Monday, January 30, 2012

Correspondence MBA, Distance & online MBA / Executive MBA in India

MBA or Master of Business Administration is a perfect shortcut to get your own managerial cabin. This is in fact one of the worldҀs most preferred post graduate degree considering the perks that come with a  few years of work experience and a degree. Over the years, many different types of MBAҀs have made foray into our educational system. The latest entrant has been online MBA. Online MBA like what the name suggests, brings the course to students in an online package. Whatever your specialization needs be, online MBA is perfect for that successful business management career. 



There are many advantages that come with an online MBA as compared to a regular one. For instance, the course can be completed as per your availability and convenience. From the luxury of your living room, you can earn your MBA without having to compromise on work or family. Online MBA is also much more economical and viable than regular MBA programs and you can even save commute time as well as travel expenses that are synonymous with regular colleges. Online MBA is perfect for a working individual looking to advance their careers. You do not have to stop working and online MBA can help you save years of time as most programs give students enough and more time to prepare for exams.    
 
Another benefit of enrolling yourself for an online MBA is that your study materials and course syllabus would be up-to-date with the changing times and your degree would be much more useful than otherwise. Updated study materials mean that your skills would be relevant and these updated study materials with online MBA come in electronic form bringing with them the ease of mobility.  Most online MBA programs also offer you better opportunities to interact with seasoned MBA professionals and teachers. Technology has made online MBA courses practical as students can directly take part in discussions and sessions from anywhere in the world. These one-on-one or group interactive sessions can also lead to better understanding of the subject and such sessions can be stretched to fit your schedules. 

Unlike regular MBA projects that are a real pain to complete for a working individual, online MBA projects are much easier to work with.  Online MBA projects strike an ideal chord between being challenging and being feasible. Online MBA can help your save time, money and effort unlike any other course. There is minimal procedure for getting enrolled in an online MBA course and with them gaining such wide spread approval, this is definitely the best way to master techniques of management available today.  

Master of Business Administration requires a more of sincere efforts to be taken by the students. A person who whole heartedly prepares well for the MBA will definitely scores well and attains a good grade and shines well in this competitive business world. MBA will be of 2 years and we also have mba for executive - Executive MBA which is for 1 year through correspondence, online & Distance MBA education mode.. Both the courses and well established and designed well to the competitive standard for the people to become the business managers of the future. 

Correspondence MBA course has both practical and theoretical classes for the students to have a good understanding and well knowledge of the business facts. Those who wish to join the management or are already working, get a chance to improve their skills and to implement the business tactics by joining this course as preferred by you for 2 years or for 1 year. Financial and the managerial knowledge are the one which is the core requirement of any business for establishing a well structured business.

NIBM Education, committed to quality, excellence and innovation in order to help applicants realize their dreams, proud to play a part in making a difference and changing lives by providing a World Class Professional MBA and Executive MBA Program through correspondence and online for overseas students with well established structure. Get this MBA / Executive MBA Program and have a bright and colorful life. For Details, Visit: http://www.nibmglobal.com

Friday, January 27, 2012

Gilman Scholarship Application Now OPEN for Summer 2012, Fall 2012 and Academic Year 2012-2013

The Gilman Scholarship Program is happy to announce that the online application system is now open for students participating in study abroad programs during either the Summer 2012, Fall 2012 or 2012-2013 Academic Year terms. For more information about the Gilman Scholarship please visit the Gilman website at www.iie.org/gilman.

Summer & Fall 2012 online applications are due March 1, 2012 by 11:59pm CST. The GT campus deadline is February 16, 2012.

