Compare Mobile Phone Deals and Save

Wednesday, March 3, 2010 posted by mutsav

Compare Mobile Phone Deals and Save

Whenever you are in the market for a new mobile phone, you will want to know where to find the best cheap mobile phones and deals available. That’s where the internet comes in handy! There are some brilliant sites available which can show you a price comparison on all mobile phones, from the exquisite design of the Samsung Jet, one of the fastest touch screen phones available on the market today and ultra stylish with its slim-line design, to the Samsung Tocco Ultra, with built in GPS so you’ll always know where you are when you’re out and about.

You can easily compare deals, not only between the newest mobile phone designs, but also compare network deals to make sure that you’re getting the absolute most for your money; more calls, more texts and more value. These deals vary from month to month, with each network trying to persuade you to make the switch, so it’s important to check out exactly what is available right now, and mobile phone price comparison websites can do just that for you, comparing every last detail of each offer to make sure you get exactly what you need and the cheapest price available.

You can also find out about all the best features on the newest designs to find something which is just right for you. If you’re well into your music, and who isn’t these days, you might be interested in the fantastic Nokia 5800. You can download as many of your favorite songs as you like from the music store, how’s that for starters? And it also has a terrific camera which takes good quality photographs, and it’s available in a variety of different stylish colors. The Nokia N97 is the newest in the Nokia N-series and is the first to have a sideways slider in its design.

Take a look at the fantastic HTC Hero with its controversial new angled chin design; it’s one of the best looking touch screen smart phones with the Android operating system. It’s available in a range of stylish colors, including pink, graphite and white; or if you prefer, the more business like brown.

If a Blackberry Curve 5800 is more your style you’ll be able to see exactly where you can get the best deal, discounts on prices, discounts on line rental, even cash back offers, from all of the major networks including T-mobile, Orange, O2, Virgin and Vodafone. If they’ve got an offer you’ll be able to find it on the internet.

So whenever you fancy a change, just log on to the internet and check out the latest deals. You never know, you might be able to upgrade to the latest style and get a brand new deal for less of your hard earned cash than you’re spending at the moment, doesn’t that sound like an attractive prospect? You’ll be able to keep in touch with your pals, listen to your favourite tunes, take some fantastic photographs and keep a track on exactly where you are when you find a fantastic new mobile phone deal.

Mobile Phones are Here to Stay

Wednesday, March 3, 2010 posted by mutsav

Mobile Phones are Here to Stay

Today’s society makes it almost impossible to go without some type of a mobile phone. These phones could be basic with nothing but regular phone features or could include music, photos, and the features that make smart phones so popular these days. These simple devices will help you through most of your day at home or work. The features for these phones will also include the ability to get on to the internet, which is important for those that need access to emails and data files while on the go. These phones are especially popular for business-minded people all over the world.

Smart phones like the Nokia 5800, the Blackberry Curve 8900, the Samsung Jet, the Nokia N97, the HTC Hero, and the Samsung Tocca Ultra are just mini computers that make life for their users easier. These phones often include a good sized memory card or slot capable of extra files, along with music and Mp3 abilities, and even audio players with a sound that is crisp and clear.

One reason for the popularity of smart phones is the wide array of applications available on these phones. A popular application for the smart phones is the GPS system. This applications means you no longer have to have two devices while traveling. Smart phones have the capability of GPS, PDAs and many are mini personal computers too. The features on these phones are usually put in an interface and format that is easy to browse through and they are easily accessible by the user.

Many phones and features are designed to entertain you and are easy to find with plans that will fit your budget. Even with the tight budgets of today’s society, people are allowed different options for phones and accessories to choose from. Features for mobile phones are simple for those that just want voice calls and messages, while others are for those who are more technologically advanced. Many of the sales and plans on these phones will allow you to find cheap mobile phones without having the quality of your service suffer.

Some carriers have cheaper phones and some offer refurbished phones. Refurbished phones are remakes of the original cell phone or of a smart phone. The phones are just sent back to the factory, their old parts are removed, and then new working parts are put in. Once this is done the phone carriers cannot sell the phone at the higher price.

Another thing you will need to make sure of is the battery life for your phone. The battery life of a mobile phone is important. Running out of battery life on your phone can be frustrating and sometimes even embarrassing. Extra batteries and chargers are also a good idea to keep handy for those just-in-case instances.

