Friday, March 30, 2012

FATIMA GIRLS EMERGED VICTORIOUS IN ALEBTONG DISTRCT !


GIRLS FOOTBALL GETTING REAL!
THE GOAL KEEPER SEMMY AKULLO: She saved the team by grabbing three out of the six penalty shots!
THE EXCITEMENT OF WINNING: The team celebrates winning the final game
TAKE HEAR NEXT TIME BETTER: Apala SS boys consoling their girls after loosing to Fatima Girls in a penalty shoot out
THE OPPORTUNITY TO HUG A TEACHER: The girls enjoys hugging their Games teacher and coach MR. GIDEON OMONY DURING THE CELEBRATION

KETTY AND NAUM DID IT WELL FOR ALOI FATIMA AND THE GOAL KEEPER SAVED THEM IN SPOT KICKS!

WATCH THIS SPACE FOR MORE!

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Healthy Development of Children and Young People through Sport

Physical education and sport have an educational impact. Changes can be seen in (i) motor skills development and performance and (ii) educational potential. This shows the positive relationship between being involved in physical activities and psychosocial development.

Sport and physical education is fundamental to the early development of children and youth and the skills learned during play, physical education and sport contribute to the holistic development of young people. Through participation in sport and physical education, young people learn about the importance of key values such as:

  • honesty,
  • teamwork,
  • fair play,
  • respect for themselves and others, and
  • Adherence to rules.

It also provides a forum for young people to learn how to deal with competition and how to cope with both winning and losing. These learning aspects highlight the impact of physical education and sport on a child’s social and moral development in addition to physical skills and abilities.

In terms of physical and health aspects of child and youth development, there is an overwhelming amount of evidence that focuses on the (mostly positive) effects of sport and exercise on physical health, growth and development.

Long-term involvement in physical activity
Physical education and sport also build health activity habits that encourage life-long participation in physical activity. This extends the impact of physical education beyond the schoolyard and highlights the potential impact of physical education on public health.

To achieve broader goals in education and development, sports programmes must focus on the development of the individual and not only on the development of technical sports skills.

While the physical benefits of participation in sport are well known and supported by large volumes of empirical evidence, sport and physical activity can also have positive benefits on education.

Sport as a 'hook'
Sport is an attractive activity for young people, and is often used as a draw card to recruit children and young people to health and education programmes. Sport and development projects that focus on educational outcomes use sport as a means to deliver educational messages to participants, and spectators in some cases.

Additionally, some programmes aim to promote and develop other aspects of education such as school attendance and leadership. Sport does not inherently provide positive educational outcomes. Much of the literature emphasises the crucial role of physical education teachers and other providers of physical activity and sport as determinants of educational experiences.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), for example, are using sport and play programmes to encourage young people, particularly girls and young women, to attend school within refugee camps across the world. In addition, UNICEF has a strong focus on using sport to campaign for girls’ education, promoting education through events and awareness campaigns.

Learning performance
Sport-based programmes have been shown to improve the learning performance of children and young people, encouraging school attendance and a desire to succeed academically. Whilst a majority of research into the health and development impacts of sport has been conducted in developed countries, there are studies that support this relationship in developing countries.

For example, a study on sports involvement among children and young people in Namibia has shown that those who participated in sport and physical activity were more likely to pass the Grade 10 examinations. There is further research that suggests this relationship continues in tertiary education.

Dr. Christine - TMG CAREER! 

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

MORE ON POST PRIMARY TOURNAMENTS!

Hello Just Like LAST week, TMG PRESS ARE AT DIFFERENT GROUNDS TO HAVE U UPDATED.
BOYS AND GIRLS OF ALEBTONG DISTRICT ARE AT AKII BUA COMPREHENSIVE SECONDARY SCHOOL, WHILE LIRA BOYS ARE IN DOCTOR OBOTE COLLEGE LIRA.

WATCH THIS SPACE FOR FULL COVERAGE OF THE EVENTS!

For Esther Wanitho
TMG EVENTS

Friday, March 23, 2012

ST. KATHERINE GIRLS; THE CHAMPOINS!

St. Katherine Girls Secondary School emerged victorious in the just concluded Post primary Girls football tournament which was taking place in Rachele comprehensive secondary school here in lira municipality.
THE DEADLY FOUR! They run like electric train, they engage the defense and they will never allow you to dodge them! the strikers of St. Katherine Girls Secondary school
THE GIRL IN THE MIDDLE: King James School Star; she had a hat trick against Bishop Tarantino College and OMANI, A CHEMICALLY FIT DEFENDER OF ST. KATHERINE DIDN'T ALLOW HER EVEN A SHOT!
 
OMANI: SHE DEFENDED AND ENSURED ST. KATHERINE IS SAFE!
GOAL KEEPER OF THE TOURNAMENT: Juliet Ajwang from Amach Complex Secondary School
GIRL OF THE TOURNAMENT: FELICITUS from ST. Katherine Girls Sec School!



THE BOYS
FROM ALL CORNERS OF THE TOWN OTHERS COMING FROM AS FAR AS NGETTA: ON HEARING THAT ST. KATHERINE QUALIFIED FOR THE FINAL: Boys jammed the venue to show solidarity and CHEER UP the popular Girls; they efforts was not in vain: the Girls WON!

