiterate high-school and university students to get the picture.
But before rushing off to sign your child up at the nearest Montessori school, a strong word of caution. There is no legal way to stop anybody from calling his school a Montessori school. Consequently, there are a number of so-called Montessori schools without trained teachers, without Montessori materials, or without teachers who have even the faintest idea of the Montessori methods.

It is imperative, therefore, that you thoroughly familiarise yourself with both the Montessori Method itself as well as the Montessori school you have in mind for your child.
That aside, a Montessori education comes with our highest recommendation.

Copyright 2006 — A parent of three young children who are homeschooled according to Montessori principles, Chris is a former Number 1 ranked junior tennis player in the world (1975) and Wimbledon finalist (1983). When not discussing children’s education, you will find him on a tennis court in Southern California, where he now resides. You can read more of Chris’s articles and tennis tips at his website, Expert Tennis Tips.

Induction to Mesothelioma

Posted by admin on April 28th, 2009 — Posted in Medical Management, Radicals and Others, The Healthy Way

Cancer of the mesothelium is a uncommon cancer of the tissues that line the person’s internal organs. About 2,000 brand new instances are detected every year in the whole United States. From this group, nearly three out of four of occurrences concern the sac around the lungs, referred to as the pleura. Also known as pleural mesothelioma. In around 10 to twenty percent of occurrences, malignant mesothelioma might concern the tissue that envelopes visceral organs, called the peritoneal membrane, causing what is then acknowledged as peritoneal mesothelioma.

Introduction to asbestos is absolutely the overwhelming cause for this rare sickness. After asbestos exposure, the delay to progression of the mesothelioma disease might be two to four decades. As a result of work exposure, mesothelioma is nearly three times more routine in males, than in women. Due to the mass of instances moves upward with age, there are almost 10 times more instances in the men more than age 64 than in the males in their 30s.

Being diagnosed with Malignant mesothelioma is a weighty cancer, that, at the current moment, has a very low rate of long-term endurance. However, if it is recognized early, care are then at hand that can notably lengthen the patient’s life. Cutting edge therapies continue to be and are being developed by the way of clinical trials.

Trips vs. a Set

Posted by admin on April 28th, 2009 — Posted in A Funny Farm, Internet Gambling, Life Of Games

A poker online hand with three matched cards, such as 7 7 7, is often a winner at the casino. Texas Hold ‘Em players are thrilled when they flop three matching cards. But not all threesomes are the same.

There are two types of three-card hands in poker and poker online. Even though they contain the same cards, QQQ, is much different if two of the Queens are in your hand than if two of the cards are on the board.

When you hold a pocket pair that the board completes with a third, you have made a “set.” If the board provides two cards to match one of yours, then you have hit “trips.”

A set is actually a much more powerful hand, and more likely to win than trips. Even though three of a kind is a strong, winning hand, if two of the cards are on the board, its potential is diminished. First of all, everyone can see the two cards out there. Any savvy poker knows to fold if the board pairs and makes no connection to their pocket cards, so there are fewer chips going into the pot.

With a paired board, it’s also possible for someone else to make a full house. That is why a set is so powerful. It is difficult to put anyone on a set. It is an ambush hand. And a set can complete to a full house or even quads - a circumstance that might also give your opponent a good, but second best hand.

Be careful with trips and very observant of your opponents. With a set, you are better positioned to slow play and deceive your opponents into contributing more to the pot.

Start Using Algebra Right away

Posted by admin on April 27th, 2009 — Posted in Education + Training, Science Hall, World Of Mathematics

Algebra is the most influential subdivision of mathematics. Although at beginning it may look to just fly over your head, exercise helps in making understanding matters a lot better. Students will have to study this for many stages, thus it is critical to create a strong base from the start.

The Troublesome Areas

Algebra includes many areas of study, graphing being one of them . This could include graphing a circle, graphing systems of radical systems of inequalities, graphing inequalities or graphing quadratic equations. Exponents is one of the fundamental areas of study. This can range from subtracting exponents, dividing exponents or just employing the laws of exponents. Rationalizing, factorizing, matrices, hyperbolas and quadratics all have to do with algebra.

Some students find algebra rather challenging. However, in today’s day and age that is not a trouble as nearly each student is capable of getting to and using a computer. A student can easily use online math computer programs that instruct and test the user. For practicing and improving skills, there are worksheets available in these software. Online tutors are also accessible and are easy to reach. The fees can be based on number of hours or per module and this works as if the student and the tutor were face to face.

