Free Online Learning Opportunities to Bolster Your Resume and Reputation

March 10th, 2010 by fabula

Online classes, or “distance learning,” used to have a meaning limited to computer-based interaction with teachers and students. And unfortunately, the concept got tarred with a bad brush for a while.

Particularly in the case of online-only institutions, which were often compared to diploma mills and old-school correspondence courses, online learning went through a period where the concept had to fight for respectability.

And if we’re being completely honest, it affected hiring decisions, because hiring managers do make judgments based on the school on your resume. (Some let those judgments affect their hiring decisions, too – maybe not the best way to go about things, but it does happen.)

Now, there are two new kinds of name-brand education you *could* add to your resume when you send it out through a distribution service. And both are free.

The first is called the “OpenCourseWare Consortium,” which includes classes from some of the world’s most prestigious schools, all available for free online.

Pioneered by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, it’s spread across the world, and in the US it includes Yale, Notre Dame, Stanford, and other renowned colleges. According to Anne Marie Chaker in the Wall Street Journal Online, “The [courses] – which differ from the ‘distance learning’ courses that many schools offer for credit and charge for – come as colleges and universities say they want to democratize education, making the best resources available to more people. But they also hope that it leads to more interest from potential applicants and inspires alumni in far-flung locales to make a donation.”

The benefit passes to job seekers of all stripes as well. You may not be able to get credit toward a degree by mastering the coursework for any of these classes, but you can certainly demonstrate your desire to improve yourself and become more appropriately positioned for an opportunity that a recruiter or headhunter may locate for you.

Another free resource online comes through iTunes. Once you download their free software and start it up,look for the link on the left-hand menu with “Music, Movies, TV Shows,” etc. At the bottom of that list is “iTunes U,” and it leads to a whole host of lectures from classes at universities across the country, and many of these are free to view as well.

With all the belt-tightening going on these days, there are still ways to get the education you need to advance your career without paying through the nose for it.

But don’t forget to look into you company’s tuition reimbursement plan, too. Depending on the time frame you have for your career plans, the investment might make sense after all.

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Curriculum 2.0

March 9th, 2010 by fabula

Technology is a powerful tool that can help and enhance learning. Everyday we see technology used as a tool outside of formal schooling for communication, collaboration, understanding, and accessing knowledge. It is our goal in developing an integrated curriculum to ensure that the way students learn with technology agrees with the way they live with technology. Technology is in a constant state of evolution and change. Access speeds, hardware, software, and computer capabilities all evolve and improve on a monthly basis. This change occurs at a rate at which it is impossible for schools to keep up and adapt. Is it not time that we create a curriculum model that understands and this fact and works with it rather than tries to control it? This is Curriculum 2.0

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4xBYSdMK1LU&hl=en

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RN to BSN Programs Online Makes Your Advanced Degree Possible

March 9th, 2010 by fabula

RN to BSN programs offers nurses the chance to earn that 4 year degree. The courses can be taken online or at a state university or private college. Some of these programs today are offered on weekends or even during evening hours. These are ways of making the RN (Registered Nurse) to BSN (Bachelor of Science in Nursing) program accessible to more nurses who hold full time jobs.

There are even RN to BSN programs available through online programs. These are perhaps the most convenient way for any nurse to complete their transition from RN to BSN. The programs offer courses that can be scheduled when you have free time and you do not have to struggle to fit your life around nursing courses any longer.

If you are an RN and you have been interested in pursuing a bachelor’s degree online, an RN to BSN program may be the perfect solution. You will be able to continue working your regular job and can take courses as needed or when you are able to fit them in to your own schedule. The online nursing community offers quality instruction and you can even find tutors if you need to.

The courses for RN to BSN programs offer you the opportunity to study and learn at the pace most comfortable for you. There is no need to rush to finish courses and miss half of the material in the process. You can complete the courses and the work as you learn it. Having online courses is one of the least stressful ways of getting a nursing education. Online courses are every bit as challenging as on-site courses, but you have time to learn the material at a comfortable pace and rhythm. The key in selecting the right nursing program is to choose which route is right for your lifestyle. Whichever route you choose to get your bachelor’s degree should be the one that you feel most comfortable with.

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Online Accounting Classes – What You Need To Know

March 8th, 2010 by fabula

The accounting field is continuously growing and offers a great salary. There is expected to be an increase between 18 – 26 percent for all accounting professions through the year 2014. This growth is due partially to the need to replace accounting professionals that retire.

A career in accounting can provide a secure future for those willing to pursue the required training. Accountants help to ensure that firms are run more efficiently, public records are kept more accurately, and in some cases, that taxes are paid appropriately. The fundamental tasks of the occupation include preparing, analyzing and verifying financial documents in order to provide information to clients.

