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    The Sort Of Blog Referrals And Mentions That Will Open The Floodgates For You
    For centuries marketers have known and respected the power of referral marketing. The truth is that it is referral marketing that really lifts a product to sensational success.This is why entrepreneurs have always tried to use a wide range of different techniques to trigger off massive referrals. They have done this with the full understanding that with a useful product or service, one needs only a small spark to ignite the flame and power of referral marketing and open the floodgates of orders.The web is a natural when it comes to referral marketing and blogs are the ultimate referral marketing tool. They have actually become the sensation they are today through linking to one another (if linking is not referral marketing, I don’t know what referral marketing is.)Online Evidence of The Power Of ReferralsProof of the efficacy of referral marketing on the net is easy to find. This is one of the reasons why it is easier to make money from being an affiliate online than by starting your own brand new business. It is of course much more convincing for you to point folks to another site (send them referrals) than it is trying to sing your own praises.Since the early days of Amazon.com, affiliate programs have taken off in a hurry to become the multi-million dollar online industry they are today.Offline the same truth of the power of referral marketing has held true for centuries. This is why Public Relations and mentions in the media still get you a much higher response than an advertisement.Blogs – The Ultimate Referral ToolsEnter blogs and marketers have in their arsenal a weapon like no other that they have handled previously. Blogs are a referral tool and an advertising medium rolled into one.For instance by simply getting a writer to launch an independent blog on a popular subject related to your product or service, you can end up with huge targeted traffic and a source that generates a steady flow of hot sales leads for your enterprise.Blogging Techniques That Will Open The Flood Gates For YouBuilding up traffic to a new blog is not too difficult and there are various ways of doing this, which can be used separately or combined. You can get one or two major blogs or sites related to your blog topic to link to you, or you can use carefully selected keywords targeting popular but less-competitive search terms.Once they have the traffic, all a blogger needs to do is give out useful, interesting information that will give them a good excuse to mention you or your product or service. This should be done in such a way that prospects will find it difficult not to bite and visit your site or even make a purchase.
    of things but if students are encouraged early on in the education system to interact, discuss, debate and share with their peers and teachers then it seems that the technology will be better used, rather than misused.

    Traditional Aboriginal life seems fitting here, under the topic of technology and ideal teaching styles. In Aboriginal life, the elders of the community are highly respected and listened to by other members of the community. Wisdom is carried from one elder to a listener, not through notes or typing information into our laptops, but is learned only through listening. You must listen to understand, and perhaps that is where technology in the post-secondary system, and basically all educational systems, is lacking. Technology doesn't hear and it definitely doesn't listen. For the general public, there is nothing more real and more engaging than the company of another human being. Technology simply cannot deliver in all areas of human growth and development, but if teachers and professors fill in the needs of students and add technology on top of what they have already developed, the results would be more incredible than anything the education system has seen yet.

    It seems to come down to the fact that technology can only add to education, it cannot make it which seems to be the mistake being made by so many educational institutions today. Therefore, it is becoming more and more apparent that a mix of both worlds needs to be offered to the students from the very beginning of the education system, so that once students reach the post-secondary level they will have both social and technological skills. If students are raised simply relying on the technology of the time, they will lack social skills that are mandatory in most occupations and, more importantly, in life. Besides, as Aristotle clearly stated human beings are social creatures and why would be want to alter who we naturally are for something as impersonal and unnatural as technology?

    If the post-secondary education system (students, faculty and administration) continue to abuse information technology in the manner it is being misused now, then when you add education to the equation you only add to the severity of the abuse. Education will continue to move farther and farther from what is an ideal education and students will move farther from personal growth and development, to simply being the results of a bigger corporate campus agenda. Isolation, through the use of technology, will continue to hold students back from their full potential because they are never engaged, they are never challenged and from where they stand no one really cares about whom they are and what they're capable of. It's often said that children are our future, but ironically they are being treated much less than that. After focusing on the many advantages and disadvantages of education, on all levels, but mainly the post-secondary level it can be stated that if we continue to promote education in the direction it has been going, we will eventually find ourselves in an irreversible predicament. Education will be further moved from its original, ideal definition and students will become frustrated with the unproductive, yet socially accepted method of obtaining a degree, yet no knowledge. It is the natural desire of students to feel welcomed and celebrated within the educational system, and quite simply, the only way of doing that will be to make them feel that way. An answer that seems simple enough in theory, but practice has proven that it isn't so simple after all. Universities are finding themselves blinded by the global recognition, competitiveness and profits that information technology is bringing them and are allowing the bad in information technology to overtake all the good that it can produce. In an article written by Mohammad Hamza and Bassem Alhalabi, they stated that "…If we value thinking, if we treasure the creative potential necessary to withstand future information challenges then we, as passionate educators, must rededicate ourselves to our profession. Only then can wisdom, the capstone of human thinking and the forbearer of all human knowledge, intervene to save a decaying educational system." The need to repair our current education systems, to allow for the positive flourishing of infor

    The 6 Components Of An Effective Presentation
    One ingredient common to top salespeople is the ability to consistently deliver effective presentations. An effective presentation moves a customer from their current position to a position of action.Effective presenters use the following Methodology Selling™ techniques to move customers to action.1. Preparation – Establish a very clear vision or goal. Ensure your thoughts and ideas are clear as to how you will move the customer’s position from where they are now to a position of action.2. Educate And Create Interest – The audience needs to focus on you the presenter not on themselves. Inform the audience as to why you are there and the purpose of your presentation. Understand the customer’s needs and pain. Clearly define your resolution to their dilemma. The first few minutes of the presentation are vital. These few seconds can determine the success of the presentation.3. Clear Presentation – Present in a clear simple manner. Avoid using this venue as an opportunity to show the audience how much you know. Keep it simple and focused. Present points one at a time and make sure each point is understood before moving on.4. Listen To Your Audience – Listen and watch for the prospects response. Determine if hot buttons have been pushed.5. Touch Their Emotions – Remind the customers of their needs and their pain. They need to feel their pain to want to move away from it.6. Action – Give the customers the solution or tools to make the change. Empower them to move away from the pain and move to action.
    It goes without saying that constantly developing technologies are simplifying our life as well as studying process. However, there also are some negative aspects of such a rapid know- how development for it’s limiting students from achieving their full potential. While students and faculty work to achieve new skills, new communication interactions, new relationships, new teaching styles and new learning opportunities many are wondering how they, as an individual, fit into the grand scheme of education. Quite obviously, the use of information technology and the skills that which accompany it are in high demand within all levels of our world that is now centered on interconnectedness and the fast-paced changes now taking place in the post-industrialization era. But this in no way indicates that today's use of information technology can only be seen as beneficial. As the disadvantages become lost in the incredible list of advantages, it has become increasingly important to focus on what technology is giving students and faculty, at all levels of education in Canada and the United States, but more specifically at the post-secondary level, and more importantly it has become essential to examine what is being taken away, and potentially lost, from the original or ideal view of education.