Getting Assistance with Algebra

There are a large number of software systems that can help students. These computer programs provide step-by-step guides to help students over their troubles. These software programs can aid you with your homework, test preparation and even exam preparation! As algebra has a wide number of sub-sections you can choose computer software packages that link to your particular difficulty or problem. This could be radical equations, inequalities, functions, or just graphing. Some computer software packages also include games and videos that could further develop your algebraic skills.

Algebra calculators are also available over the Internet. They can help resolve some types of algebraic questions. Mostly these will include questions that have to do with fractional equations or quadratic inequalities . Various types of calculators help students to concentrate on different domains of algebra.

Though these software systems and other aids can aid many individuals solve a great number of problems, it is important that they are utilized for the correct function. Using these facilities for cheating would only be a loss to yourself. These software program are ideally used for double-checking your answers of your assignments rather than using them to complete the assignments.

Best Possible Exam Results - Ten Things to Do Before A Big Exam to Get Them

Posted by admin on April 26th, 2009 — Posted in Education + Training

What can you do right before a big test - let’s say starting the
day before a big test — to get the best possible exam results?
Even if you are already a great test-taker you’re probably
looking for that extra edge to create the best possible scores
on your exams.

Here are ten things you can do to create better results on your
exams.

The Day Before -

1. Review Key Points — Notice the word Review — The day before your test is less than ideal to be first learning something.
Hopefully you have already mastered the material, and it is just
a matter of giving that material an extra polish.
2. Eat Well-balanced Meals — Remember the phrase, You are what
you eat? Be sure to keep your body and your brain in peak
condition by feeding it the nutrients it needs to perform at its
best.

3. Feed Your Ruminator — Whatever we spend time doing,
thinking, and seeing in the 45 minutes before falling asleep is
what our brains ruminate on throughout the night. So it’s to
your advantage to feed it — the things you want to remember for
the next day’s exam.

4. Envisioning Your Success — Just before you drift off to
sleep, create a picture of yourself successfully completing your
exam. It’s most effective if you do it every night, but even one
day before your exam could make a significant difference in
creating better exam results.

5. Get A Good Night’s Sleep — You need your 7-8 hours of quality
sleep to perform at your best.

The Day Of –

6. Eat Your Breakfast — Keep your body, mind and blood sugar in
balance.

7. Do Light Exercise — Light exercise will help you feel good
and energized, and help get more oxygen to your brain.

8. Do A Light Review — Glance through your exam preparation
materials one more time, and do any last minute checks you feel
you need.

9. Keep the Exam in Perspective - It’s just a test, not the end
of life on this planet. Allow yourself to relax and let your
worries go.

10. Breathe — A lot of students tense up, and forget to breathe,
or take shallow breaths. Be sure to breathe deeply from the
diaphragm. This will help your muscles feel better and will help
to clear your head and allow you to think better.

So the next time you are facing a big exam, follow these tips
and create great exam results!

Copyright 2006 by Teresa Bolen. All Rights Reserved.

Teresa Bolen is a teacher at Todaiji Academy, one of the top 5
schools in Japan, and the author of Master Plan to Master Exams:
How to Discover Your Hidden Abilities to Create the Success You
Desire. You can get her ‘Academic Excellence Report’ at
http://www.MasterPlanToMasterExams.com

‘Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life
you have imagined.’
— Henry David Thoreau –

Georgia Technical Colleges

Posted by admin on April 25th, 2009 — Posted in Education + Training

Whether you live in Atlanta or not, Georgia technical colleges are great when it comes to technical training and education. With 34 to choose from, it can be quite difficult to pick the one for you. With locations all over Georgia, it may simply come down to selecting which college is closer to you.

Offering you different types of degrees, Georgia technical colleges can be a great start to your career. There are different types of programs offered at each college, with more than a million students graduating in the state. Georgia has a reputation for technical prowess, which is why there are so many technical schools. Some of them include Albany Technical College, Appalachian Technical College, Athens Technical College, and the Atlanta Technical College.

No matter where you happen to be in Georgia, you can always find a technical college in your area. If you live in Augusta GA, there’s the Augusta Technical College, or those living in Macon will have the Central Georgia Technical College; both of which are fine examples of Georgia technical colleges. Those of you who live in or travel around Columbus Georgia also have the Columbus Technical College, which is located at 928 Manchester Expressway in Columbus GA.

