Content:
Post 10 open-ended questions
for approval you want to ask an expert in the field of your senior
project. The first question should be your essential question and the
other nine must be about the foundation of your essential question or
help you answer your essential question.
1. How can a nonprofit best promote High School Graduation to socioeconomically disadvantaged students in Los Angeles?
2. In your experience, how does a solid education affect an individual's ability to be a functioning member of society?
3. In your experience, how does an individual stemming from a lower income environment differ from an individual stemming from a higher income environment?
4. Within a business or organization, how does one best satisfy its clients?
5. How can an individual best promote an idea to a client?
6. In a community aiming to progress itself economically, what issues must it address first?
7. What powers does a nonprofit [business] contain that may affect the behaviors of its consumers in modern society?
8. In your opinion, what issue is the United States facing that currently limits the job market and economy?
9. How can the United States as a whole, best prepare its labor force for the future job market?
10. How can the United States as a whole, best progress society so that the aforementioned issues are resolved?
Tuesday, January 14, 2014
Thursday, January 9, 2014
Blog 11: Mentorship 10 Hours
Content:
1. Where are you doing your mentorship?
I am completing my mentorship at Edwards Jones' Financial Advisory.
2. Who is your contact?
My contact is David Bower, a financial broker.
3. How many total hours have you done?
I have completed 11 hours.
4. Summarize the 10 hours of service you did.
The service I have completed so far has mostly involved observing and talking to my mentor about what his job entails, and how he works with clients both on a personal and intellectual level. I have learned a lot from him about how to deal with clients, and how working in any financial field is both extremely competitive and structured. Of course, we have many future plans ahead of us.
1. Where are you doing your mentorship?
I am completing my mentorship at Edwards Jones' Financial Advisory.
2. Who is your contact?
My contact is David Bower, a financial broker.
3. How many total hours have you done?
I have completed 11 hours.
4. Summarize the 10 hours of service you did.
The service I have completed so far has mostly involved observing and talking to my mentor about what his job entails, and how he works with clients both on a personal and intellectual level. I have learned a lot from him about how to deal with clients, and how working in any financial field is both extremely competitive and structured. Of course, we have many future plans ahead of us.
Monday, January 6, 2014
Senior Project, The Holiday.
1. It is important to consistently work on your senior project, whether
it is break or we are in school. What did you do over the break with your
senior project?
Over Winter Break, I have completed a number of pages in my infamous Independent Component - the Comic Book of Business, and I have completed over a day's worth of mentorship under my mentor, David Bower, asking him various questions pertaining to my independent component as well as assisting him in any way I could.
2. What was the most important thing you learned from what you did and why? What was the source of what you learned?
The most important thing I learned was the art of creating visual elements, and effectively implementing both educational and entertaining elements together. The source of what I learned was the result of experience messing with designing my comic book in Photoshop, stacked with a list of resources my mentor had given to me.
3. If you were going to do a 10 question interview on questions related to answers of your EQ, who would you talk to and why?
I would ask any questions about my topic to my mentor, David Bower, because he has been an enormous help with my project, and is very educated in not only his own topics of business and administration but also in the realms of education; He has a very unique perspective, and I would enjoy the chance to be able to explore his perspectives further.
Over Winter Break, I have completed a number of pages in my infamous Independent Component - the Comic Book of Business, and I have completed over a day's worth of mentorship under my mentor, David Bower, asking him various questions pertaining to my independent component as well as assisting him in any way I could.
2. What was the most important thing you learned from what you did and why? What was the source of what you learned?
The most important thing I learned was the art of creating visual elements, and effectively implementing both educational and entertaining elements together. The source of what I learned was the result of experience messing with designing my comic book in Photoshop, stacked with a list of resources my mentor had given to me.
3. If you were going to do a 10 question interview on questions related to answers of your EQ, who would you talk to and why?
I would ask any questions about my topic to my mentor, David Bower, because he has been an enormous help with my project, and is very educated in not only his own topics of business and administration but also in the realms of education; He has a very unique perspective, and I would enjoy the chance to be able to explore his perspectives further.
Thursday, January 2, 2014
Post New Years.
"The more that you read, the more that you will know. The more that you know, the more places that you will go."
- Dr.Seuss
This January, I had been suggested by an unknown soul to continue on my mission of education by looking at the world's leading examples, and comparing them to ourselves. My search has led me to examine the educational systems of Finland, Singapore, and China. So far, Singapore and Finland seem the most likely candidates, but Singapore has major problems with income distribution, and I would not like to further complicate my issue. Finland has its own distinctive cultural problems, but I feel it has more to offer because of its unified and exemplary education.
"Learning and Competence 2020: Strategy of the Finnish National Education Board" was a recent article I examined, and it revealed stirring revelations of Finnish success. As it turns out, the recent successes have only really taken place in the past 10-20 years, as the system was barely implemented in the 1970s as part of a cultural reform. Finland still has strong cultural stigmas within its culture that may hinder its educational system from staying the world's best in the future.
Finland owes multiple things to its success. All teachers require a Master's Degree, and the teaching profession is a very competitive, prestigious field viewed in the same way that we currently view lawyers and doctors. In addition, it seems to be fed by the demands of the job market. In other words, if the demands of the market changes, so do the curricula of the children in the Finnish system.
Overall, my holidays were fantastic. I learned a lot about foreign educational systems, and how we may be able to implement them here. Cheers!
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