...Child is a hope of mission Hope is itself a species of happiness and perhaps, the chief happiness which this world affords: but like all other pleasures immoderately enjoyed, the excess of hope must be expiated by pain. Parents always have some hopes from their children. They always want to see their children best from others and also want them to do something exceptional. No doubt every child is bestowed with some unshakable competence and aptitude. The embodiments of these aptitudes always touch the horizon of the sky of the world. As a writer said “Child is a father of man.” Every child is a hope of mission. But one of the most significant thing is that how can we brighten the traits of the children. “Our children should not be resultant of our surrounding.A child is a precious assert of Nation. He is the epicenter of the hopes of nation. So training of the child becomes the cause of the hope of the nation. The man’s toils bring the sense of grandeur. So this grandeur prepares the way of his mission. Muhammad Ali Jinnah was also a child of his age. Thats why he brought the revolutionary change in the history of the world. Pakistan is the result of his endless struggle. He was the hope of his nation. Ah! What would the world be to us if the children were no more? We should dread the desert behind us worse than the dark before”. A philosopher said that a good child makes a better nation. We are not here to play, to dreams to drift. We have worked to do and load...
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...Books for Military Children ENG 290 1422 South Tech Lane, Meridian, Idaho, 83642 November 26, 2013 Mr. Thomas Luna Superintendent State Board Of Education 650 West State Street, Boise, Idaho, 83720 Dear Mr. Luna, We are a concerned group of students from University of Phoenix who want to address a lack of appropriate reading material for our students from military families. These children, and their families, are seemingly always on the move. The culture shock a typical military child goes through every time his family moves can be stressful. Although there are communities within the confines of the base, the world outside the gates can be overwhelming and even scary. Within the gates and fences there is relative safety, and a sense of security. However, outside those parameters are challenges that most children may have no idea how to handle or what to expect when they arrive in their new temporary home. There is a need for children of military families to make friends easily, and to find a community of his or her peers, but many of them find it hard to be accepted into a group when continually viewed as a temporary “new kid.” Rarely do military children have lifelong friendships from their childhood. They will better equip themselves to make friends easier and form meaningful relationships if they would prepare themselves with a sneak peak at the culture they will be living in ahead of time. Our goal is to put more books regarding these issues into...
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...entire at-risk population. Vaccinations in the US are responsible for the eradication of smallpox. They have also helped with significant reductions in other serious infections like influenza, polio and the measles. The issue for me is then why are diseases becoming more prevalent in our country recently? What has changed? I believe the issue is two-fold. The first issue is our children. New mothers in the United States are now refusing to vaccinate their children because of a financial burden to get the shots, a religious belief that goes against what they see as truth, as well as the reactions and possible death they may cause. The second issue is that our country has become lazy with protecting its citizens. People from other countries are allowed to come to our country, possible even infected with the virus, and live amongst us infecting us. The second tier to this is that there is no follow up on the people who have got vaccinated to see if their bodies have produced enough antibodies for protection. So the issue I have, that I hope to answer is, should vaccinations be mandated for anyone living and trying to visit our country so that we can prevent outbreaks of these very contagious diseases? Does our government need to step up or just continue to allow others to infect the rest? The issue is compelling to me because last December we had a measles outbreak at one of the happiest places on earth, Disneyland. They had 52 cases originate from that location which in my opinion is...
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...Dear Mom and Dad, I’d like to say something cute and catchy here…but instead, I’ll just get to the point of why I’m sending you this message. Danielle and I will be going on our 1st mission trip that will travel to Ecuador on November 2nd, 2013 to invest into the lives of children and families living in abject poverty. God has touched our hearts and opened our eyes to the harsh realities and living conditions that no child should ever have to endure. Yet, they do. The children that we will be caring for ‘endure’ in the most heinous and dire circumstances. On this trip, we will be partnering with two organizations that are on the front lines caring for children and families in need. The first half of our trip will be spent at Nuevos Amigos. Our church, RiverTree Christian Church, has recently assumed the operational responsibilities of Nuevos Amigos, a school located just outside of the capital city of Quito, Ecuador. It's mission is to operate a school that seeks to walk hand in hand with families to ensure that children receive spiritual guidance, quality education, and loving care that complement a healthy home environment. The other half of our time will be spent serving one of the churches and child development projects that our church helped start through Stadia Church Planting and Compassion International. This church is located on Pampanal Island, located off the northern most coastline of Ecuador. There are roughly 250 chlidren on the...