St. Katherine will now represent Lira District in the national even taking place in Kabarole district in late April 2012. What the event in picture!

THE JOY OF WINNING

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

A QUALITY TUNE FROM TEENS MEDIA GROUP-THE TEENS ENJOY THIS PEER OF THIERS!

Music of Uganda
 
Ugandan music is as diverse as the ethnicity of its people. The country is home to over 30 different ethnic groups and tribes and they form the basis of all indigenous music. The Baganda, being the most prominent tribe in the country, have dominated the culture and music of Uganda over the last two centuries. However, the other tribes all have their own music styles passed down from generations dating back to the 18th century. These variations all make for good diversity in music and culture.

The first form of popular music to arise out of traditional music was the Kadongo Kamu style of music, which rose out of traditional Ganda music. Later music genres drew from Kadongo Kamu, making it one of the most influential music styles in Uganda. Currently, because of the effects of globalization, Uganda, like most African countries, has seen a growth in modern audio production. This has led to the adoption of western music styles like Dancehall and Hip Hop. Current Ugandan popular music is part of the larger Afropop music genre.

A GLIMPSE ON NORTHERN UGANDA

In the northern part of the country, various tribes like the Acholi and the Langi have their own styles of music. The "okeme", which is a thumb piano, is popular in this region since having been brought in the early 20th century by Congolese porters. Locally made papyrus flutes are also common. Vocals are delivered in a group by various singers, most times male. Constant stomping and jumping, alongside shaking of the head and neck, are common features of dance from this part of the country.

AN ENCOUNTER WITH A POPULAR PRODUCER

Day? Tuesday 16th December, Time? 11:05 am. I am live in the kingdom of the Fire Base Hierarchy to catch up with producers, Washington and Tony, the souls responsible for some of the region’s bingers such as Bam Bam, Funtula, Dembe, Suunda, etc
 Puzzle: So what are your names?

Washington: Man, am simply Washington David Ebangit. My Dad’s Dr. Ebangit and he’s a Pastor as well (meanwhile Tone jumps into the interview room to take his seat with such a friendly smile)

Puzzle: Who inspired you into production? 
Washington: Man, that was the group ‘First Love’, especially Nicholas Mayanja. He actually produced my first album at a home studio in Soroti.
Puzzle: Oops! By the way, what schools did you attend?
Washington: I went to Shimoni Demonstration School, Royal Oasis and Eagle Nest for my O and A levels (He passes a hand through his dreadlocks like a superstar)
Puzzle: So when did you join the Fire Base Studio?
Washington: That was late November 2002 through Tony who then introduced me to Bobbi Wine and later Eddie Yawe, the CEO. It’s been a great experience.
Puzzle: Now, while at it, what songs have you produced for example?
Washington: Man, I have had the pleasure of co-producing Bobbi Wine’s Bam Bam, Sunda, Wootoba E.t.c. 
Puzzle: And about the P.A.M awards plus the industry?
Washington: I shall say it the ‘nth’ time! The P.A.M awards were not fair. But thank God we still doin’ our thing, plus the media often ignores we people on the board. The producer is always the kingpin!
Puzzle: What’s are the toughest moment while producing Joint?
Washington: Boy! That’s mixing and editing. It’s always a testing moment.
Washington: I actually went to school with Ziggy D at Shimoni. We were in the same class and shared the same seat. He’s a wacky character (He runs to the studio as an Artist calls out his name for Help).
Puzzle: So are you seeing somebody?
Washington: I have a lovely girlfriend. Anything for her if you ask me.
Puzzle: Finally Dudes, the festive season’s here. What gift would you like to receive?
Washington: Just get producers recognized. That’s to precious for me.

 
MUSIC INDUSTRY
Today, Uganda has a vibrant music industry that plays a fundamental role in the social and economic lives of many. Musicians are the main celebrities in Uganda and all entertainment content from the mainstream media will most times be about music or musicians. The private lives of musicians are closely followed by many Ugandans. Music concerts, most times called "album launches", are very popular. Many companies spend huge amounts of money on sponsoring these music concerts and advertisements for the concerts are very common on radio and television.

The emphasis on music concerts comes from the fact that very few music artists make a worthwhile income from sales of their music on physical media. The lack of any distribution structure means that there is little to no incentive for capital investment in artist development or music sales. There are no genuine record labels, with most of the companies that are refereed to as labels being merely artist management companies. Because of these inadequacies, there is a severe strain placed upon musicians to find profitability and sustainability in making music. However, this somehow does not seem to deter new musicians from developing, as there is a very healthy production rate of young and talented musicians.

There have also been efforts at organizing the music industry, with the Uganda Publishing Rights Society (UPRS) and Uganda Musicians Association being prime examples alongside a number of music awards organizations like PAM Awards. Attempts by some of these organizations to make use of an under-utilized and largely ignored copyright law to generate revenue from music distribution have proved fruitless. These are some of the challenges facing the music industry in the country and indeed are very similar to the ones facing most music industries around the world.