    Perhaps in this debate it is necessary to clarify the meaning of "education" to further a logical debate. Education is the knowledge or skill obtained or developed by a learning process or also an instructive or enlightening experience. This idea of education through enlightenment and instruction seems somewhat ideal by today's standards but this ideal did once exist long before our arrival, in the time of the Athenian School of Thought. It was here that ancient philosophers like Plato, Aristotle, Socrates and Pythagorus gathered under ideal classical architecture to discuss and debate. These men were, and still are, considered great thinkers, and although time has elapsed and so many things have changed, students continue to study their ideas and theories. This alone speaks volumes on the importance of setting and their style of expanding the mind: some how it was accomplished without the use of technology. Learning and developing was simply done for the sake of knowing and the sake of broadening a knowledge base, but today the reasons behind developing knowledge are quite different and this "ideal" definition of education doesn't seem to exist in our educational system.

    In today's educational system many university students are finding themselves feeling empty and confused with their current post-secondary experience, and also previous schooling experiences. In a recent survey, it has been found that thirty-four per cent of first year university students' drop out. Perhaps the process of memorization, regurgitation and remaining yet another nameless student seems somewhat unappealing to those trying to discover what it is that they want to do with their lives. A saddening majority of students will walk away with degrees that hold no real meaning or value. Students experience pressure to attend university, in hopes that graduation will present them with a job that will make their parents proud. In a survey done within elementary and secondary levels of education by MetLife "only 15 percent of students surveyed said they believe their school is preparing students extremely well to go to college" and "less than half (42%) of students report that teachers very much encourage them to do their best". It all seems to come down to a scramble to keep a grade point average at a comparable high with other students or to pass a test or paper that will certainly be forgotten once the year is over. Emphasis is being pressed in all the wrong places: students are trying to put forth results when what we really need is guidance and someone to help develop our own personal knowledge base. We are seen more or less as numbers, rather than people who are rarely asked what they think or who they are. The process of true discovery and development, what schools (and more specifically universities) want from their students can only come forth from people who know themselves, who know their strengths and know the meaning of putting in all you have. But, if students aren't even given the opportunity to discover all that they are, how could they possibly give it in a post-secondary setting.

    With IT taking such a major role within our societies, importance is being placed upon skills, expertise and basic knowledge of computer technology, so in order to remain desirable in a competitive work force students are looking to develop these needed skills. Where technology has essentially become a necessity in education and the workforce, it has become a priority for schools at all levels, especially at the post-secondary level, to integrate technology into the curriculum. But, the problems seem to truly arise at the post-secondary setting where universities rely on funding through the government and students' tuition payments which accounts for nineteen per cent of universities total annual revenue in 1999/2000. Basically the rest of the necessary money for Canadian universities come from sponsored research funding from governments, the private sector and other non-government organizations which added up to $2.8 billion in 1999/2000. Universities and colleges all over Canada and the United States are looking to remain desirable to students by being comparable or advantageous over other higher education institutes. This need results in a campaign for profits and results, over the ideal view of education where development and the students' needs are the priority.

    With this said, it seems that computer and information technology within the university setting can be quite damaging to students and their opportunities to receive the education and instruction they want. Placed upon an already unstable system of education which relies heavily on student payments and corporate sponsors and donations, it seems unlikely that positive results would prevail. But the truth is that information technology can be used positively within the educational system, especially in higher education. With this in mind, IT is quite comparable to the use of globalization. Globalization is quite tricky to define, but one basic definition would sound something like this: increased mobility of goods, services, labor, technology and capital throughout the world. Used properly, globalization can have incredible benefits for many. For example, an unemployed Inuit woman living in Nunavut can make a living for herself by selling her artwork online without having to suffer the price of a middle man, or retailer, taking her hard earned money. This is an example of globalization working for the people of the world, but this same concept can be misused and that is how we are finding children working in sweatshops in India. Applying this same theory upon information technology and its effect on education one would see that both negative and positive effects can occur depending on the strength of the educational system at hand.

    Focusing first on the advantages of information technology within the educational system, many find that this new concept of a global classroom, where technology is integrated into all levels of the class, is the means of advancing students to a level of educational learning that has ceased to ever exist. In a survey done by Campus Computing Project's nearly 600 U.S. colleges and universities it's estimated that half their students used the Internet daily for their studies and with a statistic this high, it's obvious that information technology will integrate itself into the education system, changing the traditional classroom setting into a global one. This era of educational change is considered an extremely exciting time where the system and structure of learning will be pushed as far as our imaginations will take us, which essentially has no boundaries. Just imagine, we are only limited by our own creativity and if we think up something that doesn't exist yet, it can almost be guaranteed that technological advances will bring it to us in only a short matter of time. Essentially, our opportunities as students, as educators and as life-long learners are breaking past the walls that once held back our ideas.

    Technology is also providing opportunities to develop knowledge in general with the use of university courses and programs online. If you have access to the resources you can better your education and therefore your status in the workforce by partaking in distance learning, or online courses. And, for those who simply want to broaden their knowledge without the degrees and programs, the Internet is an educator all on its own, with endless information available at the click of a button. Students can interact online with other students, professors, friends, political figures, government and organizations around the globe; become involved and aware of politics on a national and international scale; develop interests that otherwise may not have been available; be aware of news and events occurring within their world and the greater world around them and also, information on nations, governments, companies and people is much easier to assess by the average web surfer, so things become more transparent and truths can no longer be hidden.

    Ideally, these advantages are what the educational system wants within their classrooms. Technology is basically becoming a necessity at all levels of education; it is a skill that is being brought into the elementary, secondary and even more so, the university classrooms. One day, technology will most likely be necessary within the realms of our careers so it is necessary to master the skills now. But as mentioned above, the advantages are somewhat ideal and don't look quite how we all want them to in our current system of education. It seems that they look the worst at the university level because it is here that universities are no longer public, like most elementary and secondary schools are.

    As public support decreased and societal demand increased, the government pulled back university funding in the 1980's, so these institutions in Canada and the United States had to raise tuition to meet the demands of higher education, especially in light of the desperately needed advancements that technology has brought about. Many of these institutions have had to turn to corporations for funding or receive "gifts" from alumni families, much like Acadia University did with the undisclosed sum of money that alumni, J.D. Irving, gave to Acadia to build a botanical garden, and campus meeting place. Elaine Benoit, spokesperson for Acadia's office of public affairs, insists this will have no bearing on the research conducted. "We will continue to conduct the same kind of research we have in the past. It's not a buy-out; we're not selling ourselves to the family." Excepting an undisclosed sum of money does at least attach an institution to a particular family no matter what the spokespeople say. This is another way that technology can lead education from its ideal version to a version based on gain and profits.

    With technology emerging as such a key player, institutions have used it to their profitable advantage. "Many educational institutions seem driven to use newly found access to global data communication that will increase enrollments and will award a vast range of degrees through massive investments in distance education programs." But, unfortunately these steps to be adaptive and remain competitive with "fast track diplomas" have created programs, that "…when compared in-depth to the curricula of bona fide academic institutions… …these ventures appeared to be little more than money-making plots managed by capitalistic-minded individuals who held verily the slightest regard for academic values." This simple act of taking advantage of students need for technology and fast paced education seems to have made education into a commodity, or means to an end rather than an end in itself.

