Archive for the ‘Science’ Category

Downside Of Online College Degrees

We know how important it is for employers to find post-high school academic credentials in our resumes. Those who have college education and training are more likely to land secure jobs. Understanding the importance of college education, there are some who would try to earn a degree by going back to traditional colleges or earning them through online college degree programs.

If you would search the internet, there are different testimonies on how online learning could cater to the needs and limitations of different students, whether they are single parents, working or with disabilities. Online education also tends to be more affordable than regular or traditional college. Its flexibility and lower cost are definitely among the primary reasons why there are about 3.9 million online students as early as 2007 according to the Sloan Consortium.

There are two sides of a coin, everything has it benefits and downside. One side could outweigh the other but knowing both sides would help a person come up with a guided decision. The same thing applies to online college degrees. Although there are many benefits, online college education is not for everybody. There are things that should be considered and there are also limitations.

‘ Time management is important for students who are studying online. Since they would be able to complete their assignments and school work on the time convenient for them, there are tendencies that students would procrastinate. Students must be able to juggle family, work and studying into their schedule.

‘ Self-discipline is important. Although students could work or set the schedule according to their free time, this could also work against them. Lack of self-discipline or self-motivation to do the assignments or lectures could lead to failure.

‘ Since online education requires familiarization and usage of technology, it is important that students would be able to navigate in software and programs frequently used by the educator or the course. While there are students who have limited access to internet connection or even use of a decent computer.

‘ If you do have a working computer and internet connection, you may encounter connection problems. This can cause to delays with getting your lessons done.

‘ Most of the courses online are self-learned. Readings and lectures are read by the students on their own time. There are no classroom lectures. However, there are some online programs that would require students and teachers meet during orientation or examinations.

‘ There are also some students who would get the motivation from classmates and teachers. However, with online education, there are no or limited face-to-face sessions, making human interaction less. Eventually, you would have to work on your own. For some lack of interaction with classmates could lead to poor participation while it may prove beneficial for others. Different from traditional colleges, online students would not be able to expand their horizons by joining different organizations, student unions, clubs, etc.

‘ Another limitation is that most online college degrees require students to be adept with the English language. Foreign students may encounter difficulties, but rest assured, internet and site developers would surely be able to address this in the near future.

Author David Bryant notes that the Chinese word for crisis is made up of two characters. One character stands for ‘danger’ and the other stands for ‘opportunity’In our lives, sometimes the greatest challenges bring about the greatest opportunities for positive change.

In Hebrew, the word for crisis holds the meaning of a ‘birthing stool’In the Old Testament it was a piece of furniture that was used to give aid during the time of labor. One can imagine the pain of childbirth giving way to the elation of a new born baby. Similarly, sometimes the hardest things in life seem to be taking us nowhere. Then suddenly when the labor pains are past we see that in the process of the struggle new life has been breathed into us and we realize we have grown more than we could ever have imagined.

In his classic speech Acres of Diamonds, Russell Conwell shares the true story about an African farmer who sells his farm to hunt for diamonds he had heard rumors of in certain mines. The farmer uses up all of his savings journeying across the continent in search of vast riches. Sadly, his money and friends ran out before he located the treasure and he died bitter, broke and alone.

Fortunately the story does not end there, which is why Russell Conwell was asked to share the lecture more than five thousand times during his own life. The man who bought the farmer’s land was out one day walking his donkey along a stream. There he found a large stone that brightly reflected light. Enjoying the beauty of the rock, he took it home and placed it on his mantel.

Several months passed until one evening a salesman met with the man at the farm. Recognizing the stone for what it was, he asked the farmer if he had seen similar rocks on his walks. When the new farmer asked him why he wanted to know, the salesman told him, ‘This is a diamond’The next day the two men anxiously walked out to the stream and found dozens of similar looking stones. In fact, the farm was covered with acres of diamonds. (more…)

Who Puts The Wrong In Wrongdoing?

In 2010 Joshua Vasquez, a 22-year-old man from East Los Angeles, was booked on suspicion of felony vandalism and jailed in lieu of $20,000 bail. It seems the six-foot-four, 200-pound tagger scratched graffiti into a glass door on a public building. When Vasquez opened the door to tag the other side, he was confronted by approximately 40 deputy sheriffs and police officers who were in the building for a class. What Vasquez hadn’t realized was that although he couldn’t see through the outside of the door, the law enforcement officers could see through the inside of it. Lesson: there is no open-door policy for crime.

Nevertheless, hospitals repeatedly open their doors to crime. It’s not only hotel guests who steal from their rooms. A 2010 survey of 93 nonprofit hospitals found that two-thirds of them experience patients stealing – costing each hospital approximately $15,000 a year. The items most stolen were towels, followed by pillows, bed linens and telephones. However, according to VHA, the international group of nonprofit hospitals that conducted the study, employees taking scrubs is a bigger problem. Some hospitals require old scrubs to be returned before new ones can be taken. It seems taking scrubs is so widespread it has become “uniform” behavior. (more…)

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