Gira Emmanuel

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

CAREER GUIDANCE, A NECESSITY FOR OUR SCHOOLS TODAY

The Deputy Head Girl, St. Katherine Girls Sec. school Hosting a Radio  Show on Radio Wa  89.8 FM on international Women's Day  (8TH MARCH 2012): TMG IDENTIFIES THE TEENS WITH TALENTS AND HELP GUIDE AND DEVELOP THIS TALENTS TOWARDS THE DESIRED CAREER
Career guidance and counseling programs aim to help students make more informed and better educational and career choices. Among other things, career guidance offer information on high school course offerings, career options, and the type of academic and occupational training needed to succeed in the workplace, and postsecondary opportunities that are associated with their field of interest. Career guidance also often provides teachers, administrators, and parents with information they can use to support students' career exploration and postsecondary educational opportunities.

Activities associated with career guidance and counseling programs typically include:
  • Advising students and parents on high school programs and academic curriculum, preparing them for college application and admission.
  • Arranging dual/concurrent enrollment and Advanced Placement credits to prepare students for the rigour of post-secondary education.
  • Informing students about post-secondary financing that can be used to support advanced education and training.
  • Developing career portfolios, which include test and grades results, examples of student work, and resumes and cover letters to prospective employers.
  • Arranging job shadowing, work placements, and community-based learning programs to allow students to directly experience workplace situations.
  • Sponsoring workshops, classes, focus groups, and special presentations that focus on job skills and personal development.
  • Providing specialized counseling and intervention services to provide students with individualized attention.
Recognizing the importance of career guidance and counseling programs for student's post-secondary success, TMG plays a key role in supporting  schools’ efforts to build and implement these programs.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

The Problem With Invisible Children's "Kony 2012" -According to Michael Deibert

Recently, a new video produced by the American NGO Invisible Children focusing on Joseph Kony and the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) has been making the rounds. Having just returned from the Acholi region of Northern Uganda myself, where the LRA was born, I thought I might share some of my thoughts on the subject, for what it's worth.

I think it is easy for Invisible Children and other self-aggrandizing foreigners to make the entire story of the last 30 years of Northern Uganda about Joseph Kony, but there is a history of the relationship between the Acholi people from whom the LRA emerged and the central government in Kampala that is a little more complicated than that. 

Kony is a grotesque war criminal, to be sure, but the Ugandan government currently in power also came to power through the use of kadogo (child soldiers) and fought alongside militias employing child soldiers in the Democratic Republic of Congo, something that Invisible Children seem wilfully ignorant of.

The conflict in Acholi -- the ancestral homeland of the ethnic group who stretch across northern Uganda and southern Sudan -- has its roots in Uganda's history of dictatorship and political turmoil. A large number of soldiers serving in the government of dictator Milton Obote (who ruled Uganda from 1966 to 1971 and then again from 1980 to 1985) came from across northern Uganda, with the Acholis being particularly well represented, even though Obote himself hailed from the Lango ethnic group. When Obote was overthrown by his own military commanders, an ethnic Acholi, General Tito Okello, became president for six chaotic months until Yoweri Museveni's National Resistance Army took over. Museveni became president, and has since remained so, via elections -- some legitimate, some deeply flawed.

Upon taking power, the Museveni government launched a brutal search and destroy mission against former government soldiers throughout the north, which swept up many ordinary Acholi in its wake. Some Acholi began mobilizing to defend themselves, first under the banner of the Uganda People's Democratic Army (largely made up of former soldiers) and then the Holy Spirit Movement.

This movement, directed by Alice Auma, an Acholi who claimed to be acting on guidance from the spirit Lakwena, brought a mystical belief in their own invincibility that the soldiers of the Kampala-based government at first found terrifying: Holy Spirit Movement devotees walked headlong into blazing gunfire singing songs and holding stones they believed would turn into grenades. The movement succeeded in reaching Jinja, just 80 km from the capital Kampala, before being decimated by Museveni's forces.

Out of this slaughter was born the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), led by Joseph Kony, a distant relative of Alice Auma. Kony added an additional element of targeting civilian Acholi to his schismatic blend of Christianity, frequently kidnapping children and adolescents to serve in his rebel movement. The Museveni government responded by viewing all Acholi as potential collaborators, rounding them up into camps euphemistically called "protected villages", where they were vulnerable to disease and social ills, and had few ways to carry on their traditional farming.

The LRA's policy of targeting civilians (though not the Museveni government's draconian measures) eventually drew international condemnation and in 2005 the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants against Joseph Kony and several other seniors LRA commanders for crimes against humanity and war crimes. Ironically, one of those commanders, Dominic Ongwen, was himself kidnapped by the LRA while still a small boy.

After peace talks between the LRA and the Ugandan government collapsed in 2007, the group decamped from its bases in southern Sudan to the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Central African Republic.
Following the end of negotiations, the Museveni government launched its Peace Recovery and Development Plan (PRDP), an effort to stabilize northern Uganda after years of war. Since then, according to the United Nations, 98 percent of internally displaced persons have moved on from the camps that once sheltered hundreds of thousands of frightened people.

