Showing posts with label Education Tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education Tips. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Tips to Increase Your Visibility

How many times have we heard of people getting jobs with competitive salaries, amazing benefits and the chance to take on challenging projects simply because of the people they knew? Though hard to admit, the fact is that in today's competitive job market, one cannot find a reasonable job without good contacts.

Harvey Coleman, a well-known management consultant, conducted a research on what is needed to land a good job. He concluded that performance and education, (that is, whether the candidate has earned a university degree, be it from an online university or a traditional university), although crucial, accounted for only 10% of what is needed for a particular job. A person's image (i.e. the way a person dresses or how well he/she fits in) accounts for 30% whereas visibility accounts for a staggering 60%. These numbers, however surprising, did accurately represent the state of conditions in the job market today. So how does one make oneself visible? The following tips should help:

Talk to People about Your Work/Education: The importance of this point cannot be stressed enough. Every chance you get, you should talk to people about yourself as a brand. This would include telling them what you do. For example, if you are studying at an internationally accredited online university programs, such as MUST University, then talk about the programs offered and the services provided, both of which aim to optimize the learning experience for its students.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Tips On Becoming An Early Childhood Teacher

If education is a passion and you love working with kids, early childhood education might be the perfect path for you. There's nothing more fulfilling than teaching children, and the impact you make on them now will last a lifetime. Teachers are highly sought after at an early education level and there are plenty of opportunities for you to make a career out of your passion for working with kids, helping them to develop skills and preparing them to be enthusiastic about learning.

Not sure if you're right for the job? Don't know where to start? Read on for all the information that you need about becoming an early childhood educator.

What Skills Do I Need?

Being an early childhood teacher requires a different set of skills than are needed at a primary or secondary level. Creativity, patience and the ability to make learning fun are all crucial to help shape the young minds that you will be working with. A lot of the job is very hands on - you'll be creating routines for your students and helping them to play and discover through lots of interaction and activity.

Early childhood education is different in the way that every day is unique. You'll learn how best to work with each and every one of your students as you begin to understand their individual personalities and what they respond best to.

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Early Childhood Education Planning Tips

While no child is alike and each family is unique, a common tread run deep in the heart of every home - the desire of parent is to give their children the BEST education possible and see them grow into their full potential. However, life is full of unplanned surprise and the path to achieving this desire may be a convoluted one. That's where a sound investment strategy comes in. With flexible planning and a suite of investment options that are available, you may help put your child on the journey to a valuable college degree. Here are a few TIPS that may help kick-start you planning:

1. CREATE A FINANCIAL PLAN WITH AN END IN MIND.

First, make an estimate of the costs that will go into your child's education. Your cost should take into account inflation over the investment or saving period. With the estimate as a guide, start piecing together your investment plan. There are many education planning option, each with its own risks and benefits, which you may use alone or simultaneously to achieve your goals:

a. AN EDUCATION SAVING PLAN is a good place to start as it aims to offer payout when your child enters college. Some education savings plan may also provide protection benefits to the child and or parent.

b. PROPERTY may provide rental yields and capital appreciation to fund your child's tertiary education. Rental yields may be used to top up your child's education fund savings or pay for your child's tuition. Should the value of your properties appreciate, it may be sold to obtain capital gains. Investing in property has its risks too as the property market may fluctuate in the future and you may not be able to get the selling price you hope for.

c. UNIT TRUSTS and STRUCTURED INVESTMENTS can be added to your investment plan, if they fit your risk profile, time frame and target goal for your child's education.

d. AN INVESTMENT LINKED PLAN can be tailor-made to grow your wealth with the flexibility to choose the type of funds suitable to your risk profile and goals. Your child may be nominated to receive protection benefits, should the unforeseen happen to you. Usually, you would have the option to make regular contribution or a single contribution in line with your financial standing.

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Tips on Using Educational Aquariums In The Classroom

How an Aquarium Will Make Kids Smarter

First a teaching aquarium in the classroom energizes learning, it prods learners to get involved because the tank is not an inanimate object it is a living, breathing organism, full of fellow creatures who just by their very existence teach learners about life in an ecosystem covered by water. It is easy to engage a human being in caring about the welfare of their fellow creatures, their life cycles, what they eat, how they protect themselves and even how they pass away. All of this will engage learners in a real way that a computer or online game can only dream of. Once you have observed the "life under the sea", you are invested in its well-being and it's ultimate successful survival.

Math and The Aquarium

The educational aquarium is also good for teaching math skills. From the little

learners who are just learning how to count. to the older learners who are learning about algebra, geometry or physics, all can be accommodated and engaged by using an educational aquarium. Lessons to learn simple math can be devised to count the "creatures" in the tank, or to group them together into similar groups, or to add and subtract them from the tank, or to learn the percentages of the population of your tank, from what percentage of the total population consists of sea stars. The applications are as limitless as the imaginations of our brightest educators. As for older learners, you can determine how much water is best for the tank, the percentage of salt in the water, the life span of certain sea creatures, how they function outside and inside. How to measure angles and recognize geometric shapes in nature. All of this can be developed by using an educational aquarium in the classroom to enhance and teach math skills.