For students applying for any academic term (Academic Year, Fall, Spring or Summer) please find the eligibility requirements below:
1. Enrolled as an undergraduate student at a two or four-year U.S. Institution
2. United States citizen
3. Receiving a Federal Pell Grant at the time of application or during the term of study abroad
4. Participating in a study abroad program that is no less than 4 weeks (28 days) in one country and no more than an academic year
5. Receiving academic credit
6. Study in any country not currently under a U.S. State Department Travel Warning or Cuba


Last Chance to Apply for RISE (Research Internships in Science and Engineering)

RISE is a summer internship program in Germany for undergraduate students from the United States, Canada and the UK in the fields of biology, chemistry, physics, earth sciences and engineering. It offers unique opportunities for undergraduate students to work with research groups at universities and top research institutions across Germany for a period of 2 to 3 months during the summer. RISE interns are matched with doctoral students whom they assist and who serve as their mentors. The working language will be English. All scholarship holders receive stipends from the DAAD to help cover living expenses, while partner universities and research institutes provide housing assistance.


RISE is sponsored by DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service).


To learn more about RISE, please visit: www.daad.de/rise or email: rise@daad.de


Application deadline: January 31, 2012

Sunday, January 15, 2012

An Uncommon College Experience

Recent post comments have asked me to post about my experience as a first-year at the University of Chicago. Having completed my first quarter, I think IҀm finally prepared to share that. IҀm now stocked with my own photos of campus and personal exposure to the university that just months ago existed to me mostly on paper.

















To give you a general outline of my life at UChicago, IҀm a first-year living in Dodd-Mead House in Burton-Judson Courts. IҀm currently taking required Humanities and Social Science Core sequences, as well as Latin and humanities electives. Outside of the classroom, IҀm in several reading groups and academic clubs, a writer for The Chicago Maroon and College website, and an after-school philosophy coach for neighborhood students through the Civic Knowledge Project.

After visiting campus many times my senior year for various campus events, my residential experience here officially began in late September with Orientation Week, known here as ӀO-week.Ԁ First-year students move into their houses one week before classes begin and have a chance to get to know their fellow classmates and the University more broadly. ItҀs an unusually social time for students here, many of whom donҀt typically come out of their shells or have Ӏfamily timeԀ with their housemates. With O-week began my praise of the (Harry-Potter-style) House system, which provides a great group of friends with which to attend campus events, explore Chicago, and generally relax with outside of class.















Student life at UChicago is constantly buzzing with various activities, both on and off campus. These are the perfect compliment to academic life. In just this past week, IҀve attended two career events; four club meetings; three public lectures on topics ranging from economics to religion; attended a school-sponsored Lascivious Ball (IҀll let the name speak for itself); and taken advantage of Chicago by exploring Chinatown with my house and seeing the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Lyric Opera of Chicago, and Art Institute of Chicago. I also have to plug queer life here, which is very well established on campus and, like everything at UChicago, has a definite intellectual slant that refreshingly defies many queer stereotypes. Generally, student life here has a lot to offer if one is proactive and takes advantage of it. ItҀs often tough to balance everything, but I love penciling exciting new events into my calendar each week.

Though extra-curricular life has certainly been eye-opening, the deeper transformation occurred in my classes this past quarter, which were unlike any I had taken before. The Humanities and Social Science Core have truly changed the way I think and write after just one quarter. Both of these sequences examine great books without the ӀslantԀ with which traditional classes approach a work. As a quote engraved in Harper Memorial Library summarizes the College's Great Books approach: ӀRead not to believe or contradict, but to weigh and consider.Ԁ















The closest thing to the Core I have taken before are two Freshman Seminars at Harvard, which it turns out have little in common with my current classes. Freshman Seminars at Harvard (and most other colleges, from my understanding) approached a specific topic with a faculty expert and focused almost exclusively on the course material. Core classes are nearly the opposite; the texts we read are springboards into more universal topics. Discussions regularly descend into fundamental philosophical debates to the likes of Plato and Aristotle in RaphaelҀs The School of Athens.