Clients of accountants can include any of the following: corporations, governments, nonprofit organizations, or individuals. Job duties vary according to the type of client an accountant works with or specializes in. For example, public accountants, (many of which are Certified Public Accountants [CPAs]), usually have their own businesses.

Most accountants work in a typical office setting. However, it is becoming increasingly more common for accountants to work at home. Most accountants work a 40-hour per week schedule, but some work longer hours – this seems to be particularly true for those that are self-employed.

A deterrent to this profession may be the required training. Most jobs require at least a bachelor’s degree in accounting or a related field. The idea of four years of traditional college classes is not appealing to most adults. However, the field of accounting is as it has much to offer.

The solution that many have found is online accounting classes. The advantages of taking classes online are many and varied. Online training provides a way for you to have control over your learning schedule. You can schedule your classes to meet your needs. You may be able to learn without leaving your workplace. If this is the case, your training can be fit around your workload.

If you are interested in a career in accounting you should know that these classes are generally less expensive and will provide you with the opportunity to create your own schedule. Learning from home or while at work provides the flexibility that many desire.

Learning at your own pace is an added benefit of receiving your training through an online accounting class. The flexibility of online training allows an individual the ability to look back on old training for future reference. Repeating any difficult areas is always an option. Plus it is never necessary to move at a pace that is slower than you can handle due to another student that is having difficulty with the material.

Online accounting classes not only save you time due to the alleviation of travel to and from classes, they may save you some stress related to what to wear – if you are learning from home your pajamas may be part of your regular classroom apparel. Your comfort is enhanced and you are in control. Traditional classroom learning could never compete with that!

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Reading To Your Child The Best Head Start on Education

March 7th, 2010 by fabula

You’ve planned for your baby and read all the books. You went to the baby warehouse and bought every baby gadget, dozens of developmental toys and a hand-crafted maple crib and changing table that cost more than your first car. You’ve already applied to the most coveted pre-school and have weighed the benefits of private school vs. public. There have been long, heated debates with your father-in-law over what kind of mutual fund will reap the highest return for her college fund. The kid hasn’t even arrived yet and already you are thinking about her education.

The best way to get a head start on your child’s education is by reading to her – and you can start the day she’s born. Studies show that child who are read to as infants have higher IQs, earlier language acquisition, better vocabularies, and overall better test scores. Getting in the habit of reading to your child is fun, and easy.

Reading to Your Newborn

Reading to a newborn is pretty easy. After all, they can’t exactly climb down off your lap if they don’t like the story. And, you can read just about anything to them – the back of the cereal box, the financial page of the New York Times, the recipe for chicken enchiladas you’re making for dinner tonight.

When you read aloud, the cadence and tone of your voice is different than regular speech. Your infant will pick up on that tone and become used to the rhythm and sound. While holding your baby on your lap and reading aloud, you are engaging with her in a very specific way that you want her to become accustomed to.

Reading to an Older Baby

Once your baby is a few months old, you can introduce picture books. Rhyming books are great with their sing-song rhythms and bright pictures. Once baby is old enough to start trying to grab the book out of your hands, you might distract her with a teething toy or something else to hold onto while you read.

Read to your baby the same time every day, to start making it a routine. I read to my babies right before their naps and at bedtime, right after baths. By the time they were toddlers they were accustomed to the routine and reading was a nice transition from play time to sleep time.

Books to chew on

Promote familiarity with books. You want your baby to start thinking of books as his friends – something to help ease his boredom while you’re at the mall or doctor’s office. Once he’s old enough to hold them, get him an array of board books that he can look at and even gnaw on. You’ve heard of cutting your teeth on the classics…how about a board book edition of Make Way for Ducklings? Vinyl books (sometimes designed especially for the bathtub) are great because they can be drooled on and wiped off.

Rhymes and Rhythms

Small children love the cadence of rhyming words. Dr. Seuss is an old favorite, and for good reason. Don’t be surprised if your child has his favorite book memorized at an early age – rhymes are great for memorization skills.

Dancing Animals and Imagination

No, Giraffes really can’t dance. But introducing your child to the world of fantasy is great for her imagination. And the better her imagination, the better her problem-solving skills will be.

Ask any kindergarten teacher and she will tell you that the best way to help your child prepare for school is by reading to her. Start cultivating a love for books from the very first day of your baby’s life and set her up for a lifetime of reading and learning.