    Students are now finding themselves referred to as "clients" in most universities and are feeling even less appreciated and less motivated to truly put themselves into their studies. Now, how is it that students become "clients"? The universities are realizing their cost cutting potential through the use of technology. Wired campuses, distance learning and online classes and discussions won't require lecture halls, full faculty, libraries and laboratories. The idea of students becoming clients simply goes hand in hand with the idea of commodifying education. Universities are taking roles of businesses where transactions are conducted. Clients pay for their education, or their degree, and it is given to them by the institution. As Michael Margolis stated in his article entitled Brave New Universities, "…Institutions of higher education in United States are considered superior because they have delivered a lucrative educational product for a competitive price…"

    Also, in a university setting where information technology plays a major role, both professors and students may sense a lack of belonging and a lack of relations that might otherwise exist without the technology. For example, within a wired campus students use email to contact or ask a professor a question, rather than taking the time to visit them in their offices. Potentially, a student could go through an entire year of classes without ever having to talk to their professor, and in all certainty this has happened. It seems that this approach undermines all that education is about. By definition, education is intertwined with enlightening experiences and instruction. Certainly in this technology based class and campus setting the student is receiving instruction, but how could a student ever be enlightened when enlightenment comes from a sense of self-discovery. Many Canadian and American universities and colleges support extremely large classes to cover the institutions annual operating cost and an example of these classes can be seen at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The universities introduction to Psychology enrolls approximately 1000 students and it becomes unrealistic to say that students are engaged, challenged or asked to develop their thoughts or mind. These sorts of advances in personal knowledge can only properly expand under certain conditions and many of these conditions are neglected in just about all North American classrooms. By the time university comes for many students, or "clients" as they will soon be referred to, they have mastered the skills of remaining unknown, cramming and writing last minute papers and assignments. The technology only makes the latter even easier to get away with.

    Another disadvantage comes forth in the idea of men and women, and their different ways of learning and accessibility. Women are underrepresented on the World Wide Web, just as they are in the high-tech occupations and therefore some underlying discrimination may prevail at a university setting. In a survey done by Nielson/Net Ratings men log on more than women (an average of 54 sessions compared to 50 sessions), spend more time on average (31 hours versus 27 hours), and view more pages (1900 versus 1700). Women, compared to men, are much less likely to use or even attempt to access the Internet for a variety of reasons. Many women are intimidated by pornography, prevalent sexist attitudes and the basic idea that technology is more directed towards men. Perhaps, in a university classrooms, where laptops are used women are finding they are even more isolated than an average student might feel. Not only are they neglected by their professors, but many do not feel comfortable with the replacement offered: the Internet.

    Fortunately, when looking at the list of disadvantages it seems that they can all be reversed and used to the advantage of students, teachers, professors, women and anyone else who might feel that they are losing out because of technology. For example, women are under represented in all aspects of information technology but it is that very technology that is bringing women together and bringing technology into their lives. Women, for example, are emerging as the dominant users of the Internet. Following in Nielson/Net Rating survey, "...women at work logged onto the Internet 23 percent more this August than they did in August 2001… … while men still outpace women in Internet usage at work, Internet usage by men at work grew only 12 percent year-to-date."

    Also with online courses, information, training and advertisement for conferences the Internet is basically a meeting place for people to come together and strengthen their role within the world of IT. When it comes to students, technology can play a major role in bringing students and professors together through online discussions and also online communication can make it easier for students to ask questions or set up a time to meet in person with other students or professors. This is where information can be misused, and where it tends to be in today's classrooms as students are finding they are merely a number in the grand scheme of things but if students are encouraged early on in the education system to interact, discuss, debate and share with their peers and teachers then it seems that the technology will be better used, rather than misused.

    Traditional Aboriginal life seems fitting here, under the topic of technology and ideal teaching styles. In Aboriginal life, the elders of the community are highly respected and listened to by other members of the community. Wisdom is carried from one elder to a listener, not through notes or typing information into our laptops, but is learned only through listening. You must listen to understand, and perhaps that is where technology in the post-secondary system, and basically all educational systems, is lacking. Technology doesn't hear and it definitely doesn't listen. For the general public, there is nothing more real and more engaging than the company of another human being. Technology simply cannot deliver in all areas of human growth and development, but if teachers and professors fill in the needs of students and add technology on top of what they have already developed, the results would be more incredible than anything the education system has seen yet.

    It seems to come down to the fact that technology can only add to education, it cannot make it which seems to be the mistake being made by so many educational institutions today. Therefore, it is becoming more and more apparent that a mix of both worlds needs to be offered to the students from the very beginning of the education system, so that once students reach the post-secondary level they will have both social and technological skills. If students are raised simply relying on the technology of the time, they will lack social skills that are mandatory in most occupations and, more importantly, in life. Besides, as Aristotle clearly stated human beings are social creatures and why would be want to alter who we naturally are for something as impersonal and unnatural as technology?

    If the post-secondary education system (students, faculty and administration) continue to abuse information technology in the manner it is being misused now, then when you add education to the equation you only add to the severity of the abuse. Education will continue to move farther and farther from what is an ideal education and students will move farther from personal growth and development, to simply being the results of a bigger corporate campus agenda. Isolation, through the use of technology, will continue to hold students back from their full potential because they are never engaged, they are never challenged and from where they stand no one really cares about whom they are and what they're capable of. It's often said that children are our future, but ironically they are being treated much less than that. After focusing on the many advantages and disadvantages of education, on all levels, but mainly the post-secondary level it can be stated that if we continue to promote education in the direction it has been going, we will eventually find ourselves in an irreversible predicament. Education will be further moved from its original, ideal definition and students will become frustrated with the unproductive, yet socially accepted method of obtaining a degree, yet no knowledge. It is the natural desire of students to feel welcomed and celebrated within the educational system, and quite simply, the only way of doing that will be to make them feel that way. An answer that seems simple enough in theory, but practice has proven that it isn't so simple after all. Universities are finding themselves blinded by the global recognition, competitiveness and profits that information technology is bringing them and are allowing the bad in information technology to overtake all the good that it can produce. In an article written by Mohammad Hamza and Bassem Alhalabi, they stated that "…If we value thinking, if we treasure the creative potential necessary to withstand future information challenges then we, as passionate educators, must rededicate ourselves to our profession. Only then can wisdom, the capstone of human thinking and the forbearer of all human knowledge, intervene to save a decaying educational system." The need to repair our current education systems, to allow for the positive flourishing of inform