Despite criticisms from the Acholi that the government's program has been insufficient, local initiatives and the work of some foreign organizations have helped restore a sense of normality and gradual progress to the region, with people returned to their homes and travel between once off-limits parts of the region now facilitated with relative ease.

Now a thousand miles from the cradle of their insurgency, the LRA would appear to have little hope of returning to Uganda, though their potential to wreak havoc on civilians remains little diminished. In Congo's Haut-Uele province, between December 2009 and January 2010, the LRA massacred 620 civilians and abducted more than 120 children.

In October 2011, U.S. President Barack Obama announced that he was sending 100 Special Forces soldiers to help the Ugandans hunt down Kony. By the end of the year, the Ugandan army confirmed that the troops had moved along with the Ugandan army to Obo in the Central African Republic and Nzara in South Sudan.

The problem with Invisible Children's whitewashing of the role of the government of Uganda's president Yoweri Museveni in the violence of Central Africa is that it gives Museveni and company a free pass, and added ammunition with which to bludgeon virtually any domestic opposition, such as Kizza Besigye and the  

By blindly supporting Uganda's current government and its military adventures beyond its borders, as Invisible Children suggests that people do, Invisible Children is in fact guaranteeing that there will be more violence, not less, in Central Africa.

I have seen the well-meaning foreigners do plenty of damage before, so that is why people understanding the context and the history of the region is important before they blunder blindly forward to "help" a people they don't understand. 

U.S. President Bill Clinton professed that he was "helping" in the Democratic Republic of Congo in the 1990s and his help ended up with over 6 million people losing their lives.

The same mistake should not be repeated today.

Sunday, March 11, 2012

CHEATING: UNCLE EMMA on Why students cheat!

Academic Cheating Background

Introduction:
Academic cheating is defined as representing someone else's work as your own. It can take many forms: from sharing another's work to purchasing a term paper or test questions in advance, to paying another to take a test or do the work for you. 

 
Statistics show that academic cheating among high-school and college students has risen dramatically during the past 50 years. The results of the 29th Who's Who Among American High School Students Poll (of 3,123 high-achieving 16- to 18-year olds – that is, students with A or B averages who plan to attend college after graduation) were released in November, 1998. Among the findings: 
 
  • 80% of the country's best students cheated to get to the top of their class.
  • More than half the students surveyed said that they don't think cheating is a big deal.
  • 95% of cheaters say they were not caught.
  • 40% cheated on a quiz or a test
  • 67% copied someone else's homework
According to the results of a 1998 survey of 20,829 middle and high school students nationwide conducted by the Josephson Institute of Ethics, 70% of high school students and 54% of middle school students said they had cheated on an exam in the last 12 months. According to Josephson, the same question asked of high schoolers in 1996 prompted 64% to admit they had cheated. This demonstrates a 6% increase in only two years. 
 
ETS Research:
In order to better understand academic cheating and be proactive, ETS recently commissioned three studies: 1) Focus groups with test takers (conducted by Conway, Milliken & Associates) which included nearly 100 test takers for one of the following: SAT, AP, GRE, GMAT, TOEFL, PRAXIS; 2) Focus groups and interviews with 255 test takers, college and high school personnel (conducted by the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago); and 3) Phone interviews with test takers, parents, school and college personnel (conducted by Rowan & Blewitt Incorporated) which included 2,436 test takers and adults and 412 college personnel. The results were compelling.
  • The general perception is that cheating is widespread. Students believe that cheating is more prevalent and accepted today. They see it in every facet of life: politics, business, home, and school.
  • The perception is also that cheating is changing. Cheating on tests given in school is widespread.
  • Collaborative academic (team) environments like the Internet are making the definition of cheating even murkier.
  • 56% of educators and 31% of the public, students and parents say that they hear about cheating incidents. However, only 35% of educators and 41% of the public, students, and parents agree that there is a problem with cheating on tests.
  • 73% of all test takers, including prospective graduate students and teachers agree that most students do cheat at some point; 86% of high school students agreed.
  • Many who have engaged in cheating cite the following as rationales: It's a victimless crime; It's o.k. to many if you don't get caught; it has it's own language (using shortcuts, whatever it takes, everybody does it, part of life); it makes up for unfair tests or lack of opportunity.
  • High school students are less likely than younger test takers to report cheaters, because it would be "tattling" or "ratting out a friend."
  • Fewer college officials (35%) believe cheating is a problem in this country than do members of the public (41%).
Our research clearly demonstrates the influence of pressure on the incidence of cheating. We know that cheating behaviors are well-established by high school; the stakes of a test may influence the probability of cheating; and parents and educators may unintentionally aggravate the problem with pressure for results over learning. 
 
General Background:
Cheating is seen by many as a means to a profitable end, a way to obtain the highest grades in order to gain admission to the best universities. Students who do not cheat are not only at a disadvantage, but can be viewed as fools for not playing the system, a system that has grown tolerant of cheating with few punishments. This system continues to place more and more emphasis on getting the grade by any means possible. The benefits of individual learning are no longer seen as a goal or focus. 