Hand accessories and Bluetooth capability are also very important when you are choosing a mobile phone. These phones will allow you to stay in compliance with many state rules that prohibit driving while being on your mobile phone. New York and California have both been in the news recently for enforcing these rules. Bluetooth technology allows you to also walk and talk on the phone at the same time and it eliminates the need for wires too.

While mobile phones are handy to have for many reasons, it is easy to shop for good mobile phones, accessories and rate plans, especially when you shop online. Keep in mind that some phones will only work with specific carriers so make sure your smart phone will work with the carrier of your choice before signing a contract for service.

Finding the Best Insurance Company

Thursday, February 25, 2010 posted by mutsav

Finding the Best Insurance Company

Did you know that there is a specialist insurance company who can offer you really competitive quotes, whatever your business? Well, there are some companies that can do just that. They specialize in all sorts of insurance, including taxi insurance, chauffeur insurance, minibus insurance, as well as van, motorbike, limousine, HGV, home, travel, breakdown – you name it, they can cover it. Let’s take a closer look at some of these innovative policies.

Newer insurance companies know that if a taxi is your business, in the unfortunate event of an accident or a claim, while you’re not on the road you’re not making any money; it’s as simple as that. That is why they offer a specialist taxi service coverage which can offer a replacement plated vehicle (sometimes at extra cost) if your taxi is involved in an accident or other insurance claim. How else can you keep a roof over your head if your taxi is off the road? And with their comprehensive breakdown coverage, you are secure in the knowledge that you can benefit from a home start service, roadside assistance and/or recovery service, and all calls are responded to quickly and professionally by a UK leading supplier. This breakdown service is available not just for taxis, but for every vehicle including vans and HGV’s. Surely if transport is your business, then you need to talk to someone who is knowledgeable.

Another specialist insurance service which is offered by the best companies is chauffeur insurance for the professional chauffeur business or a private chauffeur. The specialist knowledge of the experienced staff will help and advise you in ways of tailoring your insurance package to suit your individual requirements, enabling you to go about your business safe in the knowledge that all of your insurance requirements have been professionally dealt with.

Minibus insurance is offered to cover all eventualities of minibus needs. There are many different reasons why people have a minibus, both commercially and privately, so for all individual requirements there is a package to suit you. We can tailor an individual policy for minibuses which are used for private or public hire work, charity work, school and educational groups, church groups and nursing homes, or just pleasure use for the larger family.

You won’t find gimmicks or tricks to try and draw you in, just excellent customer and claims service and a genuinely cheap package just for you. The best companies check insurance quotes from many different sources, but only tell you of the cheapest and most suitable for your requirements, saving you lots of time, energy and money. Therefore, when you are searching for an insurance company to do business with, you will need to take the time to learn more about the different companies out there and make sure that you go with the best. Compare rates and take the time to learn the various types of insurance that they have to offer to make sure that they will meet all of your insurance needs.

Tools For Around the House

Sunday, February 21, 2010 posted by mutsav

Tools For Around the House

There are few things worse than getting ready to begin a project and realizing that a tool that you thought you had is nowhere to be found. What are some basic tools that everyone should have around the house so that they are prepared for those little maintenance jobs that always tend to pop up?

A hammer is one of those essential tools. Every home should have at least one, probably two, since most projects that involve hammers go even more smoothly with more than one person working on them. A good hammer should have a good ergonomic grip because anyone who has worked with a hammer for any long amount of time will tell you that it can be pretty hard on your hand to continuously use a hammer that does not have an ergonomic grip.

A set of screwdrivers is another indispensable tool that everyone should have around their home. A set that includes Phillips and flat heads, at the very least, in a variety of sizes should make you equal to the task of any screw in your home, well almost any task. Some screws are really tough and they are going to require a drill. A corded drill with a few different sized bits should be sufficient for any small project around the home.

Just a note, duct tape is not a tool, nor is electrical tape, but you simply can not have a good house tool box without a roll of each of these staples. Not that you will be doing any major electrical projects, but there are plenty of simple electrical tasks where electrical tape in the right place can save you from getting the charge of a lifetime.

A staple gun is also a nice addition for an around the house tool kit. It need not be a very heavy duty stapler, but electric staplers are as a rule much easier to use than manual staplers, especially for accuracy. A standard size box of staples should suffice for a few months, especially if you have good aim.

