 Maybe it’s called PTA at your school, or PTO, or Home and School. But chance are, once a month or so, parents and administrators meet to discuss activities, events, problems and procedures; and indeed, those meetings are boring and frustrating and annoying and filled with highly vocal people who really need to get a hobby. But you know what? Go anyway. Participation matters.
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Teaching your Child Selflessness |
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 From birth well into their teens and beyond, we can continue to provide our children with the tools to care for those in need – from the friend whose parents are divorcing to the homeless man living on the city streets to victims of unforeseen disasters. We, as parents, are the most important tool to show our children selflessness.
Providing a home environment that is filled with empathy, generosity, compassion, kindness and consideration creates an ideal learning area for your children. When children witness your positive behavior, they have a greater tendency to model it.
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Youth crime harms communities, creates a culture of fear and damages the lives of some of our most vulnerable young people. Reducing youth crime and improving the youth justice system is a central part of our effort to build safer communities and to tackle the problem of social exclusion.
What causes youth crime?
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Career Choice and Fulfillment |
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 About 20 years ago, when I was in Senior Secondary School, I was often asked by elders about what I wanted to become. I remember that my answer was always, unhesitatingly, ‘Computer Engineer' (much to their surprise). Then, on one occasion, at a family function in Lagos, my uncle’s friend, who had a ‘good career’ going, told me in no uncertain terms that Computer Engineering wouldn’t do as a career. Eighteen years hence, I’ve missed my Computer Engineering bus, and, working in the banking sector, I still ask these questions.
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The Nigeria National Policy on Education – Continuous Assessment Practices |
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 The importance of and preference for evaluating learning outcomes, using a wide variety of instruments and containing data from a wide variety of sources, rather than the use of one-shot and one-type examinations, have long been recognised worldwide; hence the Federal Government of Nigeria mandated, in 1982, the use of evaluations of this nature, referred to as continuous assessment, in Nigerian Schools. Several problems confronted its planning, and now its implementation. The authors of this study went out in the field to evaluate the nature and scope of activities and problems that have to do with implementing continuous assessment in Nigerian primary schools. By and large, the continuous assessment procedure is accepted in preference to the previous narrower scope of one-shot evaluation, but many problems continue to threaten the benefits derivable from using this method to evaluate primary school pupils.
What are suggestions on how these problems can be addressed?
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Is Your Child Using Anger to Control You? |
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 Have your child’s angry outbursts worn you down so much that you’ve simply learned to give in? You should know that this is not a phase or a behavior; that will “just go away on its own.” Read on to discover 5 things you can do to stop your child from using “Anger with an Angle” today. Anger is a fact of life. Everyone gets angry, including kids—they get frustrated and disappointed just like adults do. The goal for children as they mature is to learn ways to manage their anger or, as I like to say, “Solve the problem of anger.” That’s because anger is a problem—it’s not just a feeling. And like many other problems, kids solve it in different ways. Some learn to solve the problem of anger by developing skills like communication and compromise, while other kids deal with it by becoming more defiant and engaging in power struggles.
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Family Life and HIV Education |
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 Family Life and HIV Education should be introduced into the school curriculum. It should be a planned process of education that fosters the acquisition of factual information, formation of positive attitudes, beliefs and values as well as development of skills to cope with biological, psychological, socio-cultural and spiritual aspects of human living. This curriculum will represent a starting point for developing a comprehensive approach to ‘Humanity’ Education and it will guide the national school curriculum integration efforts at the primary, junior secondary, senior secondary and tertiary levels of education.
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