|
|
Like this article? PLEASE +1 it! |
|
school girls Tagged Articles
|
Poverty and Human Resources
| |
| Poverty can prevent households from making high return investments in the human capital of their
children. |
|
Other school girls Related Articles
|
It IS a Popularity Contest
| |
| Business and high school actually have one very important thing in common. Thinking back on my high school days, I remember the start of the school year and when elections for class president were about to begin. . . |
|
|
2.1 The cruel dilemma of school or work: Working Out of Poverty
| |
| The education and preparation for working life of the current generation
of children are of key importance to the drive to reduce and eradicate
extreme poverty. Access to basic education has improved in a large number
of countries, but the poor have benefited much less than those who are better
off. Over 115 million school-age children, mainly in low-income countries,
were not in school in 1999; 56 per cent of them were girls. On current
trends, a large number of South and West Asian and African countries are
unlikely to achieve the Millennium Development Goal of ensuring that all
children complete a full course of primary education by 2015. |
|
|
Mann Deshi: A Micro-Business School for rural women
| |
| The Mann Deshi Business School for Rural Women (MDBS) is a new Micro-business school program launched in India that provides training in technical, financial and marketing skills to women with no formal education and to girls who have dropped out of high school, allowing them to start and improve their own small enterprises. |
|
|
From Spice to Soccer: Fuller Charts New Territory
| |
| In 1996, Fuller created a carefully constructed promotion package for the newly named Spice Girls. Within just a few months of hiring Fuller as their manager, the Spice Girls were an international sensation. Their debut single, Wannabe, became the instant number one hit in not only the UK, but in 36 other countries around the world. |
|
|
Doing Business but Suffering in Silence
| |
| Women entrepreneurs fall victim in part to economic abuse due to familial socialization from the time of birth. From a tender age, socialization which is the process of inheriting norms, customs and ideologies differentiates girls from boys. As boys grow up, they learn to be the head of their future homes as well as being the main (if not only) breadwinners. Girls in turn are socialized to be the home makers and caregivers. |
|
|
A Closed Mouth Never Gets Fed
| |
| I don’t watch a lot of television, but this one commercial sticks out to me about a kid who was born with seemingly ultimate confidence: asking girls out for dates even though he’s clearly shorter and younger; graduating college when most graduate high school; performing open-heart surgery in a crowded concert hall with a ballpoint pen. But when it comes to negotiating a fair price for a new car, he’s frozen in his tracks. |
|
|
Up In Smoke
| |
| Recently, I saw two attractive teenage girls smoking cigarettes. I watched them and it was obvious that they were new smokers. As a father who has watched two of his daughters go through the pains of death trying to quit smoking, I wanted to give the two young women a warning and a lecture. I didn’t do it, because they could rightfully have said it was none of my business. As an employer, I looked at those two girls and knew that it would definitely jeopardize their opportunities for getting some jobs. Many companies do not hire smokers. I looked at them as future parents and knew what that smoke would do to their babies, should they continue to smoke and ever become mothers. |
|
|
Top 10 Questions to Ask Your Prospects Before You Ask for the Business
| |
| When I was in high school, my girlfriends and I often envied the boys' prerogative of asking for phone numbers, dances, and dates, since the only time it was proper for girls to call boys was to invite them to the Sadie Hawkins dance. It wasn't fair, we fumed, that the guys got to do all the asking, and the girls had to wait to be asked. |
|
|
3 critical elements of a research survey. Part 2 – Does the sample size really matter?
| |
| There are two hospitals: in the first, 120 babies are born every day, in the other, only 12. On average, the ratio of baby boys to baby girls born every day in each hospital is 50/50. However, one day, in one of those hospitals twice as many baby girls were born as baby boys. In which hospital was it more likely to happen?
|
|
|
For Retail Franchises, the Back-to-School Shopping Season Spells Sales
| |
| Back-to-school shopping is the second biggest consumer spending event for retailers, behind the holiday shopping season. Retail franchises that carry back-to-school must-haves are benefitting as families prepare for the impending school days. |
|
Featured Article
How to Improve Sales Training Programs with this One Word
by: Leanne Hoagland-Smith, Chicago Sales Coach
Newsletter
Get advice & tips from famous business
owners, new articles by entrepreneur
experts, my latest website updates, &
special sneak peaks at what's to come!
Get advice & tips from famous business
owners, new articles by entrepreneur
experts, my latest website updates, &
special sneak peaks at what's to come!
Popular Articles
What Is The Foundation for Your Vision?
The Importance of Master Data Management (MDM)
Death by Micromanagement
What Is The Foundation for Your Vision?
The Importance of Master Data Management (MDM)
Death by Micromanagement
Suggestions
Email us your ideas on how to make our
website more valuable! Thank you Sharon
from Toronto Salsa Lessons / Classes for
your suggestions to make the newsletter
look like the website and profile younger
entrepreneurs like Jennifer Lopez.
Email us your ideas on how to make our
website more valuable! Thank you Sharon
from Toronto Salsa Lessons / Classes for
your suggestions to make the newsletter
look like the website and profile younger
entrepreneurs like Jennifer Lopez.