    What is Link Popularity?
    Link popularity is simply the total number of web pages that link to your web page. Link popularity is an extremely important factor that is used by most of the major search engines to rank web pages and web sites. In general, the major search engines consider link popularity a key factor in their algorithms to determine the relevancy of your web page to a particular keyword search query.Good link popularity is important because it can increase the visitor traffic to your web page. The reputation of your web site (i.e., votes of confidence from other web sites) is a measure of the site’s link popularity. Your web page rank (i.e., the position your web page occupies in a search engine’s results page) to a particular search query can be improved by increasing the number of relevant and quality web sites that have incoming links to your web page.An incoming link is considered to be relevant if it is meaningful and relates to your web page. If you sell golf clubs online, relevant incoming links could be from: golf club manufacturers, golf apparel sites, competitors, golf-related directories and so forth. In addition, internal links (links from web pages within your web site) are considered relevant and essential because they help your web page visitor to navigate your web site.It is not enough to just have web page links coming into your web page (link popularity). The quality of the incoming link is also critical. A search engine will put more emphasis on a high quality web page (ranked high by a particular search engine) than on a low quality web page (ranked low by a particular search engine). It will take many lower quality incoming links to approach the level of a single high quality incoming link.The major search engines do more than match the content of your web page to the keyword search query to determine if there’s a good match for a particular search. They look at the quality of the links to your web page. The reason is because there are thousands, if not millions, of web pages that contain the search query’s particular keyword or keyword phrase in the web page content. The search engines want to deliver a list of relevant and ordered web pages to meet a user’s query search.In addition to the link popularity, search engines also look at the anchor text contained in the incoming link to your web page. It will consider your web page more relevant to the keyword query search if the text in the incoming link to your web page contains the queried keywords.The number and quality of incoming links to your web page can be an excellent source of targeted and consistent visitor traffic to your site. In addition, search engines are more likely to index your web pages on a mo
    all that they are, how could they possibly give it in a post-secondary setting.

    With IT taking such a major role within our societies, importance is being placed upon skills, expertise and basic knowledge of computer technology, so in order to remain desirable in a competitive work force students are looking to develop these needed skills. Where technology has essentially become a necessity in education and the workforce, it has become a priority for schools at all levels, especially at the post-secondary level, to integrate technology into the curriculum. But, the problems seem to truly arise at the post-secondary setting where universities rely on funding through the government and students' tuition payments which accounts for nineteen per cent of universities total annual revenue in 1999/2000. Basically the rest of the necessary money for Canadian universities come from sponsored research funding from governments, the private sector and other non-government organizations which added up to $2.8 billion in 1999/2000. Universities and colleges all over Canada and the United States are looking to remain desirable to students by being comparable or advantageous over other higher education institutes. This need results in a campaign for profits and results, over the ideal view of education where development and the students' needs are the priority.

    With this said, it seems that computer and information technology within the university setting can be quite damaging to students and their opportunities to receive the education and instruction they want. Placed upon an already unstable system of education which relies heavily on student payments and corporate sponsors and donations, it seems unlikely that positive results would prevail. But the truth is that information technology can be used positively within the educational system, especially in higher education. With this in mind, IT is quite comparable to the use of globalization. Globalization is quite tricky to define, but one basic definition would sound something like this: increased mobility of goods, services, labor, technology and capital throughout the world. Used properly, globalization can have incredible benefits for many. For example, an unemployed Inuit woman living in Nunavut can make a living for herself by selling her artwork online without having to suffer the price of a middle man, or retailer, taking her hard earned money. This is an example of globalization working for the people of the world, but this same concept can be misused and that is how we are finding children working in sweatshops in India. Applying this same theory upon information technology and its effect on education one would see that both negative and positive effects can occur depending on the strength of the educational system at hand.

    Focusing first on the advantages of information technology within the educational system, many find that this new concept of a global classroom, where technology is integrated into all levels of the class, is the means of advancing students to a level of educational learning that has ceased to ever exist. In a survey done by Campus Computing Project's nearly 600 U.S. colleges and universities it's estimated that half their students used the Internet daily for their studies and with a statistic this high, it's obvious that information technology will integrate itself into the education system, changing the traditional classroom setting into a global one. This era of educational change is considered an extremely exciting time where the system and structure of learning will be pushed as far as our imaginations will take us, which essentially has no boundaries. Just imagine, we are only limited by our own creativity and if we think up something that doesn't exist yet, it can almost be guaranteed that technological advances will bring it to us in only a short matter of time. Essentially, our opportunities as students, as educators and as life-long learners are breaking past the walls that once held back our ideas.

    Technology is also providing opportunities to develop knowledge in general with the use of university courses and programs online. If you have access to the resources you can better your education and therefore your status in the workforce by partaking in distance learning, or online courses. And, for those who simply want to broaden their knowledge without the degrees and programs, the Internet is an educator all on its own, with endless information available at the click of a button. Students can interact online with other students, professors, friends, political figures, government and organizations around the globe; become involved and aware of politics on a national and international scale; develop interests that otherwise may not have been available; be aware of news and events occurring within their world and the greater world around them and also, information on nations, governments, companies and people is much easier to assess by the average web surfer, so things become more transparent and truths can no longer be hidden.

    Ideally, these advantages are what the educational system wants within their classrooms. Technology is basically becoming a necessity at all levels of education; it is a skill that is being brought into the elementary, secondary and even more so, the university classrooms. One day, technology will most likely be necessary within the realms of our careers so it is necessary to master the skills now. But as mentioned above, the advantages are somewhat ideal and don't look quite how we all want them to in our current system of education. It seems that they look the worst at the university level because it is here that universities are no longer public, like most elementary and secondary schools are.

    As public support decreased and societal demand increased, the government pulled back university funding in the 1980's, so these institutions in Canada and the United States had to raise tuition to meet the demands of higher education, especially in light of the desperately needed advancements that technology has brought about. Many of these institutions have had to turn to corporations for funding or receive "gifts" from alumni families, much like Acadia University did with the undisclosed sum of money that alumni, J.D. Irving, gave to Acadia to build a botanical garden, and campus meeting place. Elaine Benoit, spokesperson for Acadia's office of public affairs, insists this will have no bearing on the research conducted. "We will continue to conduct the same kind of research we have in the past. It's not a buy-out; we're not selling ourselves to the family." Excepting an undisclosed sum of money does at least attach an institution to a particular family no matter what the spokespeople say. This is another way that technology can lead education from its ideal version to a version based on gain and profits.

    With technology emerging as such a key player, institutions have used it to their profitable advantage. "Many educational institutions seem driven to use newly found access to global data communication that will increase enrollments and will award a vast range of degrees through massive investments in distance education programs." But, unfortunately these steps to be adaptive and remain competitive with "fast track diplomas" have created programs, that "…when compared in-depth to the curricula of bona fide academic institutions… …these ventures appeared to be little more than money-making plots managed by capitalistic-minded individuals who held verily the slightest regard for academic values." This simple act of taking advantage of students need for technology and fast paced education seems to have made education into a commodity, or means to an end rather than an end in itself.

