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by Don Pedro

The importance of education in anybody’s life cannot be overemphasized.It is what makes you to stay in tune with the latest developments in every field of endeavor. It enables you to know whatever is happening in your environment.However, it is sad to note that though education is good, it is not everybody in the world that has access to it. Furthermore, even those that began could not finish their education because of one or two circumstances beyond their control.Most of the time, the financial ability of everyone determines the level of education a person will attain in life. Unfortunately, many people in this condition drop out of school and are now living with regret and frustration.

But all hope is not lost yet as adult education was specifically designed to care of the needs of this type of people. In other words, with adult education program, you can get to any of education that you want in life.When it first started, adult education was restricted to the provision of elementary level of education for those people who had to drop out of school. But things have taken a dramatic turn because of recent development in our days.

Every adult can now progress to a higher level of education than he or she currently has.You can now earn diploma or degree in any field you desire.

If you are one those that dropped out of school, this is the right time to enroll for an adult education program so that your earning power can be increased. There are many matured people like you also enrolling for the classes. It is recommended that you join too.In addition, many colleges and universities are now conducting adult education for people like you. What are you waiting for?

You can chose to attend these programs in person at the institution’s centre or have it sent to you through the mail In the former, you will be required to attend all the classes in person, meet with fellow students and the teachers before you can earn a certificate.But the latter does not require you to do all these.

You can complete the program when you want. It is not compulsory for you to meet students and teachers in person before you can be given a certificate. There is the online version of adult education also if you want. You can do everything wherever you are without leaving your location.All that is required is a computer with an internet connection and knowledge of computer operation.You get the same quality of education that others attending the regular institutions get.

Another thing you should know about adult education is that many institutions offering it offer loans to qualified students. The loans are meant to assist you complete the program.You can seek for more information on this from the institution you are planning to attend.

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11 Comments to “What You Haven’t EVER Being Told About Adult education”

  1. on 28 Mar 2009 at 7:42 amJazmine

    Illegal aliens murder 12 Americans daily
    Death toll in 2006 far overshadows total U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq, Afghanistan
    WASHINGTON – While the military “quagmire” in Iraq was said to tip the scales of power in the U.S. midterm elections, most Americans have no idea more of their fellow citizens – men, women and children – were murdered this year by illegal aliens than the combined death toll of U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan since those military campaigns began.

    I cant stand the arrogance and hateration from some immigrants, particularly Haitians, especially because they ARE black. There should be a kinship there, but they will eat their young (if not 100% Haitian of course) to get ahead of us. Black americans can identify with Haitians, or any minoroties for that matter, in the struggle as a minority, but for some reason they can not identify with us. They even use that to their advantage when it benefits them looking for benefits for “we black people”, but the truth is they will do any and every underhanded thing toward an american black, even backstabbing us in favor of whites, its rediculous. My neighborhood was primarily Haitians where I grew up. The part of town I lived in we all nicknamed ‘little Haiti’ for all the Haitians there, so I am not talking about what I don’t know or out of just a few interactions with them. I wish I could say different. For their attitude, and their usery, I say send them all back, we dont need that mess here to confuse and divide anymore.

    Unlike Nigerian women who put up with philandering husbands, Jamaican women have long ceased to link children and marriage. Jamaican women are serial monogamists and think nothing of having different fathers for their 2 or 3 children. At last count, 85% of Jamaican children were born out-of-wedlock, and do not have their father’s name on their birth certificates…

    The conventional wisdom is that Jamaican men refuse the responsibility of fatherhood - the reality for many Jamaican men is that their girlfriends don’t see the point of tying themselves to men who earn less than they do, are emotionally immature (having grown up without fathers themselves) and require easily as much attention as a small child.

    Since the early 90’s, government statistics have shown that Jamaican children are “better off” - that is have more access to education, books and food - in homes where no adult male is present.
    Adult Jamaican men devote their resources to transport (make that an SUV) and entertainment (Red Stripe, Appleton rum, girlfriend with 16 year old tits). Adult Jamaican women tend to divide their money between children, church and clothes. Never the twain shall meet, in half of Jamaica’s households. So there’s lots of men and boys around who are “surplus to requirements”. Once they’ve donated their sperm they are short of homes, love and consolation

  2. on 31 Mar 2009 at 4:03 pmrawasch

    Redondo Beach Unified Instructional Aide III/Parent Education/South Bay Adult School,Academic,Redondo Beach, CA,..