A box of assorted screws and nails will have you prepared for any fastening projects that pop up. Online retailers usually carry a good variety of fasteners at a good price, so you may want to keep a few boxes on hand.

A utility knife is handy in many different situations. If you purchase the quick change variety you can save yourself a lot of time in switching blades. A box of blades will not cost you too much and if possible, try to find the spring loaded type because it makes it much simpler to pull out an individual blade.

A good flashlight will help to shed light on any household problem and should be included in any standard emergency kit as well.

With the above tools in your toolbox you should be pretty well equipped to handle the majority of maintenance issues you are likely to run into in your home. If any are missing from your box, check out online retailers to find excellent prices on the missing items.

Outsourced Personnel Services

Wednesday, February 10, 2010 posted by dan

HR Software

Human resource departments are ever evolving as the business climate continues to change. Technology has allowed for the automation of more tasks than ever imaginable, and much time and manpower is being saved in the process. Is it time for your company to start taking advantage of all the cost savings that are involved with outsourcing personnel services? One of the most important and obvious benefits, especially for small businesses, is that it frees up employees that are a key part of your staff to work on more important projects, like growing your business in new markets.

By outsourcing personnel management you benefit from the management skills of those with years in the profession, but with significant costs savings. Managing you personnel correctly can contribute in a large way to maintaining a happy staff. If employees feel that the human resource department is aware of their needs and ready to help where possible, even if they are outsourced, they will be more likely to handle problems in a timely manner before they get out of control.

One of the problems that occurs most frequently that human resource departments have to fix is a problem with an employee’s check. Every employee wants their check to be on time and accurate with regard to the amount they are paid. When this is not the case the problem needs to be corrected as quickly as possible in order to keep happy employees. Having an outsourced human resource department means that you will not tie up a small part of your staff to deal with these kinds of problems. If the outsourcing can combine payroll and human resource it is even better and will usually allow for any payroll discrepancies to be handled even more promptly.

Taking advantage of the technology that is now available for managing your human resources can benefit your company in many ways. It is always beneficial to have the most up to date information possible available for all of your employees and human resource management software can help you to make sure that this information is always current and readily available. When deciding whether or not to implement a certain program in your company, human resources records can be organized based on certain employee data to help figure out which employees would be the best to have in the test group for a certain program. If your field is one where employees must frequently participate in training programs, human resources software can help with the management and scheduling of training programs.

Employee performance should be rewarded and human resource software can help you determine exactly what an employee’s service record is and it can be rewarded accordingly. Managing the people in your business takes skill and the available technology can only be used to its full potential in skillful hands. It is always an excellent idea to review the track record of a human resource management company before choosing to work with them. If you choose well your entire staff will benefit from the organization that human resource management software can bring.

Computers In Personnel Ltd
28-30 Chapel St
Marlow, SL7 1DD
0870 366 2345

Education for Sustainable Development for Child Education and Schools

Thursday, January 28, 2010 posted by Heather

Education for Sustainable Development (ESD) is a rather new field of education. We can see it as an innovative kind of future education for schools linking the child’s development with the future challenges of society.

I don’t think that education for sustainable development is just another buzzword forgotten in a few years. From a global perspective as well as a local perspective we have to direct education toward what will be truly useful for each child and for each society in the future.

To have a fulfilling life should be within reach for all children whereever they are born. In too many parts of society and of the world children grow up in hazardous environments with very poor conditions for basic requirements and bleak prospects for their future.

Education for Sustainable Development is derived from the Brundtland report’s focus on Sustainable Development (SD). The Brundtland report requires fundamental changes in the society and its institutions, in politics and in our individual family life styles. Economic development cannot be separated from social development and a concern for the environment.

ESD for child development Educational research can tell us a lot of how to make use of education for sustainable development for child development.

The most important fact might be that ESD is an excellent frame for the empowerment of children. When we respect each individual child for its ideas and opinion, and at the same time bring the child into challenging learning situations we facilitate empowerment of the child.

Developing self esteem and empowerment goes hand in hand in education for sustainable development. A proper self esteem is such an important part of successful child development.