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...On a very general level, we are all the same. All humans share the same basic characteristics regardless of age, race, sexuality, or gender. This means that, at the most basic, instinctual level, a seventeen year old high school student from Simi Valley and an eighty-seven year old Somalian fisherman are exactly the same. These shared characteristics are collectively termed our human nature. We cannot understand why we act in such a way, it is only natural, instinctual, a reflex. Yet, these reflexes are the unifying characteristics that connect us to our fellow humans all across the globe. One such characteristic is a person’s natural desire to set and strive for an impossible goal. This goal is true of all humans, across all areas, across all of time. By examining Kiwi from...
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...is nowadays, however, I did read an article on http://suavv.com, which is from an interview regarding Christian Keyes’ childhood. If this story has any truth to it, Christian Keyes is the best candidate to share his story and words of encouragement to our youth. The event is hosted by investors of the Vista Del Mar Child and Family Service which is a private group home for child development. The facility provides shelter, food and clothes to children and assists young teens that have been forced out onto the streets. We find that youth who transition from foster care, often end up living on the streets or are placed in group homes. Generally, they are left with little help and little hope. Would Mr. Keyes be willing to speak to the children and investors? This would allow the youth to see what success looks like after foster care. Christian Keyes’ success story speaks for itself. Mr. Keyes’ presence at the event would encourage the youth and motivate them to become successful in life. Most of these children do not have a positive future ahead of them. We wish to encourage and infuse faith, hope, discipline and determination into our youth, demonstrating that their future can be better than their past. These children have experienced unspeakable, hurtful backgrounds and we wish to instill into them that they have a successful future ahead of them through dedication, commitment and hard work. Having grown up in the foster care system myself, I refuse to allow my...
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...The Hope for Child Beggars ___________________ A Baby Thesis Presented to Ms. Mary Jane Valenzuela of the Divine Word Mission Seminary College New Manila Quezon City ___________________ In Partial Fulfillment for the Requirement on the course English ____________________ Submitted by: Gocotano, Josh Uriel Paul P. March 16, 2016 The Hope for Child Beggars I. Introduction II. On Hope A. Definition of Hope A.1 The Christian View on Hope III. Child Beggars A. The Reality of Child beggars B. They are Victims B.1 Poverty B.2 Family Problem IV. The Hope for Child Beggars Conclusion Bibliography Chapter I Introduction In the Philippines’ current condition the populations live below poverty level. The basic cost of foods and transportations are growing rapidly while employment opportunities remain low. It is not surprising that children are often forced by circumstances to help their family in eking out a living or fend for their selves to live in the street, that’s why they engage in begging. They are also ‘engage in begging to help their parents in eking out the subsistence of the family.’As they remain in the streets begging they remain ‘unschooled, unskilled and with no future, if they don’t beg, they will starve’and probably begging is their last resort to live. In the Philippines, especially in the Quezon City, beggars are common sight, especially the children. Child beggars in the streets of Quezon City are...
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... | |John C Johnston | |8/7/2012 | | I hope this time capsule finds you doing well and enjoying the Earth. That would mean that we figured some things out and managed to | |preserve this beautiful planet for your use. I would like to share what my day to day life is like in the year 2012. | I hope this time capsule finds you doing well and enjoying the Earth. That would mean that we figured some things out and managed to preserve this beautiful planet for your use Your Final Project for this course will be a virtual time capsule. A time capsule is a grouping of items for future discovery. For our purposes, we will imagine that our time capsule will be buried at the end of the course and opened 100 years later. The goal of our capsule is to provide an overview of what you believe future generations should remember about the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. The project can be composed in Microsoft Word or PowerPoint. It can include multimedia if you wish. It should include the following eight...
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...conflict.” This quote was important to African Americans during the Civil Rights Movement. During the Civil Rights Movement, religious morals kept African American families close. It kept everybody strong through the hard times and made people realize that there is hope. The Civil Rights movement was an extension of church. During the 1960s morals were important to everyone because morals gave them hope to one day reach their dreams. Morals are important to a family and the elders of the family will keep those morals stronger than anybody else. In A Raisin in the Sun, momma is talking to Benetha and she says, “There is always something left to love. And if you ain’t learned that, you ain’t learned nothing. Have you cried for that boy today? I don’t mean for yourself and for the family ‘cause we lost the money.” (Hansberry 145) Benetha was hurting her brother instead of praying for him and loving him in hard times. The elders of the family know what’s going on so they have to be strong and set good examples to the young ones in the family and keep everyone’s hopes up. Religious morals are the best way to go with keeping everyone’s hopes up. Everybody has a dream of being rich and famous, but maybe it’s not our destiny to be rich and famous. God has a plan for us and we are here to live out the plan he has for us. Brain Simmons states in his article The American Dream “While it is not that we can be anything we want to be, it is true that we can be everything God created us...