    Students are now finding themselves referred to as "clients" in most universities and are feeling even less appreciated and less motivated to truly put themselves into their studies. Now, how is it that students become "clients"? The universities are realizing their cost cutting potential through the use of technology. Wired campuses, distance learning and online classes and discussions won't require lecture halls, full faculty, libraries and laboratories. The idea of students becoming clients simply goes hand in hand with the idea of commodifying education. Universities are taking roles of businesses where transactions are conducted. Clients pay for their education, or their degree, and it is given to them by the institution. As Michael Margolis stated in his article entitled Brave New Universities, "…Institutions of higher education in United States are considered superior because they have delivered a lucrative educational product for a competitive price…"

    Also, in a university setting where information technology plays a major role, both professors and students may sense a lack of belonging and a lack of relations that might otherwise exist without the technology. For example, within a wired campus students use email to contact or ask a professor a question, rather than taking the time to visit them in their offices. Potentially, a student could go through an entire year of classes without ever having to talk to their professor, and in all certainty this has happened. It seems that this approach undermines all that education is about. By definition, education is intertwined with enlightening experiences and instruction. Certainly in this technology based class and campus setting the student is receiving instruction, but how could a student ever be enlightened when enlightenment comes from a sense of self-discovery. Many Canadian and American universities and colleges support extremely large classes to cover the institutions annual operating cost and an example of these classes can be seen at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The universities introduction to Psychology enrolls approximately 1000 students and it becomes unrealistic to say that students are engaged, challenged or asked to develop their thoughts or mind. These sorts of advances in personal knowledge can only properly expand under certain conditions and many of these conditions are neglected in just about all North American classrooms. By the time university comes for many students, or "clients" as they will soon be referred to, they have mastered the skills of remaining unknown, cramming and writing last minute papers and assignments. The technology only makes the latter even easier to get away with.

    Another disadvantage comes forth in the idea of men and women, and their different ways of learning and accessibility. Women are underrepresented on the World Wide Web, just as they are in the high-tech occupations and therefore some underlying discrimination may prevail at a university setting. In a survey done by Nielson/Net Ratings men log on more than women (an average of 54 sessions compared to 50 sessions), spend more time on average (31 hours versus 27 hours), and view more pages (1900 versus 1700). Women, compared to men, are much less likely to use or even attempt to access the Internet for a variety of reasons. Many women are intimidated by pornography, prevalent sexist attitudes and the basic idea that technology is more directed towards men. Perhaps, in a university classrooms, where laptops are used women are finding they are even more isolated than an average student might feel. Not only are they neglected by their professors, but many do not feel comfortable with the replacement offered: the Internet.

    Fortunately, when looking at the list of disadvantages it seems that they can all be reversed and used to the advantage of students, teachers, professors, women and anyone else who might feel that they are losing out because of technology. For example, women are under represented in all aspects of information technology but it is that very technology that is bringing women together and bringing technology into their lives. Women, for example, are emerging as the dominant users of the Internet. Following in Nielson/Net Rating survey, "...women at work logged onto the Internet 23 percent more this August than they did in August 2001… … while men still outpace women in Internet usage at work, Internet usage by men at work grew only 12 percent year-to-date."

    Also with online courses, information, training and advertisement for conferences the Internet is basically a meeting place for people to come together and strengthen their role within the world of IT. When it comes to students, technology can play a major role in bringing students and professors together through online discussions and also online communication can make it easier for students to ask questions or set up a time to meet in person with other students or professors. This is where information can be misused, and where it tends to be in today's classrooms as students are finding they are merely a number in the grand scheme of things but if students are encouraged early on in the education system to interact, discuss, debate and share with their peers and teachers then it seems that the technology will be better used, rather than misused.

    Traditional Aboriginal life seems fitting here, under the topic of technology and ideal teaching styles. In Aboriginal life, the elders of the community are highly respected and listened to by other members of the community. Wisdom is carried from one elder to a listener, not through notes or typing information into our laptops, but is learned only through listening. You must listen to understand, and perhaps that is where technology in the post-secondary system, and basically all educational systems, is lacking. Technology doesn't hear and it definitely doesn't listen. For the general public, there is nothing more real and more engaging than the company of another human being. Technology simply cannot deliver in all areas of human growth and development, but if teachers and professors fill in the needs of students and add technology on top of what they have already developed, the results would be more incredible than anything the education system has seen yet.

    It seems to come down to the fact that technology can only add to education, it cannot make it which seems to be the mistake being made by so many educational institutions today. Therefore, it is becoming more and more apparent that a mix of both worlds needs to be offered to the students from the very beginning of the education system, so that once students reach the post-secondary level they will have both social and technological skills. If students are raised simply relying on the technology of the time, they will lack social skills that are mandatory in most occupations and, more importantly, in life. Besides, as Aristotle clearly stated human beings are social creatures and why would be want to alter who we naturally are for something as impersonal and unnatural as technology?

    If the post-secondary education system (students, faculty and administration) continue to abuse information technology in the manner it is being misused now, then when you add education to the equation you only add to the severity of the abuse. Education will continue to move farther and farther from what is an ideal education and students will move farther from personal growth and development, to simply being the results of a bigger corporate campus agenda. Isolation, through the use of technology, will continue to hold students back from their full potential because they are never engaged, they are never challenged and from where they stand no one really cares about whom they are and what they're capable of. It's often said that children are our future, but ironically they are being treated much less than that. After focusing on the many advantages and disadvantages of education, on all levels, but mainly the post-secondary level it can be stated that if we continue to promote education in the direction it has been going, we will eventually find ourselves in an irreversible predicament. Education will be further moved from its original, ideal definition and students will become frustrated with the unproductive, yet socially accepted method of obtaining a degree, yet no knowledge. It is the natural desire of students to feel welcomed and celebrated within the educational system, and quite simply, the only way of doing that will be to make them feel that way. An answer that seems simple enough in theory, but practice has proven that it isn't so simple after all. Universities are finding themselves blinded by the global recognition, competitiveness and profits that information technology is bringing them and are allowing the bad in information technology to overtake all the good that it can produce. In an article written by Mohammad Hamza and Bassem Alhalabi, they stated that "…If we value thinking, if we treasure the creative potential necessary to withstand future information challenges then we, as passionate educators, must rededicate ourselves to our profession. Only then can wisdom, the capstone of human thinking and the forbearer of all human knowledge, intervene to save a decaying educational system." The need to repair our current education systems, to allow for the positive flourishing of infor

    Make It Easy to Reply - Voice Mail That Works
    If you are like most business people, voice mail has both simplified and complicated your life. On the good side, it helps you exchange information. On the other side, leaving messages can seem like putting notes in bottles that drift off to sea. Here's how to make sure that your messages get results.First, prepare for the call. Realize that you are more likely to leave a message than to talk with someone. Thus, write a list of your key points and questions before you call. Then use that list as an outline when you leave a message. Of course, such preparation also helps you communicate effectively when you actually talk to someone.If you suffer a sudden mental block when the beep tells you to leave a message, simply hang up. Then, organize your thoughts and call back. This is far better than leaving a rambling, incoherent message.When you leave a message, speak clearly. Begin by greeting the person and identifying yourself. For example, I might say "Hi Pat. This is Steve Kaye at 714 -528-1300." This standard communication protocol tells the other person who you wanted to call and identifies who you are.When leaving numbers, write the numbers while you state them. This slows down your speaking pace to match the listener's writing speed. Then, as an added courtesy, repeat all numbers. If this is your first contact or if your name is unusual, spell your name, also writing each letter as you speak it. The extra time that you spend to leave a clear message greatly helps the other person return your call.Next state the purpose of you call. Be candid and concise. Provide enough information so that the other person can meet your request by leaving a message on your system.Never leave personal information on a message. This could embarrass you or the other person. It is possible that 1) an assistant or coworker will pick up your message 2) the message will be played back on a speaker phone with other people in the office, or 3) your message will be forwarded to someone else.Similarly, never leave a message when you are upset. Instead, hang up and call back after you calm down.Close your message with directions on how to respond. Suggest times when you will be available for a return call. For example, you might say "I'd welcome a return call at three this afternoon." Then add positive encouragement, such as "I look forward to hearing from you."
    online courses. And, for those who simply want to broaden their knowledge without the degrees and programs, the Internet is an educator all on its own, with endless information available at the click of a button. Students can interact online with other students, professors, friends, political figures, government and organizations around the globe; become involved and aware of politics on a national and international scale; develop interests that otherwise may not have been available; be aware of news and events occurring within their world and the greater world around them and also, information on nations, governments, companies and people is much easier to assess by the average web surfer, so things become more transparent and truths can no longer be hidden.