In accordance with the Socratic method, Core class discussions arenҀt guided to a specific destination, but that doesnҀt make them flimsy. Comments are expected to be relevant, insightful, and almost always to reference a specific passage in the text. This classroom method of claims, evidence, warrants, and counter-claims is meant to work hand-in-hand with the expectations for academic writing at Chicago, which are emphasized from the very beginning in an additional peer writing seminar which students must pass as part of their Humanities Core. The seminars themselves get mixed reviews from students, but the general theme is central to the CollegeҀs academic mission: critical inquiry and precise means of argument are the backbone to any liberal arts education. Professor Wendy Doniger described that philosophy most aptly in an anecdote she read for Convocation one year:
Once when I returned to Hyde Park after a long trip abroad, I dashed off to the Co- op, of blessed memory, to restock the larder. As I waited to check out, I overheard the conversation of two undergraduates standing in line in front of me. ӀNo,Ԁ said one to the other, Ӏbut thatҀs not what Aristotle meant by that.Ԁ ӀAh,Ԁ I thought with a happy sigh, ӀIҀm home.Ԁ It was not merely the subject of their debate׀Aristotle, the poster boy of the Common Core׀that identified them as my people, but the style in which they were debating, the contentiousness of their discourse. That intellectual style is one of the things for which the University of Chicago is justly famous, our cultivation of the hawk eye that pounces on the unexamined assumption, the false logical link, the shoddy piece of evidence. And we are right to be proud of that training.
׀Wendy Doniger, Mircea Eliade Distinguished Service Professor of the History of Religions at the University of Chicago Divinity School, June 2008 Convocation Speech entitled ӀThinking More Critically About Thinking Too CriticallyԀ

In writing this post, I re-read my review of UChicago from my first visit in 2009. My understanding of the University has changed greatly since then, to say the least. For one, I was then a believer in the self-deprecating slogan, ӀThe University of Chicago: Where fun comes to die.Ԁ I saw Chicago then as extremely niche and a college experience defined by the sacrifice of social life and non-academic activities. (Never mind that my house currently sells mugs bearing a picture of Cobb gate with the inscription "Abandon all hope... Ye who enter here," playing on the O-week photo above.) Though these characterizations arenҀt "wrong," theyҀre fundamentally misguided in that they attempt to squeeze Chicago into a narrow box. On the contrary, ChicagoҀs best attribute is its resistance to such oversimplifications via its emphasis on free speech and its diverse modes of inquiry. A perfect example of this is the "Aims of Education" speech delivered to my Class of 2015 during O-week. The speech was from a statistician who presented real-world data in the form of charts and graphs with little interpretation, thus deliberately leaving it up to us to determine how it related to education in our small discussion groups following the talk.
















A summer job application recently asked me to share Ӏwhat I considered my greatest achievement and why.Ԁ I thought really seriously about this question for days. In the end, I felt that listing an accomplishment or award from high school would really just be resting on my laurels, which is something I try to avoid on principle. It occurred to me then that my greatest accomplishment in life thus far is that I ultimately chose the University of Chicago for my college experience. I have never been more proud of a decision in my life. Having visited over twenty top colleges, many of which provide a significantly "happier" college experience, I've had my share of reservations and doubts. (To the like of Barry Schwartz's The Paradox of Choice, be warned that the more colleges you visit, the more objects you will have for comparison. You thus run the risk of being less satisfied with the one you finally choose!) Yet, my doubts have fully dissipated, and, as it turned out, I knew what I wanted from the very beginning, when I first visited UChicago in summer 2009.

I chose the most challenging institution I came across from the over two-dozen that I visited. The one thatրfrom day oneրfanned my sense of curiosity, made me question and defend my ideas, and promised no Ӏeasy way out.Ԁ The University of Chicago's mottoրCrescat scientia; vita excolatur, or Let knowledge grow from more to more; and so be human life enrichedրmeans more to me than ever before. Being a part of what has been called "The Great American University" has taken my life, not just my education, that much closer to where I want it to be. As my professors and peers here have shown me in equal part, that symbiotic journey of intellectual and personal discovery, however grueling, is one worth embarking on.

