Archive for May, 2011

Nursing Assistant Education – Develop Your Skills

May 30th, 2011

Certified nursing assistants need to have a certification that they have finished the required educational program for the CNA. Nursing assistant education aims to train and educate aspiring nursing assistants on how to properly take care of their patients. Although a nursing assistant is always under the supervision of a registered nurse, it is still important that he is well-trained to avoid mistakes that could be very dangerous for the patient.

Education

An applicant for nursing education must be at least 18 years old. They must also have a high school diploma at the very least or a GED. The requirements mentioned may differ for each state as well as the educational institution. Some institutions accept students that are fresh high school graduates for the graduation even if they are only 16 years old. There are also some states that do not require a high school diploma or GED from the applicants for the education program. Once enrolled in the program, a student must complete the required number of hours in lectures and practical training. After accomplishing that, he is already qualified to apply for the licensure exam or certification. » Read more: Nursing Assistant Education – Develop Your Skills

Nigeria’s Ball-Point Pen Education

May 28th, 2011

After I had read the sub-chapter in Walter Rodney’s How Europe Underdeveloped Africa entitled Education for Underdevelopment where the author contended that the pattern of education which Europe bequeathed to Africa was meant to be, not an agent of development, but of further impoverishment and underdevelopment of Africa, I had seriously begun to critically examine that assertion vis-à-vis the system of education in Nigeria. I had not concluded my investigations when again I stumbled upon yet another classic, Rene Dumont’s False Start in Africa. Dumont was a French professor of agronomy, but he was not an armchair professor; he was a thorough and committed field worker who dedicated his life to research on rural development in Third World economies. Somewhere in that discourse, Dumont had made a striking remark that if your sister goes to school, you will have nothing to eat but ball-point pen. Immediately my mind went back to Rodney, and I had no doubt in my mind that the pattern of education we inherited from our European overlords was indeed education for underdevelopment; a pattern of education that gives its recipient a false sense of importance, a false feeling of being above all else, and, worst of all, a feeling that his rightful place is in a cosy, air-conditioned office, with fat salary attached, a company-paid apartment, a chauffeur-driven car, and other sundry privileges. » Read more: Nigeria’s Ball-Point Pen Education