Another important fact is that ESD is a productive frame for meaningful learning. Opposite to rote learning and the acquisition of facts without much understanding meaningful learning situations help the child to engage fully in the teaching. By working with real problems the child can develop much better understanding of concepts and skills from the schools core curriculum in a meaningful context. The key to that is the opportunity to use and reflect on these ‘traditional’ ingredients of classic schooling in the meaningful contexts derived from the focus on sustainable development.

Education for sustainable development and schools Some schools have focused on the beautification of their school environment. This might help the school’s prestige in the local society but it isn’t helpful for education for sustainable development unless it happens as the students’ project.

Similarly some schools have put a lot of emphasis in making the school buildings more ‘green’ with solar power panels, recycling systems, water conservation measures and tree planting around the school. Again, such initiatives are only valuable for the learning of the students if they are planned as student projects. You cannot evaluate the quality of a school’s work with education for sustainable development from a picture of the school.

Concerning a better approach to ESD, headmaster and teachers should ask questions like: – How can we challenge students’ thinking on the future and how to make use of parts of the core curriculum in a meaningful way in combination? – How can we teachers cooperate to create stimulating activities and plan the teaching in such a way that the self-esteem of the students will benefit from it? – How can we help students to investigate local people’s concern for the future and how to make sense of such results? – How can we help students to try to make a difference according to their wishes and visions?

Education for sustainable development will gain increasing publicity as the picture of environmental degradation, energy shortage, climate change, increasing poverty mixed with increasing wealth and the overall picture of globalization becomes more evident.

We cannot blame our children for these issues but it is our duty to educate them to be able to cope with such complex and controversial issues and to live a decent life with a belief that it is possible for everybody to make a difference to the better.

Investing For College Education – Inconvenient Or Important?

Thursday, January 28, 2010 posted by Heather

Most parents consider investing for their children’s education to be as important as planning for their retirement years. What about you?

These days, the costs charged by most universities and colleges for tuition fees are forever rising to unheard of new highs. Add to that fees for study materials, and worse, the rent paid in order to keep your child in a suitable residential place for students, and you get an increasing number of high school graduates who start working for a living even before they’re properly prepared — educationally, that is.

But what would you say if I told you that most caring parents regard this as a nightmare because they’re finding it very hard to cope with the high fees required to put their youngsters in a good university or college? What’s more discouraging is the fact that most parents earn much less in household combined income than what the majority of these higher learning institutions are asking them to pay even for registration purposes only.

So where do you go from there?

Do you just shrug your helpless shoulders and start giving up on your child’s dreams of becoming the next president of your country, doctor, nurse, or ballerina, and put every blame on the education system and those who are currently representing you in parliament for failing you?

Or is there another solution around this nightmare?

Fortunately for you, there is a solution that can absolutely help you as caring parent to help you make your child’s dreams come true…

And the solution is the college education plan for children from as young as one day old!

The college education plan – available at most financial services providers in your area – is an investment or savings plan that can be personalized to cover for your child’s future education needs when she’s ready to start her higher learning. Investing in a college education fund is also within reach or most parents because you can start investing from a very low monthly contribution that is guaranteed to make sure your child will enter a higher learning institution of her choice when she’s ready.

Perhaps you’re worried that you won’t be able to keep up with the monthly contributions because the money might somehow get into your greedy little hands. Relax! Contributions to your investment are paid via your employer’s automatic stop order system or debit order from your bank account. All that’s left for you is to just sit back, relax, and watch your college investment grow side by side with your child.

And not only will your investment be protected against the threat of inflation reducing your money’s spending power, the money will be paid back to you tax-free! But the cherry on top is that your child’s dreams of becoming the next president of your country, doctor, nurse, or ballerina, can definitely come true — no matter what happens to you!

2010 Andrew Molobetsi. All rights reserved

Save For Your Children’s Education

Thursday, January 28, 2010 posted by Heather

It was once thought that only the wealthy could save enough to afford a good college education for their children. That just is not true. There are plenty of ways for the middle-class and lower-income households to save for their children’s futures, as well.

Consider the Coverdell Education Savings Account, which allows you to save up to $2000 annually for your child’s future education. You can make deposits into the account until its beneficiary reaches the age of eighteen. The contributions are not tax-deductible, but the distribution withdrawals are not taxed. This is a classic way to grow wealth and you will be able to use the money for most school-related expenses.