Beware of scholarship scams | CharlotteObserver.com & The Charlotte Observer Newspaper

Beware of scholarship scams | CharlotteObserver.com & The Charlotte Observer Newspaper

Tim Tebow: Three Lessons College Applicants Can Learn from the Football Phenomenon

Tim Tebow: Three Lessons College Applicants Can Learn from the Football Phenomenon

Thursday, January 12, 2012

ALLIANCE UNIVERSITY: EPGDM Admissions Opened for January batch

ALLIANCE UNIVERSITY: EPGDM Admissions Opened for January batch: Alliance University School of Business invites applications for admissions of the January Batch EPGDM Program for Working Professionals . ...

EPGDM Admissions Opened for January batch

Alliance University School of Business invites applications for admissions of the January Batch EPGDM Program for Working Professionals .


Saturday, January 7, 2012

*VERY IMPORTANT, READ.* Closing Note (Midterms)

I know most of you don't really know me, I've kept a pretty good low profile ever since sophomore year for a reason (I'm not going to say why). I just want to thank you guys for helping me make this website popular around school. No one's grade should go down over one bad test. That's why I started giving out study guides. I'm sure you will all do well on all your midterms. I will be making study guides for finals so don't worry.
If I ever said something to hurt you guys I'm sincerely sorry. i want to muster all my empathy together and give you a sincere apology. and though it may only be on a web page and its not nearly as consoling as an apology in person the message is still the same.

Study Guide Policy

Everyone, no matter how bad relations might be between us, does not deserve to have fail a midterm/final because I wouln't give them a study guide. Which is why when its uploaded its open to everyone.

Chemistry Study Guide is Up!

Uploaded at 7:57

*just a reminder to all you out there, you can't critique my study guides unless you've got one that's substantially better*

LINK IS ON THE BOTTOM OF PAGE "Midterm Study Guides (Juniors)"

Friday, January 6, 2012

The English 11 Study Guide is up

The English 11 Study guide was uploaded at 4:00 PM on January 6th, 2012

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Das "AP US" Studienf쀀hrer (Study Guide)

Den Studienf쀀hrer wurde hochgeladen. Um 11:05 Uhr am 5. Januar 2012.

Its up. Its not in German don't worry, funny story though, a minority of the people who visit this site are from Germany.

Freeman-ASIA Summer 2012 Scholarship - Application Now Open

Freeman-ASIA provides scholarships for U.S. undergraduate students with demonstrated financial need to study abroad in East or Southeast Asia. Applicants should have a minimum 2.8 GPA. The program's goal is to increase the number of Americans with first-hand exposure to and understanding of Asia and its peoples and cultures. Awards of up to $3,000 are available for summer programs. Award recipients are required to share their experiences with their home campuses or communities to encourage study abroad by others.

For more information, eligibility requirements, and the online application, please visit: http://www.iie.org/freeman-asia. Application deadline: February 15, 2012

ThinkSwiss Research Scholarships and Travel Grants

For the sixth consecutive year, ThinkSwiss will select 15 to 20 highly talented and motivated students who are currently enrolled at a U.S. university. Awardees will receive a monthly stipend of $1,000 for a period of up to three months. Scholarships will help fund qualified U.S. undergraduate and graduate students to do research at a public Swiss university. The scholarship is open to students of all fields.

For more information, visit http://www.thinkswiss.org. Application deadline: March 31, 2012

A.P US Guide (Difficulties)

This guide is really thick. I am trying to cut down a lot so you might have to infer some stuff from the definitions and such. So far, its barely up to Jefferson and its like 17 pages. I also am going to assume you know the basic things.

Ok so i'm just doing a lot of terms that lead together so be an actual "Outline", Regular US History guys can use this guide too but its not as detailed as you would like.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Spanish Study Guide is Up

The Study Guide for Spanish 3 was uploaded at 7:39 PM on January 4th 2012.

Willkommen

I make study guides for the midterms and finals at school. I am in the process of making Junior Midterm Guides, I also have finals study guides from last year for the sophomores. I will post them up on a link and then you can just download them.