 
According Donald McCabe, Professor and Associate Provost, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, and Founder of The Center for Academic Integrity, "Students feel justified in what they are doing. They are cheating because they see others cheating and they think they are being unfairly disadvantaged. The only way many of them feel they can stay in the game, to get into the right school, is to cheat as well." 
 
The Role of Technology in Cheating:
Technology has made cheating even easier. High-tech cheating includes using information from the internet without proper attribution, downloading term papers from on-line paper mills, and sharing answers through e-mail or diskette. Numerous websites are dedicated to helping students cheat. According to Kenneth Sahr, founder of School Sucks, a website providing free term papers to students, his site has averaged 80,000 hits per day. Boston University recently filed suit against eight web companies that offer on-line term papers. The companies have included disclaimers on their websites indicating that the papers are for research purposes only, and are not to be submitted as original work. However, BU called the disclaimers a "sham" and said other advertising shows that the companies are well aware the papers are intended to be submitted as original work.

 
Cheating Through The Ages:
Pre-School:
Although little research exists about cheating among pre-school and elementary school students, the following information has been presented by Janis Jacobs, a specialist in social development and associate professor at Pennsylvania State University. 

 
At the Pre-School level children understand that cheating is morally wrong, as opposed to a social transgression (i.e. eating with their fingers). Because moral development consists of their own needs vs. punishment, they are prone to cheat in order to win. 
 
At 5-6 years of age many children cheat if the opportunity arises. In one study of this age group, 84% knew that cheating was not allowed. However, 56% cheated. This is primarily true because they have an inability to inhibit their actions at this age. 
 
Elementary School:
Although elementary age children (ages 6-10) are presented with more opportunities and motivation to cheat, most believe that it is wrong, but that it depends on the specific incident (i.e. "Johnny was sad because he didn't know the answers, so I let him copy mine."). Additionally, elementary age children do not believe that cheating is common, and admit that it is hard to resist when others suggest breaking the rules. At this age the need for approval is related to cheating, and finally, boys cheat more frequently than girls.

 
Middle School:
Most research shows that cheating begins to set in during the middle school years (ages 11 – 13). According to The Josephson Institute of Ethics, "The evidence is fairly clear that cheating begins in the middle school fairly seriously and escalates in the higher grades, 10th, 11th and 12th grades, because that's when the stakes are highest. It doesn't seem as if it's necessarily a dispositional thing, like they've never thought of cheating before. It's that there isn't much reason to cheat in the elementary school." 

 
According to Jacobs, research at this age shows that middle schoolers are motivated to cheat because of the emphasis placed on grades. In one study, 2/3 of middle school students report cheating on exams; 90% copy homework. Furthermore, even those who say that cheating is wrong, will cheat. The bottom line: If a child's goal is to get a good grade, he is more likely to cheat. 
 
High School:
Research has shown that the incidence of academic cheating among high school students has risen to all-time highs. The studies conducted by Who's Who Among American High School Students, as well as those conducted by The Josephson Institute, are just a few of the many that demonstrate the problem. In addition, a 1997 Connecticut Department of Public Health survey of 12,000 students showed that 63% of 11th graders and 62% of ninth graders reported cheating on an exam in the previous 12 months. 

 
"In the past it was the struggling student who was more likely to cheat, just to get by," according to Michael Josephson. "Today, while it is becoming almost impossible to flunk out, it is the above-average, college-bound students who are cheating. As a matter of fact, cheating is higher among college-bound kids than any other group." 
 
College bound students are expected to be all they can be to get into a selective college. They need to get the best grades, play the best sports, perform community service, etc. The pressure can be overwhelming – leading many students to cheat or plagiarize. 
 
According to Stephen Davis, a psychology professor at Emporia State University in Kansas: "about 20% of college students from across the nation admitted to cheating in high school during the 1940's. That percentage has since soared, with no fewer than 75% and as many as 98% of 8,000 college students surveyed each year now reporting cheating in high school – and the majority admitting doing it on several occasions. 
 
Josephson adds, "We've never heard things like, ‘We have too much homework,' it is more of, ‘I'm involved in basketball, I'm involved in the Glee Club and I'm involved in …' They have tons and tons of activities, and schoolwork is only part of it, and therefore, part of the justification they make is: ‘Since I can't do it all, we have to cut somewhere, and, what's the big deal." 
 
Higher Education:
"Cheating is more widespread at the nation's colleges and universities than it was years ago because it no longer carries the stigma it used to. Less social disapproval and increased competition for spots in graduate schools have made students more willing to do whatever it takes to get the grades," so says Professor McCabe. "If a student feels disadvantaged because others are cheating and seeming to get away with it, they'll say: I'm not stupid enough to blow my chances by not doing the same." McCabe also comments that many schools stopped paying serious attention to cheating as they felt the need to focus more on problems such as campus safety and substance abuse. 