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Creating a Career With Software Engineering Schools

March 7th, 2010 by fabula

Whether you’re at work or at home, from doing daily office duties to completing homework assignments, odds are a software engineer was behind the operation. How? Software engineering pros worked on the very programs you’re using on your computer. They were in charge of the software development process and computer application you use today. Cool, huh?

About Software Engineering

In 1968, the NATO Software Engineering Conference held in Garmisch, Germany popularized the term software engineering. At the time, it was unclear what software engineering was exactly, but it has since become an integral part of practically every industry today. It’s no wonder so many software engineering schools have sprouted in the decades following the conference producing software engineering professionals.

Engineering has many disciplines. Software engineering, for instance, entails the designing, creating, and maintaining software. There are a broad range of activities associated to software engineering like computer programming and systems analysis. From computer science to project management, even interface design and digital assessment management, this software is applied in technology and other practice.

Software Engineering in Demand

Whereas software can be found in products, systems, and situations, software engineering is very much a necessity. It’s something that all of us rely on, especially under demanding conditions like monitoring and controlling nuclear power plants. All of the applications embedded in these functions consist of oodles of codes. Software engineering of the lines of code is what gets them to operate even in the complex manners that they do.

Software engineering, in all its glory, calls for employees and contractors. Some work for businesses, others for government civilian or military agencies. There are also opportunities at non-profit organizations. And for those who want a flexible schedule, software engineering pros work as freelancers or private contractors. Most organizations have software engineering specialists performing tasks in maintaining, developing, and programming software used. Others hire based on need.

Getting Schooled Beyond a Software Engineering Degree

For those aspiring to become software engineering pros, software engineering schools are a must. There, you will become familiar with software development and harness your engineering skills. Keep in mind, other educational disciplines come into play, so software engineering schools are just a part of the training. Most software engineering pros today have degrees in computer science, well as computer engineering.

Students at software engineering schools might also want to consider degrees in mathematics, science, and general engineering or engineering of another discipline. Such degrees contribute to one’s vast knowledge of technology. While a software engineering degree might be all that it takes to become a software engineer, expertise and training in other subject areas can make one’s work more effective and one’s resume more marketable.

With all that said, if you’re interested in a career in software engineering, you’re making a wise choice as engineering is a huge industry with lucrative returns. In 2004, the Bureau of Labor Statistics counted 760,840 software engineering professionals as holding jobs in the United States. There are 1.4 million practitioners of all the other engineering disciplines combined employed, by the way. When it comes to Europe, Asia, and elsewhere, there are about 1.5 million practitioners. Regardless of what discipline you decide, the field — in all its many facets — only has good things in store for you.

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Learning from Code History

March 6th, 2010 by fabula

Google Tech Talk November 11, 2009 ABSTRACT Presented by Andreas Zeller. Why does my program fail? Your version history might have the answer. First, the failure may occur only in the most recent version. If there is some old version which worked, one can narrow down the change that caused the failure. By leveraging automated tests, one can even isolate such changes automatically: “The failure was caused by a change to line 365 in submit.py”. Second, your version history also records all the fixes that were made. If we have many fixes in one unit, this means that this unit is particularly error-prone – and hence should deserve particular attention: “This compiler code is seven times as error-prone as the GUI code.” In this talk, I show how to automate these techniques to learn what is wrong and how to predict bugs in large-scale systems such as Eclipse, SAP, or Microsoft Windows. Andreas Zeller is professor for software engineering at Saarland University, Saarbrücken, Germany. His research is concerned with the analysis of large software systems, in particular their execution (”Why does my program fail?”) and their development history (”Where do most bugs occur?”). In 2006, his book “Why Programs Fail” received the Software Development Magazine productivity award. In 2009, his work on delta debugging got the ACM SIGSOFT Impact Paper Award as the most influential software engineering paper of 1999.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SzRqd4YeLlM&hl=en

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Software for Business – Avoid the Software Implementation Blues

March 6th, 2010 by fabula

Planning a major software purchase? You can increase the probability of success of a software implementation project, and avoid singing the implementation blues, by doing your homework and following a proven model for success. This model includes an analysis of your current business systems, a vision of your improved system, an improvement process, and education. Also, top management must buy into this model, and support it at every step.

Failed implementations litter the landscape. You’ve probably heard horror stories, maybe starred in one yourself, where companies that purchased an expensive new software system, spent a year or more installing it, and ended up in worse shape than when they started. Organizations spend tens of thousands to millions of dollars buying, installing, and operating sophisticated systems to help them run their businesses. All too often, not only is this money wasted, but a string of casualties are left in the wake. When these projects fail to meet their expectations, blame is spread freely, and invariably rolls downhill. But it doesn’t have to be that way.

