Posts Tagged writing
The Online Education And Making It Work For You
The online education is a fantastic concept that has allowed the advent of the Internet to take education to the masses. This is fantastic in the fact that people that never expected to receive a degree can now get one regardless of social background, individual circumstance and income. The system has become a lot fairer as a result because those individuals that do have the talent and the ability can now get their lives and careers on track as a result. However, there are a lot of issues and elements of the online education that are involved and may actually hinder personal development and cause a lot of stress. Time management is one of the main problems, although personal circumstance and accessibility may be others. It is all about making it work for you.
Making an online education work for you is fundamentally essential if an individual actually wants to benefit and use the degree in life to obtain a better station or more comfortable platform for his or her family to live on. There are many ways and means of making it work for an individual but that is completely up to the individual his or herself. It is all about finding the right balance for you!
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Career Education: How It Can Propel Your Career Forward
Ongoing career education is something that can help separate from you other job searchers and in some cases might help to win you the job.
As a recruiter, I have worked with companies who won’t hire people without a university degree. In some cases, they specify the type of degree needed but in other cases, the company doesn’t care what the degree is in as long as you have one.
In other words, a lack of education can cost you. And you might not even realize it if the company doesn’t publicly admit this policy but simply lets their recruiters know about this particular form of screening.
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Understanding and Unleashing the Transformative Powers of Education
As a child, my parents always impressed upon me the importance of getting a good education. My father in particular, always told my siblings and I that we should strive to be number one in our studies. Because of the strict nature of my father, getting good grades was the rule, while getting low grades resulted in punishment. Needless to say, my siblings and I achieved honor role status throughout our K through middle school years. However, as I hit high school things began to change for me. I was no longer that little boy that followed my father’s every wish out of fear. By now, I had been hardened by the tough streets of Brooklyn and questioned whether getting a good (formal) education could take me out of this environment.
You see, in my community, I knew of few high school graduates, much less college graduates. My parents had limited education and struggled to provide for my siblings and I. Like many that grew up in poor communities, I experienced my fair share of pain and struggles. Like many of today’s youth that are dropping out of high school in record numbers, I too doubted the transformative powers of formal education touted by my parents and teachers. I did not believe that formal education alone could transform my socio-economic situation. As a result, I began to devalue formal education and withdrew (cutting classes regularly). Luckily, I began to realize the error in my thinking brought about by the intervention of a high school guidance counselor. I struggled to graduate high school, needing to attend summer school two years in a row in addition to night school. Nevertheless, I did graduate-But what next!?
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