No matter what part of Georgia you currently reside, you can rest assured that there’s a technical school right around the corner. You don’t have to live in the state to enjoy Georgia technical colleges, which is great news for those who live in other states. Georgia has something for everyone, and basically everything you could ever want to study.

Among the many Georgia technical colleges, you have hundreds of classes and fields to choose from. The technical colleges throughout Georgia offer everything from electrician to accountant, and plumbing to computers. If you’ve ever wanted to attend a technical college, rest assured that Georgia has everything you need. All you need to do is find one that’s close to your area, register, then let the fun of learning take you to a new and exciting career.

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Graduation Slideshows

Posted by admin on April 25th, 2009 — Posted in Education + Training

Slideshows for graduations are a very beautiful way to show the graduate how very proud you are of him or her. As parents we pour our hearts, souls and lives into our children. We watch them grow from a beautiful infant to a beautiful and responsible adult. Graduation day is the first step in their independent life. What better way to celebrate than with a graduation slideshow production the celebrates the life of the graduate.

The first smile, the first step, the first lost tooth, learning to ride a two-wheeler, the first tee-ball game, the first ballet recital, the first day of school, the first dance….. These memories and so many more preserved in photographs and videos. Most of these photographs and videos are spread out through various photo albums, shoeboxes and racks of videos. But with a graduation slideshow production you can put all your favorite photos and videos together to create a beautiful, sentimental, and heart-felt celebration of the graduate’s life that he or she will be able to view and share with all his or her friends whenever they want.

Include in your graduation slideshow production words of congratulations from family and friends and you’ll have a graduation slideshow that will become a treasure to the graduate throughout his or her entire life. As one young lady said, “I love my high-school graduation slideshow because anytime I begin to miss my family and friends while away at college I just put in my slideshow and it helps me not to be so home-sick.”

The graduation slideshow can be shown at the graduation party and can include pictures of the graduates family and friends. All the guests will be entertained, laughter will be heard, tears will be shed. Your graduation slideshow production will surely be the hit of the evening and the talk of the guests for years to come. And it will remain a wonderful heirloom and keepsake that the graduate will someday share with his own child on their graduation day.

Graduation slideshows - beautiful, sentimental, fun, warm, loving, and heart-felt. Sands of Time Multimedia Creations are specialists at creating slideshows for graduations and the graduation party. Graduation day will be here before you know it so begin creating your graduate’s graduation slideshow production today. You and your graduate will be so glad you did!

Sandra Clukey, Slideshow Consultant and Creator for Sands of Time Multimedia Creations http://SandsofTimeMultimediaCreations.com/ Visit us and experience the difference! View samples here: http://sandsoftimemultimediacreations.com/index-1.html See her articles “12 Steps to a Successful Slideshow Production” http://sandsoftimemultimediacreations.com/articles/12Steps.htm and “Planning the Perfect Slideshow Production”
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Home Gyms: Let’s Get Tough

Posted by admin on April 25th, 2009 — Posted in Exercise + Fitness, Lifestyles, The Healthy Way

Home gyms, how do you determine a quality home gym from a bad home gym? I have watched plenty of people buy home gym equipment without committing lots thought process into the action of picking out a superb piece of home gym equipment. I think, at times that people will put more consideration into picking out what to get for breakfast than choosing a home gym.

It’s real that the selection as well as variation in home gyms is virtually too much to handle. I can sure enough understand why individuals might just think to purchase whatsoever home gym is publicized or appears good. Sure Enough, aesthetics does play a role in how somebody may pick out a home gym. Notwithstanding, looks should be the least criteria to use.

Home gyms come in all shapes and sizes. Nonetheless, when looking at home gyms I believe the foremost criteria ought to be durability. If a gym is not durable then, of course, you will discover yourself in the marketplace for a another home gym soon after buying the original. However, even worse is the fact that psychologically when you are exercising you realize the gym is feeble and unwittingly hold back on working out with intensity. Intensity is a key ingredient in having a superb workout.

So, the primary criteria to seek out when selecting home gyms is durability. They’re many home gyms that are intentionally created not to last. The price might be luring, however, if the equipment fails after just a few exercises then it is money wasted.