    Ideally, these advantages are what the educational system wants within their classrooms. Technology is basically becoming a necessity at all levels of education; it is a skill that is being brought into the elementary, secondary and even more so, the university classrooms. One day, technology will most likely be necessary within the realms of our careers so it is necessary to master the skills now. But as mentioned above, the advantages are somewhat ideal and don't look quite how we all want them to in our current system of education. It seems that they look the worst at the university level because it is here that universities are no longer public, like most elementary and secondary schools are.

    As public support decreased and societal demand increased, the government pulled back university funding in the 1980's, so these institutions in Canada and the United States had to raise tuition to meet the demands of higher education, especially in light of the desperately needed advancements that technology has brought about. Many of these institutions have had to turn to corporations for funding or receive "gifts" from alumni families, much like Acadia University did with the undisclosed sum of money that alumni, J.D. Irving, gave to Acadia to build a botanical garden, and campus meeting place. Elaine Benoit, spokesperson for Acadia's office of public affairs, insists this will have no bearing on the research conducted. "We will continue to conduct the same kind of research we have in the past. It's not a buy-out; we're not selling ourselves to the family." Excepting an undisclosed sum of money does at least attach an institution to a particular family no matter what the spokespeople say. This is another way that technology can lead education from its ideal version to a version based on gain and profits.

    With technology emerging as such a key player, institutions have used it to their profitable advantage. "Many educational institutions seem driven to use newly found access to global data communication that will increase enrollments and will award a vast range of degrees through massive investments in distance education programs." But, unfortunately these steps to be adaptive and remain competitive with "fast track diplomas" have created programs, that "…when compared in-depth to the curricula of bona fide academic institutions… …these ventures appeared to be little more than money-making plots managed by capitalistic-minded individuals who held verily the slightest regard for academic values." This simple act of taking advantage of students need for technology and fast paced education seems to have made education into a commodity, or means to an end rather than an end in itself.

    Students are now finding themselves referred to as "clients" in most universities and are feeling even less appreciated and less motivated to truly put themselves into their studies. Now, how is it that students become "clients"? The universities are realizing their cost cutting potential through the use of technology. Wired campuses, distance learning and online classes and discussions won't require lecture halls, full faculty, libraries and laboratories. The idea of students becoming clients simply goes hand in hand with the idea of commodifying education. Universities are taking roles of businesses where transactions are conducted. Clients pay for their education, or their degree, and it is given to them by the institution. As Michael Margolis stated in his article entitled Brave New Universities, "…Institutions of higher education in United States are considered superior because they have delivered a lucrative educational product for a competitive price…"

    Also, in a university setting where information technology plays a major role, both professors and students may sense a lack of belonging and a lack of relations that might otherwise exist without the technology. For example, within a wired campus students use email to contact or ask a professor a question, rather than taking the time to visit them in their offices. Potentially, a student could go through an entire year of classes without ever having to talk to their professor, and in all certainty this has happened. It seems that this approach undermines all that education is about. By definition, education is intertwined with enlightening experiences and instruction. Certainly in this technology based class and campus setting the student is receiving instruction, but how could a student ever be enlightened when enlightenment comes from a sense of self-discovery. Many Canadian and American universities and colleges support extremely large classes to cover the institutions annual operating cost and an example of these classes can be seen at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The universities introduction to Psychology enrolls approximately 1000 students and it becomes unrealistic to say that students are engaged, challenged or asked to develop their thoughts or mind. These sorts of advances in personal knowledge can only properly expand under certain conditions and many of these conditions are neglected in just about all North American classrooms. By the time university comes for many students, or "clients" as they will soon be referred to, they have mastered the skills of remaining unknown, cramming and writing last minute papers and assignments. The technology only makes the latter even easier to get away with.

    Another disadvantage comes forth in the idea of men and women, and their different ways of learning and accessibility. Women are underrepresented on the World Wide Web, just as they are in the high-tech occupations and therefore some underlying discrimination may prevail at a university setting. In a survey done by Nielson/Net Ratings men log on more than women (an average of 54 sessions compared to 50 sessions), spend more time on average (31 hours versus 27 hours), and view more pages (1900 versus 1700). Women, compared to men, are much less likely to use or even attempt to access the Internet for a variety of reasons. Many women are intimidated by pornography, prevalent sexist attitudes and the basic idea that technology is more directed towards men. Perhaps, in a university classrooms, where laptops are used women are finding they are even more isolated than an average student might feel. Not only are they neglected by their professors, but many do not feel comfortable with the replacement offered: the Internet.

    Fortunately, when looking at the list of disadvantages it seems that they can all be reversed and used to the advantage of students, teachers, professors, women and anyone else who might feel that they are losing out because of technology. For example, women are under represented in all aspects of information technology but it is that very technology that is bringing women together and bringing technology into their lives. Women, for example, are emerging as the dominant users of the Internet. Following in Nielson/Net Rating survey, "...women at work logged onto the Internet 23 percent more this August than they did in August 2001… … while men still outpace women in Internet usage at work, Internet usage by men at work grew only 12 percent year-to-date."

    Also with online courses, information, training and advertisement for conferences the Internet is basically a meeting place for people to come together and strengthen their role within the world of IT. When it comes to students, technology can play a major role in bringing students and professors together through online discussions and also online communication can make it easier for students to ask questions or set up a time to meet in person with other students or professors. This is where information can be misused, and where it tends to be in today's classrooms as students are finding they are merely a number in the grand scheme of things but if students are encouraged early on in the education system to interact, discuss, debate and share with their peers and teachers then it seems that the technology will be better used, rather than misused.

    Traditional Aboriginal life seems fitting here, under the topic of technology and ideal teaching styles. In Aboriginal life, the elders of the community are highly respected and listened to by other members of the community. Wisdom is carried from one elder to a listener, not through notes or typing information into our laptops, but is learned only through listening. You must listen to understand, and perhaps that is where technology in the post-secondary system, and basically all educational systems, is lacking. Technology doesn't hear and it definitely doesn't listen. For the general public, there is nothing more real and more engaging than the company of another human being. Technology simply cannot deliver in all areas of human growth and development, but if teachers and professors fill in the needs of students and add technology on top of what they have already developed, the results would be more incredible than anything the education system has seen yet.