Notice that I didn’t say when these implementation projects fail to meet their goals, I said fail to meet their expectations. Goals are planned, after careful analysis. Expectations are fueled by hype and wishful thinking. A software implementation, like any investment, should deliver a return. Software is purchased with the expectation that the business will run better once the implementation is complete. Much of this expectation is a direct result of the sales pitch from the solution provider. This is not to imply that software vendors mislead their customers or misrepresent their products. However, rarely do the final results match the vision that is presented in these initial presentations.

Why is there a disconnect between expectations and results, and what can you do to close the gap? A primary reason for the disconnect is a lack of understanding of just what to expect from a new software system. The need for new software is not always expressed as a clear business need. Often, the need is not really a need, but a want. Statements such as “We can’t do such-and-such with the current system”, and “We can’t ship on-time without a new system” are often heard. Change a few words in these statements and you get to the heart of the problem. How about “we can’t do such-and-such with the current business model?”, or “we can’t ship on-time without improving the process?” A software purchase may be a part of the solution to an existing problem, but it is not always the best solution, nor the first one that should be undertaken. Before looking at software, you need to look at your business.

Thomas F. Wallace and Michael H. Kremzar, in their book ERP: Making It Happen (John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2001), define The Proven Path, consisting of 16 steps for successfully implementing an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) system. Software isn’t mentioned until step 12. This means that, according to Mr. Wallace and Mr. Kremzar, 11 distinct steps should be performed before even looking at software.

Once an organization determines that it is not achieving the performance that it desires, it should conduct an analysis of the business. This analysis should include reasons for the current performance, a vision of the future, and recommendations for improvement. This analysis should also include performance goals. Once you have determined the goals, recommendations for improvement must include strategies to achieve those goals. If the recommendations for improvement include new software, only then should a software implementation project be undertaken. But remember, this analysis is only the first step in a multi-step process of implementation. Many times, performance can be enhanced significantly by making improvements to existing processes, without an investment in software.

Education is an important step in this process, during the analysis phase, and during the implementation phase. During the analysis phase, management, including top management, must become educated on the benefits and limitations of a software solution. This education must include the resources that will be needed to successfully implement the solution, as well as realistic expectations of what the final system can provide. Once a software solution has been decided upon, further education of the management and staff that will be responsible for the implementation is required. Finally, education and training of the users must be provided during the implementation, and must be updated and reinforced on a continual basis.

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Holistic Nursing School Offers Alternative Nursing Education

March 5th, 2010 by fabula

A holistic nursing school focuses in teaching a unique approach to healthcare called holism, which concerns improving the overall health of the patient in addition to treatment of the diagnosed illness or disease. The holistic approach addresses a patient’s well being as a whole – his physical, mental and emotional health.

In a holistic nursing school, traditional nursing theories and practice combine with alternative healthcare methods and natural healing to enhance a person’s overall well being. These students promote self-awareness and self-care, believing that each one of us should be responsible for our health.

These schools train students to connect with their patients emotionally and mentally as they administer care and treatment. There is great emphasis in compassion and giving patients personal attention. These schools also cultivate spirituality in students through reflection and meditation that leads not only to individual awareness but also to awareness to other people, which is essential in the practice of holistic nursing.

This type of nursing school teaches the theories of holistic nursing and gives students diverse training in alternative medicine, which includes massage, touch therapy, music therapies, aromatherapy, stress management, herbology, nutrition, hypnosis, homeopathy, acupuncture and other ancient healing techniques.

Education and training opens many opportunities in your nursing practice. Students that complete training from a holistic nursing school may become holistic nurses, holistic practitioners and counselors and may work in healthcare clinics and facilities, treatment centers, spas, health clubs, wellness centers or have their own private practice of holistic healthcare.

It used to be that holism is viewed by much skepticism but society has started to embrace holistic medicine and its benefits as more and more patients seek natural and non-invasive ways to prevent and treat disease. Many traditional doctors and nurses have attended holistic schools in order to deliver alternative approaches in caring and treating patients.

Many nursing schools offer certification programs in holistic nursing to practicing nurses or to nursing students. Some offer online programs and self-paced home study programs. You can also check the Internet if there is any school in your state that operates separate from traditional nursing schools in universities or colleges.

The American Holistic Nurses’ Certification Corp. or AHNCC gives Holistic Nursing Certification, which requires a Baccalaureate Degree, one year of practice and forty-eight hours of continuing education in the past two years. If you are ready to take the certification exam, contact AHNCC for the exam schedule and locations.

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Come and accommodated Super Creators from Japan

March 5th, 2010 by fabula

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MHIb3yjb4ys&hl=en

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