 
Professor McCabe's research has revealed the following indicators for cheating:
    Institutional:
  • Campus norm
  • No honor code
  • Penalties not severe
  • Faculty support of academic integrity policies is low
  • Little chance of being caught
  • Higher incidence at larger, less selective institutions
    Personal:
  • Business and engineering majors are most likely to cheat
  • Future plans include business
  • Men self-report cheating more than women
  • Fraternity and Sorority members
  • Younger students
  • Students with lower GPA's (or those at the very top)
  • Others doing it
  • Faculty members disinterested
  • Required courses not in their major
  • No stated rules or rules unclear
  • Heavy workload
Conclusion:
Our research shows that students feel that their cheating will not affect anyone else. However, as they graduate into the worlds of business, medicine or government, they will be judged by their actions and their knowledge. If a graduate's performance does not correlate to the grades that he or she received, what value the degree? More important, the cheater automatically reduces the credibility and the value of every other degree awarded by the alma mater. 

 
Cheating does not end at graduation. Today, resume fraud is a problem for many employers. Additionally, there have been media reports of police recruits fined for using crib notes on a CPR exam; paramedics studying for their emergency medicine test with a purloined exam; Coast Guard mariners cheating on their Federal pilot's license; athletic coaches altering students' scores. There have even been reports of teachers and principals cheating on their own exams, as well as manipulating answers to improve their students' scores. 
 
Cheating is a problem we will continue to face. It undermines integrity and fairness at all levels. It can lead to weak life performance and corrode the merit basis of our society. No organization has yet taken responsibility for attempting to address this issue on a widespread basis. ETS has a responsibility to effectively communicate its position on cheating and the benefits of not cheating. It is time to address this issue on a national level. 
 
All of our publics agree that test security is OUR (the testing company's) responsibility. and that we have a legitimate role in helping to address this problem. Our nonprofit mission compels us to address this societal problem with American Education. 
 
Educational Testing Service is the world's premier educational measurement institution and a leader in educational research. ETS, which is a nonprofit organization, develops and administers achievement, occupational and admissions tests for clients in education, government and business. ETS annually administers almost 11 million tests in the United States and 180 countries.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Do you know your child’s class teacher?

 Some children are too sensitive to public rebuke or correction. Others fear failure so much that an examination becomes a nightmare to them. Let the teacher know the other side of the child. A class, irrespective of its size, is like a family where children share different learning activities and spend most time together. By virtue of their work class teachers spend most of their time with the child.

They toil to shape our children and parent them while we are away. A class teacher is expected to understand your child’s learning weaknesses and strengths. This level of proximity strengthens the bonds and instills a brotherly relationship among children.

The class teacher becomes intimately involved in the children’s lives and is viewed as the head of the class family. He/she becomes the mentor, role model, guide and parent to the children.

At the dawn of a new school year like this, many parents often dump their children in schools without having the slightest courtesy to know or talk to the child’s class teacher. It is like dumping your child in the wilderness without caring what happens to them.

The teacher is a critical factor in learning and the child-teacher relationship determines whether the child dislikes or loves the school. This relationship begins from the first day the child joins a new class.

Before you unite your child with the class teacher, you must build a personal relationship with the class teacher. Did you know that teachers find it easy teaching a child whose background is clear to them? How will you find out your child’s progress at the end of the term if you don’t even know the class teacher? This is how to go about it:

 Let the teacher know the number of schools your child has attended so far. This is because change of school often affects a child’s learning. Has your child ever repeated a class? What do you think might have caused this? Avail this information to the class teacher.

 Does your child have any chronic ailment? Does the ailment call for the attention of your family doctor or can the school nurse handle it?

 Does the child have problems with certain subjects? Share these difficulties and how you have handled them before.

 Assure the child that the new class teacher is caring. Strange faces in a strange environment frighten young children. The class teacher should not show signs of cruelty or aggression to the children.
The child should also understand that teachers are human beings who cannot be perfect all round. Interpersonal relationship is not based on perfection but on adjustment and tolerance.
Have a pleasant term.Do you know your child’s class teacher?

Gira Emmanuel

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY TO DATE!

International Women's Day has been observed since in the early 1900's, a time of great expansion and turbulence in the industrialized world that saw booming population growth and the rise of radical ideologies.

1908
Great unrest and critical debate was occurring amongst women. Women's oppression and inequality was spurring women to become more vocal and active in campaigning for change. Then in 1908, 15,000 women marched through New York City demanding shorter hours, better pay and voting rights.

1909
In accordance with a declaration by the Socialist Party of America, the first National Woman's Day (NWD) was observed across the United States on 28 February. Women continued to celebrate NWD on the last Sunday of February until 1913.

1910
n 1910 a second International Conference of Working Women was held in Copenhagen. A woman named a Clara Zetkin (Leader of the 'Women's Office' for the Social Democratic Party in Germany) tabled the idea of an International Women's Day. She proposed that every year in every country there should be a celebration on the same day - a Women's Day - to press for their demands. The conference of over 100 women from 17 countries, representing unions, socialist parties, working women's clubs, and including the first three women elected to the Finnish parliament, greeted Zetkin's suggestion with unanimous approval and thus International Women's Day was the result.