Scroll down to where it says "Junior Midterm Study Guides" and click on the link to whatever you need to download, it will lead you to the file

Monday, January 2, 2012

Google's Doodles and the Waning of Serendipity


I just finished reading The Filter Bubble by Eli Pariser, who is the current president of moveon.org.  In keeping with the interests of that organization, PariserҀs book is an attempt (at least tacitly) to expand the communitarian and civic capacities of the Web.  But he makes his way there by arguing that the Web is confining rather than expanding our cognitive horizons.  Instead of introducing us to a broader and more varied set of people, the Web is increasingly taking us to points of view that are congruent rather than divergent with our own.  With personalized search and personalized social networking, the 'net introduces us to places and people we already like and that weҀre already interested in.  As searching and matching algorithms improve, weҀre increasingly exposed to material that is already relevant to our lives.  This, of course, is good up to a point: we like relevance.  The downside is that weҀre challenged less and less to consider or visit perspectives that differ from our own. 

These trends have been in the works for many years now ր Cass Sunstein famously identified them as far back as 2002 in the book Republic.com.  But, as Pariser argues, what makes them more worrisome in 2012 is that theyҀve become more insidious.  In the past we narrowed our horizons through conscious acts: we went to nytimes.com instead of foxnews.com (or vice versa) by choice and more or less deliberately.  But as the Web has become personalized, these choices are increasingly made for us behind the scenes in ways that weҀre only vaguely aware of.  When I visit Amazon.com and shop for The Audacity of Hope, Amazon also suggests I buy Bill ClintonҀs memoir, but not say, Bill OҀReillyҀs Pinheads and Patriots.  And when I visit Facebook, my friends, more often than not, seem to share similar points of view.  Pariser doesnҀt reference Marx, but the filter is the modern generator of false consciousness.  In the past we did our own Web filtering.  But now our filters are selected behind the scenes.  In the brave new world of the personalized Web our false consciousness is created for us.

In PariserҀs closing chapter, he offers up a number of things that individuals, corporations and governments can do to allay the more insidious effects of filtering.  He suggests that as individuals we occasionally erase our tracks so that sites have a more difficult time personalizing their content. (To paraphrase Pariser: ӀIf we donҀt erase our [Web] history we are condemned to repeat it").  For corporations, he suggests that their personalization algorithms be made more transparent and that a little serendipity be introduced into searches so weҀre occasionally exposed to something beyond our current interests and desires.  And for governments he suggests a stronger role in overseeing and regulating personalization. 

There are problems with PariserҀs suggested solutions and Evgeny Morozov, in his own review of Pariser, brings a very important one to light.  In expanding our civic and communitarian and serendipitous encounters, it would be nice if Google occasionally popped up a link to ӀWhat is happening in Darfur?Ԁ when we type ӀLady GagaԀ into Google.  But who exactly is supposed to decide what these serendipitous experiences are to be?  We may want to allay some of the cognitive deficiencies that the current 'net breeds.  But the danger in doing so is that we replace one bias with another.  In looking a little further into this I visited the thousands of doodles (e.g. custom banners) that Google has generated in the past couple of years.  Not surprisingly I didnҀt see much there thatҀs over-the-top civic or political.  But maybe that sin of omission is better than the alternative: I prefer Ӏdon't be evilԀ (their current motto) to Ӏdo good but risk partisanship and bias in the attempt.Ԁ 

Pariser may not provide convincing fixes, but his description of the problem makes the book a worthy read.  One would think that as the information stream accelerates weҀd become increasingly subject to distractions and to new ways of seeing the world.  In fact, Clay Shirky touches on this point in ӀItҀs Not Information Overload. ItҀs Filter Failure:Ԁ the filters which the mass media industry imposed on late 20th century media consumers have been corroded by the advent of the Web.    But the trends that Shirky makes light of  may be reversing.  Our cognitive horizons may be contracting rather than expanding in the age of personalization.  And our attention blindness may be increasing rather than decreasing as the filter bubble grows.  In bringing those concerns to light, PariserҀs has done good work.  

Early rejection isn't the final answer | CharlotteObserver.com & The Charlotte Observer Newspaper

Early rejection isn't the final answer | CharlotteObserver.com & The Charlotte Observer Newspaper

Sunday, January 1, 2012