    It seems to come down to the fact that technology can only add to education, it cannot make it which seems to be the mistake being made by so many educational institutions today. Therefore, it is becoming more and more apparent that a mix of both worlds needs to be offered to the students from the very beginning of the education system, so that once students reach the post-secondary level they will have both social and technological skills. If students are raised simply relying on the technology of the time, they will lack social skills that are mandatory in most occupations and, more importantly, in life. Besides, as Aristotle clearly stated human beings are social creatures and why would be want to alter who we naturally are for something as impersonal and unnatural as technology?

    If the post-secondary education system (students, faculty and administration) continue to abuse information technology in the manner it is being misused now, then when you add education to the equation you only add to the severity of the abuse. Education will continue to move farther and farther from what is an ideal education and students will move farther from personal growth and development, to simply being the results of a bigger corporate campus agenda. Isolation, through the use of technology, will continue to hold students back from their full potential because they are never engaged, they are never challenged and from where they stand no one really cares about whom they are and what they're capable of. It's often said that children are our future, but ironically they are being treated much less than that. After focusing on the many advantages and disadvantages of education, on all levels, but mainly the post-secondary level it can be stated that if we continue to promote education in the direction it has been going, we will eventually find ourselves in an irreversible predicament. Education will be further moved from its original, ideal definition and students will become frustrated with the unproductive, yet socially accepted method of obtaining a degree, yet no knowledge. It is the natural desire of students to feel welcomed and celebrated within the educational system, and quite simply, the only way of doing that will be to make them feel that way. An answer that seems simple enough in theory, but practice has proven that it isn't so simple after all. Universities are finding themselves blinded by the global recognition, competitiveness and profits that information technology is bringing them and are allowing the bad in information technology to overtake all the good that it can produce. In an article written by Mohammad Hamza and Bassem Alhalabi, they stated that "…If we value thinking, if we treasure the creative potential necessary to withstand future information challenges then we, as passionate educators, must rededicate ourselves to our profession. Only then can wisdom, the capstone of human thinking and the forbearer of all human knowledge, intervene to save a decaying educational system." The need to repair our current education systems, to allow for the positive flourishing of infor

    6 Best Ways To Get A Christian Finance
    Christian Finance is a concept which is based on the Biblical perceptions to help teach believers their stewardship duties and to be a responsible Christian investor with their money. There are many Christian Finance principles based on Biblical affiliation such as goals, budgeting, debt elimination, saving, financial management, tithing, and giving.There is a ministry such as Crown Financial Concepts who offers numerous books and small group studies on stewardship financial management. There are also many Christian Finance scholars available who conducts stewardship seminars and workshops based on timeless truths about how to manage their money with Christians at local churches.Along with the teaching ministry, there are many financial institutions which are fee only financial planners that combine their Christian faith along with traditional financial services standards. They also use Christian Finance concepts to administer investment accounts for Christian values and always try to avoid investments that conflict with their client's Christian beliefs." Best ways to get a Christian Finance #1 - Identify your needs - Simply contacting a Christian Finance planner is not enough. Prior to that you need to identify what you need from your consultant. This would include the type of home you would like to own, the savings that you can invest, the monthly repayments that you can afford and the value that you want out of the deal. All your transactions can then be managed with the biblically based investment advice." Best ways to get a Christian Finance #2 - Get the best Christian Finance planning firm - The best Christian Financial Planning firm will help you to organize and manage the money with investment advice which are steeped in traditional values and traditional financial planning techniques. A Christian Finance planning firm is needed to help the fellow believing clients in two areas. (1. So that they are able to offer advice with solid moral Biblically based advice. 2, they can use their education and experience to provide the best advice available)" Best ways to get a Christian Finance #3 - Be aware - It pays to be aware. Do your research on the local real estate options as well as history so that you are familiar with the area and the projects that are on the platter. It is important to ask your Christian Finance advisor to walk you through the various properties and neighborhoods so that you can study their pros and cons yourself." Best ways to get a Christian Finance #4 - Be up to date regarding the Christian financial services - Before you invest, you should be thoroughly up to date with the latest trends in the Christian Finance offers. This will help you decide what is best
    education in United States are considered superior because they have delivered a lucrative educational product for a competitive price…"

    Also, in a university setting where information technology plays a major role, both professors and students may sense a lack of belonging and a lack of relations that might otherwise exist without the technology. For example, within a wired campus students use email to contact or ask a professor a question, rather than taking the time to visit them in their offices. Potentially, a student could go through an entire year of classes without ever having to talk to their professor, and in all certainty this has happened. It seems that this approach undermines all that education is about. By definition, education is intertwined with enlightening experiences and instruction. Certainly in this technology based class and campus setting the student is receiving instruction, but how could a student ever be enlightened when enlightenment comes from a sense of self-discovery. Many Canadian and American universities and colleges support extremely large classes to cover the institutions annual operating cost and an example of these classes can be seen at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The universities introduction to Psychology enrolls approximately 1000 students and it becomes unrealistic to say that students are engaged, challenged or asked to develop their thoughts or mind. These sorts of advances in personal knowledge can only properly expand under certain conditions and many of these conditions are neglected in just about all North American classrooms. By the time university comes for many students, or "clients" as they will soon be referred to, they have mastered the skills of remaining unknown, cramming and writing last minute papers and assignments. The technology only makes the latter even easier to get away with.

    Another disadvantage comes forth in the idea of men and women, and their different ways of learning and accessibility. Women are underrepresented on the World Wide Web, just as they are in the high-tech occupations and therefore some underlying discrimination may prevail at a university setting. In a survey done by Nielson/Net Ratings men log on more than women (an average of 54 sessions compared to 50 sessions), spend more time on average (31 hours versus 27 hours), and view more pages (1900 versus 1700). Women, compared to men, are much less likely to use or even attempt to access the Internet for a variety of reasons. Many women are intimidated by pornography, prevalent sexist attitudes and the basic idea that technology is more directed towards men. Perhaps, in a university classrooms, where laptops are used women are finding they are even more isolated than an average student might feel. Not only are they neglected by their professors, but many do not feel comfortable with the replacement offered: the Internet.

    Fortunately, when looking at the list of disadvantages it seems that they can all be reversed and used to the advantage of students, teachers, professors, women and anyone else who might feel that they are losing out because of technology. For example, women are under represented in all aspects of information technology but it is that very technology that is bringing women together and bringing technology into their lives. Women, for example, are emerging as the dominant users of the Internet. Following in Nielson/Net Rating survey, "...women at work logged onto the Internet 23 percent more this August than they did in August 2001… … while men still outpace women in Internet usage at work, Internet usage by men at work grew only 12 percent year-to-date."

    Also with online courses, information, training and advertisement for conferences the Internet is basically a meeting place for people to come together and strengthen their role within the world of IT. When it comes to students, technology can play a major role in bringing students and professors together through online discussions and also online communication can make it easier for students to ask questions or set up a time to meet in person with other students or professors. This is where information can be misused, and where it tends to be in today's classrooms as students are finding they are merely a number in the grand scheme of things but if students are encouraged early on in the education system to interact, discuss, debate and share with their peers and teachers then it seems that the technology will be better used, rather than misused.