1911
Following the decision agreed at Copenhagen in 1911, International Women's Day (IWD) was honoured the first time in Austria, Denmark, Germany and Switzerland on 19 March. More than one million women and men attended IWD rallies campaigning for women's rights to work, vote, be trained, to hold public office and end discrimination. However less than a week later on 25 March, the tragic 'Triangle Fire' in New York City took the lives of more than 140 working women, most of them Italian and Jewish immigrants. This disastrous event drew significant attention to working conditions and labour legislation in the United States that became a focus of subsequent International Women's Day events. 1911 also saw women's 'Bread and Roses' campaign.
1913-1914
On the eve of World War I campaigning for peace, Russian women observed their first International Women's Day on the last Sunday in February 1913. In 1913 following discussions, International Women's Day was transferred to 8 March and this day has remained the global date for International Wommen's Day ever since. In 1914 further women across Europe held rallies to campaign against the war and to express women's solidarity.

1917
On the last Sunday of February, Russian women began a strike for "bread and peace" in response to the death over 2 million Russian soldiers in war. Opposed by political leaders the women continued to strike until four days later the Czar was forced to abdicate and the provisional Government granted women the right to vote. The date the women's strike commenced was Sunday 23 February on the Julian calendar then in use in Russia. This day on the Gregorian calendar in use elsewhere was 8 March.

1918 – 1999
Since its birth in the socialist movement, International Women's Day has grown to become a global day of recognition and celebration across developed and developing countries alike. For decades, IWD has grown from strength to strength annually. For many years the United Nations has held an annual IWD conference to coordinate international efforts for women's rights and participation in social, political and economic processes. 1975 was designated as 'International Women's Year' by the United Nations. Women's organisations and governments around the world have also observed IWD annually on 8 March by holding large-scale events that honour women's advancement and while diligently reminding of the continued vigilance and action required to ensure that women's equality is gained and maintained in all aspects of life.

2000 and beyond
IWD is now an official holiday in Afghanistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, China (for women only), Cuba, Georgia, Guinea-Bissau, Eritrea, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Madagascar (for women only), Moldova, Mongolia, Montenegro, Nepal (for women only), Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uganda, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Vietnam and Zambia. The tradition sees men honouring their mothers, wives, girlfriends, colleagues, etc with flowers and small gifts. In some countries IWD has the equivalent status of Mother's Day where children give small presents to their mothers and grandmothers.

The new millennium has witnessed a significant change and attitudinal shift in both women's and society's thoughts about women's equality and emancipation. Many from a younger generation feel that 'all the battles have been won for women' while many feminists from the 1970's know only too well the longevity and ingrained complexity of patriarchy. With more women in the boardroom, greater equality in legislative rights, and an increased critical mass of women's visibility as impressive role models in every aspect of life, one could think that women have gained true equality. The unfortunate fact is that women are still not paid equally to that of their male counterparts, women still are not present in equal numbers in business or politics, and globally women's education, health and the violence against them is worse than that of men.

However, great improvements have been made. We do have female astronauts and prime ministers, school girls are welcomed into university, women can work and have a family, women have real choices. And so the tone and nature of IWD has, for the past few years, moved from being a reminder about the negatives to a celebration of the positives.
Annually on 8 March, thousands of events are held throughout the world to inspire women and celebrate achievements. A global web of rich and diverse local activity connects women from all around the world ranging from political rallies, business conferences, government activities and networking events through to local women's craft markets, theatric performances, fashion parades and more.

Many global corporations have also started to more actively support IWD by running their own internal events and through supporting external ones. For example, on 8 March search engine and media giant Google some years even changes its logo on its global search pages. Year on year IWD is certainly increasing in status. The United States even designates the whole month of March as 'Women's History Month'.

So make a difference, think globally and act locally !! Make everyday International Women's Day. Do your bit to ensure that the future for girls is bright, equal, safe and rewarding.
GIRA EMMANUEL
TMG-PRESS

INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY 2011: TIME TO MAKE THE PROMISE OF EQUALITY A REALITY

A hundred years ago today, women across the world took an historic step on the long road to equality. The first ever International Women’s Day was called to draw attention to the unacceptable and often dangerous working conditions that so many women faced worldwide. Although the occasion was celebrated in only a handful of countries, it brought over one million women out onto the streets, demanding not just better conditions at work but also the right to vote, to hold office and to be equal partners with men.

I suspect those courageous pioneers would look at our world today with a mixture of pride and disappointment. There has been remarkable progress as the last century has seen an unprecedented expansion of women’s legal rights and entitlements. Indeed, the advancement of women’s rights can lay claim to be one of the most profound social revolutions the world has seen.

One hundred years ago, only two countries allowed women to vote. Today, that right is virtually universal, and women have now been elected to lead Governments in every continent. Women, too, hold leading positions in professions from which they were once banned. Far more recently than a century ago, the police, courts and neighbors still saw violence in the home as a purely private matter. Today two-thirds of countries have specific laws that penalize domestic violence, and the United Nations Security Council now recognizes sexual violence as a deliberate tactic of war.

But despite this progress over the last century, the hopes of equality expressed on that first International Women’s Day are a long way from being realized. Almost two out of three illiterate adults are women. Girls are still less likely to be in school than boys. Every 90 seconds of every day, a woman dies in pregnancy or due to childbirth-related complications despite us having the knowledge and resources to make birth safe.
Across the world, women continue to earn less than men for the same work. In many countries, too, they have unequal access to land and inheritance rights. And despite high-profile advances, women still make up only 19 percent of legislatures, 8 percent of peace negotiators, and only 28 women are heads of state or government.
It is not just women who pay the price for this discrimination. We all suffer for failing to make the most of half the world’s talent and potential. We undermine the quality of our democracy, the strength of our economies, the health of our societies and the sustainability of peace. This year’s focus of International Women’s Day on women’s equal access to education, training, science and technology underscores the need to tap this potential.