You may also want to consider a College Savings Plan, one of two 529 plans available for college education savings. Under this plan, you can choose from a variety of investment options and you will not pay taxes when the funds are withdrawn to use for education.

The second 529 plan is the Prepaid Tuition Plan. It basically allows you to pay today’s prices for tomorrow’s tuition. By pre-purchasing your child’s education, you lock in his or her future tuition at today’s prices.

If you invest early in Savings Bonds for Education, they can work well to help finance your children’s future education. The plus to this investment is that the money can be pulled at any time to use in case of a financial emergency.

If your child is approaching college age now and you have no savings on hand for their education, there are still tax credits available to you. Right now the American Opportunity Tax Credit is the best of these options. You can also qualify for lifetime learning credits, classroom expenses deductions, and tax deductions for higher education fees and tuition.

The IRS usually does not allow a taxpayer to claim more than one large college savings plan on their income tax return, so you will want to be careful and deliberate in choosing the right option for you.

You would probably benefit from a conversation with a financial planner to discuss the best way to save for your child’s future education, and remember that it is never too soon to start.

A Parent’s Role in the Process of Education

Thursday, January 28, 2010 posted by Heather

To the federal legislators, U.S. Presidents, and appointed Executive Branch politicians who have succeeded in poking their noses into purely State matters, the process of public education is merely defined by what federal tax dollars given, with inflexible purse strings, to the States can buy. Conversely, to the many dedicated classroom teachers employed by the States’ numerous independent and dependent school districts to educate their millions of public school children, education is concerned far less with dollars and cents and more with the quality, and state, of the young minds coming from home to the classroom. Since the average normal eight-year-old American child is coming from a home with two working parents, a combined income of less than $35,000 per year, and is residing with caregivers in rented accommodations, it would be quite reasonable to presume that such a child is an impressionable complex person sensitively comprised of, both, cognitive (thinking and reasoning) and emotional components forming a cumulative dual human product based upon the daily occurrences and interactions in her family. Statistically, the average eight-year-old American child is a normal pre-adolescent female who leaves home every weekday morning for school, either, happy or unhappy, encouraged or discouraged, positively-minded or negatively-minded, ready to learn or not ready to learn. If such a child is not prepared to learn, and is emotionally distraught at the time she enters the classroom, the classroom teacher’s most congenial demeanor and best lesson plan will do little to alter the child’s dispositional deficit for the better throughout the day. This significantly impaired cognitive/emotional human being is the basic type of child, on the average, with which the best-prepared classroom teacher, in the most state-of-the-art public school infrastructure, has to deal on a day-to-day basis; and it has been that way since the inception of public education.

In a commentary on public education in “The Examiner,” dated December 2, 2009, Erica Jacobs, a professor at George Mason University, said a mouthful when she quipped, “…Money helps to improve salaries and school infrastructure, but there’s only one educational measure that matters: Are our own children happy and challenged…?” From there, Jacobs went on to talk only about teachers and the classroom-learning environment. In about a 300-word essay, she said nothing about parents and their responsibilities to their children in the home, and used the expression “our own” children as though they belong only to the teacher at the time they are in class. Parents were only mentioned once in the essay to describe a participating mother’s, or father’s, stern look at a misbehaving student at an off-campus activity at George Mason University Center for the Arts. Doesn’t Ms. Jacobs realize that the rudiments of reading, writing, and arithmetic are taught on a daily basis in the classroom by the classroom teacher and not at performances of Edgar Allan Poe’s short stories? Sure, such cultural activities are quite entertaining, but are hardly considered as rudimentary learning experiences. Actually, what loving, nurturing, and innovative parents choose to do with their children on the weekends, and during the weekdays, to stimulate their desires to learn, is much more effective in fomenting curiosity, promoting intuition, and helping those children to leave home each day for school with a fervent desire to learn, than the extemporaneous songs and dances performed by teachers to get their students’ attention in lieu of carefully crafted curriculum lesson plans.