    Traditional Aboriginal life seems fitting here, under the topic of technology and ideal teaching styles. In Aboriginal life, the elders of the community are highly respected and listened to by other members of the community. Wisdom is carried from one elder to a listener, not through notes or typing information into our laptops, but is learned only through listening. You must listen to understand, and perhaps that is where technology in the post-secondary system, and basically all educational systems, is lacking. Technology doesn't hear and it definitely doesn't listen. For the general public, there is nothing more real and more engaging than the company of another human being. Technology simply cannot deliver in all areas of human growth and development, but if teachers and professors fill in the needs of students and add technology on top of what they have already developed, the results would be more incredible than anything the education system has seen yet.

    It seems to come down to the fact that technology can only add to education, it cannot make it which seems to be the mistake being made by so many educational institutions today. Therefore, it is becoming more and more apparent that a mix of both worlds needs to be offered to the students from the very beginning of the education system, so that once students reach the post-secondary level they will have both social and technological skills. If students are raised simply relying on the technology of the time, they will lack social skills that are mandatory in most occupations and, more importantly, in life. Besides, as Aristotle clearly stated human beings are social creatures and why would be want to alter who we naturally are for something as impersonal and unnatural as technology?

    If the post-secondary education system (students, faculty and administration) continue to abuse information technology in the manner it is being misused now, then when you add education to the equation you only add to the severity of the abuse. Education will continue to move farther and farther from what is an ideal education and students will move farther from personal growth and development, to simply being the results of a bigger corporate campus agenda. Isolation, through the use of technology, will continue to hold students back from their full potential because they are never engaged, they are never challenged and from where they stand no one really cares about whom they are and what they're capable of. It's often said that children are our future, but ironically they are being treated much less than that. After focusing on the many advantages and disadvantages of education, on all levels, but mainly the post-secondary level it can be stated that if we continue to promote education in the direction it has been going, we will eventually find ourselves in an irreversible predicament. Education will be further moved from its original, ideal definition and students will become frustrated with the unproductive, yet socially accepted method of obtaining a degree, yet no knowledge. It is the natural desire of students to feel welcomed and celebrated within the educational system, and quite simply, the only way of doing that will be to make them feel that way. An answer that seems simple enough in theory, but practice has proven that it isn't so simple after all. Universities are finding themselves blinded by the global recognition, competitiveness and profits that information technology is bringing them and are allowing the bad in information technology to overtake all the good that it can produce. In an article written by Mohammad Hamza and Bassem Alhalabi, they stated that "…If we value thinking, if we treasure the creative potential necessary to withstand future information challenges then we, as passionate educators, must rededicate ourselves to our profession. Only then can wisdom, the capstone of human thinking and the forbearer of all human knowledge, intervene to save a decaying educational system." The need to repair our current education systems, to allow for the positive flourishing of infor

    Common Mistakes in Trade Show Exhibiting
    Failure to implement a consistent marketing plan. Your exhibiting efforts must be part of an overall marketing scheme that is consistent and engaging. Many exhibitors start from scratch when designing their trade show display, and their booth ends up looking entirely different from the rest of their marketing material. While it is important to have a fresh look at every trade show, it is also important to implement a consistent marketing plan to build brand recognition.Failure to set goals for your trade show experience. It is important to set measurable goals months in advance of your trade show. How can you possibly determine whether or not your exhibiting experience was a success if you never established what you were trying to achieve? Suppose you want to generate 50 quality leads from your trade show. If you make it an established goal, this will be easy to measure.Failure to give attendees and other exhibitors a reason to visit your booth. Do not assume that visitors will simply wander into your display area without incentive. There are a number of methods exhibitors use to draw attention to their booths, many of which are put in place before the show even begins. Using pre-show mailers that highlight specific points of interest is a great way to make sure your booth is full of activity. Use any avenue available to you to generate interest in your booth.Failure to follow up with the leads you generate. The biggest and most common mistake exhibitors make is that they fail to have a plan in place to turn leads into sales. Your pre-show mailers, exhibit displays, and booth staff is absolutely useless if all the leads they generate go to waste. You would be amazed to learn how many veteran exhibitors fail to implement a plan to follow up on the leads they generate. Unless you have a plan in place, you may as well not even attend the trade show.
    of things but if students are encouraged early on in the education system to interact, discuss, debate and share with their peers and teachers then it seems that the technology will be better used, rather than misused.

    Traditional Aboriginal life seems fitting here, under the topic of technology and ideal teaching styles. In Aboriginal life, the elders of the community are highly respected and listened to by other members of the community. Wisdom is carried from one elder to a listener, not through notes or typing information into our laptops, but is learned only through listening. You must listen to understand, and perhaps that is where technology in the post-secondary system, and basically all educational systems, is lacking. Technology doesn't hear and it definitely doesn't listen. For the general public, there is nothing more real and more engaging than the company of another human being. Technology simply cannot deliver in all areas of human growth and development, but if teachers and professors fill in the needs of students and add technology on top of what they have already developed, the results would be more incredible than anything the education system has seen yet.

    It seems to come down to the fact that technology can only add to education, it cannot make it which seems to be the mistake being made by so many educational institutions today. Therefore, it is becoming more and more apparent that a mix of both worlds needs to be offered to the students from the very beginning of the education system, so that once students reach the post-secondary level they will have both social and technological skills. If students are raised simply relying on the technology of the time, they will lack social skills that are mandatory in most occupations and, more importantly, in life. Besides, as Aristotle clearly stated human beings are social creatures and why would be want to alter who we naturally are for something as impersonal and unnatural as technology?

    If the post-secondary education system (students, faculty and administration) continue to abuse information technology in the manner it is being misused now, then when you add education to the equation you only add to the severity of the abuse. Education will continue to move farther and farther from what is an ideal education and students will move farther from personal growth and development, to simply being the results of a bigger corporate campus agenda. Isolation, through the use of technology, will continue to hold students back from their full potential because they are never engaged, they are never challenged and from where they stand no one really cares about whom they are and what they're capable of. It's often said that children are our future, but ironically they are being treated much less than that. After focusing on the many advantages and disadvantages of education, on all levels, but mainly the post-secondary level it can be stated that if we continue to promote education in the direction it has been going, we will eventually find ourselves in an irreversible predicament. Education will be further moved from its original, ideal definition and students will become frustrated with the unproductive, yet socially accepted method of obtaining a degree, yet no knowledge. It is the natural desire of students to feel welcomed and celebrated within the educational system, and quite simply, the only way of doing that will be to make them feel that way. An answer that seems simple enough in theory, but practice has proven that it isn't so simple after all. Universities are finding themselves blinded by the global recognition, competitiveness and profits that information technology is bringing them and are allowing the bad in information technology to overtake all the good that it can produce. In an article written by Mohammad Hamza and Bassem Alhalabi, they stated that "…If we value thinking, if we treasure the creative potential necessary to withstand future information challenges then we, as passionate educators, must rededicate ourselves to our profession. Only then can wisdom, the capstone of human thinking and the forbearer of all human knowledge, intervene to save a decaying educational system." The need to repair our current education systems, to allow for the positive flourishing of information technology is one that needs to be addressed before the collapse of the educational system falls upon us.

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