The agenda to secure gender equality and women’s rights is a global agenda, a challenge for every country, rich and poor, north and south. It was in recognition of both its universality and the rewards if we get this right that the United Nations brought together four existing organizations to create UN Women. The goal of this new body, which I have the great privilege to lead, is to galvanize the entire UN system so we can deliver on the promise of the UN Charter of equal rights of men and women. It is something I have fought for my whole life.
As a young mother and a paediatrician, I experienced the struggles of balancing family and career and saw how the absence of childcare prevented women from paid employment. The opportunity to help remove these barriers was one of the reasons I went into politics. It is why I supported policies that extended health and childcare services to families and prioritized public spending for social protection.
As President, I worked hard to create equal opportunities for both men and women to contribute their talents and experiences to the challenges facing our country. That is why I proposed a Cabinet that had an equal number of men and women.
As Executive Director of UN Women, I want to use my journey and the collective knowledge and experience all around me to encourage progress towards true gender equality across the world. We will work, in close partnership with men and women, leaders and citizens, civil society, the private sector and the whole UN system to assist countries to roll out policies, programmes and budgets to achieve this worthy goal.

I have seen myself what women, often in the toughest circumstances, can achieve for their families and societies if they are given the opportunity. The strength, industry and wisdom of women remain humanity’s greatest untapped resource. We simply cannot afford to wait another 100 years to unlock this potential.

Michelle Bachelet
Executive Director
United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women

Sunday, March 4, 2012

International Women's Day: Can Technology Close the Gap for Girls and Women?


In 1906, a woman by the name of Welthy Fisher launched a school in China to give girls the skills they needed in order to play a greater role in their society. The teaching tools this 27-year-old woman relied upon were books and chalkboards, paper and pens. Now, more than a century later, the organization she founded finds itself in an era where information and communication technologies (ICT) are being used at an increasing rate to improve education and learning environments. But will these new tools really make a difference for girls and women in disadvantaged areas across the globe?


Around the world today, girls and young women still continue to struggle to complete school, fight to secure work and to keep jobs that are often less desirable and poorly paid. (We need not look much further than our own shores to know "women are still poorer, despite massive strides." While Welthy would be pleased that the world acknowledges the importance of girls' and women's education on International Women's Day, March 8th, without the appropriate resources and support to complete their education and to gain the skills to secure safe work in a competitive environment, girls in particular are increasingly left vulnerable to unemployment, vulnerable to sexual and labor exploitation, trafficking, poor health, violence, and HIV infection.
Despite global efforts to target and improve services to women and girls, young girls in all corners of the world still continue to need:
Access to high quality and relevant education, with teachers trained to help girls meet the challenges of a rapidly developing 21st century

Support for school completion, which includes tangible support such as scholarship assistance, as well as changes in societal attitudes towards girls' education through gender-sensitivity training and mentoring

Relevant life and work skills, which means not only revamping curricula to include workplace skills and the use of new technologies, but ensuring that teachers are also equipped with technology skills to engage students and enhance learning to prepare girls for work

'Social capital' to draw on while finding work, by engaging young women in local communities and expanded social networks, and developing contacts and support systems, such as mentors.
Can information and communication technologies be integrated into classrooms in a way that engages girls with life and work skills building, keeps them in school and connects them to the support networks they need? Will adding emerging technologies to the list of teaching and learning tools help in the advancement of girls?



World Education and the Alcatel-Lucent Foundation think so, and in recognizing this value, have partnered together to implement ConnectED, a three-year $6 million global initiative to provide educational and digital skills training opportunities for over 13,000 children and adolescents (70% of whom will be girls and young women) in disadvantaged areas. The program will target youth in 7 countries. In line with existing World Education programs that promote workplace preparation and reduce youth vulnerability and exclusion, ConnectEd will weave the use of information and communications technology to transform the nature of learning. ConnectEd will ultimately ensure that youth -- especially girls -- will be equipped with the knowledge, skills, and healthy behaviors that can help them gain secure employment and livelihoods, reduce their vulnerability, and put an end to the cycle of disadvantage.
Drawing on Alcatel-Lucent employees, ConnectEd will tap into their expertise in communications technology to implement program activities. Volunteers will use their expertise in communications technology to help with program implementation and learning activities, while also serving as role models, mentors and advisors to the young people


Today in too many countries around the world, too many young women reach adulthood lacking the skills needed to prosper in our changing world. World Education and the Alcatel-Lucent Foundation will be able to work with remote and underserved schools and communities in ConnectEd's target countries to improve educational services, skills training, and their connection to the digital world -- whether it be computer labs or mobile phones and Internet.
We will not know for a while whether these new tools and technologies will really close the gap for girls and women. But Welthy Fisher would certainly be pleased that we are trying.