  3. on 11 Apr 2009 at 8:24 amSteve Berry

    Rita L. Mason (nee Clement), 50, of Grafton, passed away peacefully at her home Sunday, March 22, 2009, following a long battle with cancer. She was born in Elyria, where she resided until moving to Grafton nine years ago. Mrs. Mason earned her Bachelor’s degree in Adult Education from David [...]

  4. on 17 Apr 2009 at 10:31 pmJeremyD

    My son is 9yrs old; currently in a “mainstream” classroom and has diagnosis of severe ADHD, Asperger’s, mild OCD, and ODD. They have removed him from the special education program, does not currently have an IEP in place and now are saying that due to testing scores, he is not eligible for any type of ’special/lab’ services. He has an attention span problem, has to be reminded of what to bring home daily, uses poor choices when not supervised by an adult. What can I do get him an IEP back in place? What are my rightsf?

  5. on 19 Apr 2009 at 9:48 pmrwash

    Education fact–Pygmies are not midgets or dwarves. But must be a group of people whose adult males grow to less than 4 feet 11 inches

  6. on 29 Apr 2009 at 3:10 amableego

    How is this related to teaching special education classes for students with disabilities?

  7. on 01 May 2009 at 12:33 pmRace

    There are some harsh comments about teen writers here, most of which have no foundation at all. As a teen, with friends and acquaintances that are also teens (and a few published), I can tell you that we can handle the business as well as an adult. We can write, revise, query, deal with rejection, work with agents, revise some more, deal with rejection…
    We can get our education and work towards a career, other than the career of writing that we hope for, while writing, revising, querying…
    We can. And we do. With success. The only problem I see is that a great many people assume we can’t. And that is why it is harder for us to "compete."

  8. on 01 May 2009 at 4:14 pmNFraga

    RT RT New blog post: Read Useful Tips About Adult Education Courses

  9. on 02 May 2009 at 9:20 amacplteens

    Jeanine,

    Of course you are welcome here. Although yes, you did stir up a bit of a hornet’s nest

    I don’t think that Leo was referring to your own personal church that you attend every Sunday, rather the mystical church as a whole– which is “thoroughly divided and fights to the death with its own parts.”

    While some of our remarks may seem bitter, the bitterness (if any is there) is not necessarily directed at our former god. You posed an apt question when you asked us how we can be angry at God when we no longer believe he exists.

    For my own part, I hold no particular bitterness towards any one particular deity. I do, however, have bitterness towards the society of religion which perpetuates the myths of deities and their interactions with humanity.

    The cost of de-conversion is high, Jeanine. I no longer have a career and have no applicable job skills to offer the work force because all my adult life was spent making a living within the church as a musician, a youth pastor and an overseas missionary. I no longer have the social cushion to fall upon in times of hardship that I once had. I do indeed feel like a fish out of water.

    I now have to start my life over completely from nothing because I had given my whole life, up until recently, to serving a non-existent deity. I dropped out of college because I was convinced by people I trusted that God wanted– even needed– my own unique talents and energy in converting thousands of non-believers to Christianity. Now that I am no longer a Christian I am angry that I wasted the money I could have spent on my education on pursuing a primitive myth that is no different from the myths of any other primitive culture.

    My sob-story aside, it just gets old hearing the same arguments that we used to give others directed at us. We know all the tricks of the trade, Jeanine. We know the rhetoric, the scriptures, the Romans Road, all of it. We know it because we studied it and found it to be full of holes.

    So. If you wish to discuss it, then perhaps you should throw out a question yourself instead of assuming you have all the answers. There’s quite a bit you could learn from this community.

  10. on 07 May 2009 at 3:02 am80s

    Small Business Administration Adult Education: Free Continuing …

  11. on 09 May 2009 at 9:07 pmeducationtweety

    New blog post: Find Important Advice About Adult Education Programs

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