Who can force a mother or father to be a good parent? Actually, this very complex, yet cogent, question hasn’t been bantered about in philosophical circles for very long at all in terms of overall human history; but for only a little less than 150 years, when the ill cultural effects of poor parenting on communities, states, and nations were first mentioned in writing by wise and astute academicians, philosophers, and essayists. Even then, parenting, to any degree, was traditionally considered in the Western World an inherent God-given right of natural and adoptive mothers and fathers, for them to do with their children as they want or feel inclined. Then books like Orwell’s “1984,” and Huxley’s “Brave New World” became popular, casting unfavorable light upon state control of what goes on within a family. Hitler’s insane ambition of creating a German master race through eugenics and strict control of the education and development of Germany’s children also threw a considerable scare into people around the world, especially in America, regarding the awful effect of a nation’s government controlling the parenting of children.

From the late 1930s until around 1970, it seemed that American parents were doing a pretty good job of parenting in the home, as assessed from the prevailing learning curves in the public schools which definitely indicated that those, mostly white students, were happily learning the rudiments of a sound liberal education of reading, writing, and mathematics. This had meant that most, that is approximately 89 %, of the students during that time, were leaving home each day for their classes energized and ready to lean. Moreover, the public school dropout rate around the nation was surprisingly minimal during those years, averaging around 10 %, when communications and technology were so slow and primitive, as compared with an increased national dropout rate, of 12-15 %, during the computer-age, 1985-to-the present day. But along came the decade of the 70s, and the real entrance of the federal government into the arena of state education by application of the Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment and the Commerce Clause to civil rights, which essentially made the 10th Amendment of the Bill of Rights, of the U.S. Constitution, moot.

While corporal punishment used sparingly in the home, that is, periodic spanking, was pretty much an accepted rule and frequent productive practice of parents from the late-1930s until around 1970, new age pundits, decrying spanking as a cruel disciplinary tool in the home and in the public schools, made quite an impression on the new generation of mothers and fathers who were the progeny of the baby-boomers (the people born in the U.S. between 1946 and 1964). Thus, a generation of permissive parents evolved culturally, concerned much more with using baby-sitters and working long hours outside the home to earn money to provide their children with high-tech lifestyles, than spending quality time with their children in the home.

As one of the many baby-boomers, I was born, in 1951, to a father born in 1906 and a mother born in 1910, the distant third of three much older brothers. My next older brother had been born in 1931, which put him twenty years older than me. My dad was a self-employed, self-taught welder and my mom owned and operated a chicken, hog, and worm farm in East Texas. Yet, my dear mother taught me how to read by the time I was four, and assisted me in my elementary school years to master the multiplication tables, long division, ratio and proportion, and biographical U.S. Presidential history by the time I was ten. How was this done? Well, my mother spent quality time with me every school-day evening and on weekends in practical learning activities. She made learning fun. And you know what? My mother had only a 6th grade education, six years spent with a very good, but strict, teacher in a one-room schoolhouse in a very rural farming community in Henderson County, Texas. By the time I was born, she had used the reading, writing, and mathematical skills gained in those six formal years of education to develop the educational skill equivalence of a person with a genuine high school diploma with a high grade-point average, not a certificate of attendance for merely occupying a classroom desk during 12 years of public schooling. As a consequence of my mother’s love of learning, I also developed a love of learning and acquiring knowledge. This is why I adamantly insist that parents remain the foremost teachers, of both good and bad knowledge, in child’s life. In a nutshell, parents, good or bad, are a child’s prime role models in the home, and directly determine the habits of their children outside the home, especially in the school classroom. As an idealist, and not a pragmatist, I want to believe that most parents around the country, especially those of the Fairfax County, Virginia and DC School Systems, love their children and want to practice effective parenting; but the current statistics don’t support my continuing hope.

Perhaps Professor Erica Jacobs is neither a parent, nor a former classroom teacher; but I cannot believe that she honestly considers a teacher’s role in the classroom, or at an infrequent off-campus cultural activity, as more important than a nurturing parent’s continuing role in the home. Perhaps Professor Jacobs is a proponent of federalizing the nation’s schools, in order to standardize curriculums and include parenting as an additional role of the classroom teacher (Arkansas schools have already done it). As a former classroom teacher certified in two states, I can tell you with authority that each year many of the newly hired teachers around the nation, fresh out of university teacher education, discover, to their chagrin, that teaching their chosen discipline in the classroom is not at all what they thought it would be. And this is not the fault of these enthusiastic highly educated and trained professionals. Heavens no! Teachers, over time, sadly discover that most public school parents are sending their children to school totally unprepared, and unwilling, to learn. Thus, the forty-five minutes of a typical class period is much more an experiment in babysitting than of teaching and learning.

Such an awful problem deserves a wise suitable solution, but federal, state, and local politicians have, for a long time, been more concerned about their voters, American’s parents, electing and reelecting them, than about solving such a serious ongoing problem. Though constructively chastising the majority of the nation’s parents for not doing their jobs at home will certainly cost federal, state, and local politicians’ votes, it seems to be the only right thing to do. If I am behaving in a manner that will eventually cause my children to suffer sad experience in life from less than a proper education, I would hope that someone much wiser than me would let me know my problem and help me to change. What is currently right and wrong in our diverse society is ultimately much more important than what is politically correct and convenient.

Different Types of Schooling

Thursday, January 28, 2010 posted by Heather

As parents we want what is best for our children; the best health, the best neighborhoods, happiness, high self-esteem, and the best education. A good education starts with the type of schooling the child is exposed to and how high the quality is of this schooling. Also taken into account is the preference of the child’s parents. After all, different parents look for different things in their child’s education. Some want socialization or special services while others are looking for small class size and high quality educational materials. Still other parents are most concerned with creative thinking and child-directed learning. Following is a comparison between four main types of schooling; public, private, home and lastly unschooling.

Public Schools There is much criticism about the public school system – its poor quality, low teacher standards, lack of art and music education, etc. But it should be noted that without public education many children would have no exposure to education at all. Public schools were started to ensure equal educational opportunity. Unfortunately between poor financial management and disorganized educational goals, that equal education is pretty pathetic.

With all the cons of public schooling it doesn’t seem to make sense to send your (or any) child there. However, there are some good points to public education and it serves important functions in society. Since the beginning of public schooling, literacy has increased to nearly 95% in the last 150 years. Basic math skills is a proficiency that most people have in America now as well as the ability to write well enough to fill out an employment application and express an opinion to an elected official. Additionally, the work force benefits from public education, not only as a pool of future employees but also as a place to keep kids watched while parents work.

As a parent you can do a lot to increase the effectiveness of your child’s public education. Insist on conferences with teachers. Many teachers now provide students and their parents with an email address. Stay in contact with them this way. Join the PTA and attend as many meetings as possible. Attend school board and city meetings. If you have any concern, talk to your child’s guidance counselor and the principal. Public school takes work, effort and commitment but quality education can be found there.

Private Schools Private schools have long been associated with wealth, privilege and better quality education. Children of high status people go to private school. But is it really better than public school? In many ways, probably. Class size is usually smaller which provides for a lower teacher-student ratio. The educational materials are usually better quality. Students in private schools are often held to higher standards than the pupils in public schools. Of course, when parents are paying big bucks for their kids to go to a school they expect that school to perform. It is important to note that socially speaking private schools don’t seem to be that much different. Kids are just as judgmental and cliquey in private schools.

Homeschooling At one time homeschooling was associated with strictly religious parents who did not want their children corrupted by conventional education or families who lived so far away from any school that homeschooling just makes more sense. More recently, however, homeschoolers are just looking to have more input into their children’s education. Thanks to the Internet, schooling your children at home has never been easier. There are dozens of sites offering material (both for free and for sale) to help homeschool your child.

There is some concern and criticism that kids who are homeschooled don’t get the socialization that other children get from school. This may have been more of an issue in the past but modern homeschoolers make it a priority to ensure that their children take part in sports and other group activities so that socialization can take place.

While homeschooling can be the best type of schooling for some children, it takes a huge commitment from the parents in time, energy, and money. One parent has to stay home and spend a good portion of the day schooling. Although you can find some inexpensive or free homeschooling sources for education supplies, the loss of an income can be daunting for many families.

Unschooling Unschooling is similar to homeschooling in that the child stays home to learn. The difference with unschooling is that there is no set curriculum. Instead the child directs the curriculum according to their personal interests. By allowing the child to direct the path of education, the child is more interested and motivated. The theory is that a child’s natural curiosity will drive them to learn everything they need to know anyway. It is important to note that unschooling is not legal in all states.Choosing the type of schooling that your child receives is an important decision that is based on many different factors including income, personal beliefs, location, and child’s best interest. Hopefully the information in this article will help you make an informed decision.

For more information on everything educational, please visit http://www.essential-ed.com