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...many blackberries as possible. The poem displays an excited and nostalgic mood throughout the first stanza, but a turning point occurs at the start of the second stanza which changes the central idea of the poem from hope to disappointment. The poem’s opening lines gives the reader an idea of the time of year Heaney embarked on his quest to find the berries a very peaceful atmosphere is created kas the mixture of rain and sun required for the berries to ripen is detailed, as well as the amount of time the children put into the picking. “Late August, given heavy rain and sun, for a full week the blackberries would ripen.” The time of year suggests that going out blackberry picking will be the poet’s last ‘adventure’ before returning to school; this fills Heaney with excitement. The contrasting weather shows that it was a real occasion for the berries to ripen, which added to the poet’s excitement. Word choice of “full week” emphasises the period of time the children went out picking berries for, they used the entirety of the time available to them. The excitement of the first stanza only heightens as it continues. However, the reader first picks up a slightly darker theme creeping into the poem. This is the first sign of a slightly sinful side to what the children were doing. “You ate that first one and its flesh was sweet, like thickened wine” The second person narrative directs the idea towards the reader and gives them a sense of exactly...
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...As humans, we judge ourselves by how others perceive us and seek to conform to an almost universally accepted, but still unspoken, code of ethics relating to the basic treatment of our fellow man. It is this inherent value that we place on others and expect others to attribute to us that make us different from animals and it is also what is missing to a large extent in Orwell’s “1984” and Ishiguro’s “Never Let Me Go”. The futility of relationships in these works is part of what makes the worlds in which they are based seem so bereft of hope and consequently, dystopic in nature. Never Let Me Go is a supreme dystopian example of a modern day 1984 because the authors give hope to the characters and the audience, they both have an intrinsic human emotion to hold on to, and the people’s future isn’t clearly explained. The vision of humanity’s future, the only truly acceptable thing to ‘love’ is Big Brother. The Party restricts all other love so as to break down the ties between family, friends and lovers whilst transferring this loyalty to the Party itself as a form of control. The Party is said to have, “cut the links between child and parent, and between man and man, and between man and women.” This does not just show the breakdown of relationships, but the reduction of the self. The Party is removing the essential links that allow humanity to be more than a collective of individuals and instead uses this to its own ends, although what these are, beyond a desire for control, we...
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...student’s success. We believe that community involvement benefits our students and gives them the motivation to go above and beyond their expected potential. Our staff for early childhood level, has come up with a Community Involvement Plan that will allow students, teachers, and family members to work together and create a striving learning environment. This involvement plan will include resources that will positively influence our students learning in our classrooms. This plan will also go into depth about our first grade Read Across ABC elementary program. Jacksonville Public Library The public...
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...Example Outline Planning to Protect Our Memory Persuasive Speech Outline I. Introduction A. How to Grab their attention 1. Show a picture of the human brain 2. This is a picture of the brain of a twenty five year old vs. the brain of an 85 year old. Deina lives among these people. But she has hope, because there is someone fighting for her. 3. She is not alone. Her neighbor needs a rescuer as well. B. Thesis: The battle against poverty can be won through the efforts of those who have been blessed and who are willing to give of themselves. C. Purpose/Preview: By the end of this discussion I hope to have: 1. Presented a picture of poverty, a way we can fight it, and hope of victory. [Transition: But first, let define poverty.] II. Need A. Court fees and fines that fund crime victims have fallen off B. Around the world, 30% of children suffer from malnutrition, 19% have no access to clean water, 17% will never attend school, and worst of all, 30,000 children under five die each day (UNICEF, 2006). C. A deeper definition 1. Compassion International take the definition of poverty a step further, “Poverty is much more than a lack of money or material possessions—at its core, poverty is a lack of options. It is a mindset of utter hopelessness that overwhelms its victims with difficult circumstances and tells them to give up. Those suffering from poverty can teach us what true joy really is…and how one can find this joy in the most unlikely of places (Compassion...
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...recycling bins in our school. We thought it was ridiculous that the school was not recycling despite the ability to do so. We decided to create Project Green. The focus of the club is to get the school to recycle and encourage “going green.” As the club’s vice president, I help educate my fellow classmates on the importance of preserving the environment. We also hold meetings to share ideas with other environmental clubs. One meeting occurred at NJIT where we met with professionals to learn more efficient methods of recycling. Last spring, our club went to the elementary schools to educate younger children on the value of recycling. This year we hope to expand the club to other high schools. I am passionate about protecting the earth and hope to join or start an environmental club in college. During sophomore year, my friend and I noticed that there were no recycling bins in our school. We thought it was ridiculous that the school was not recycling despite the ability to do so. We decided to create Project Green. The focus of the club is to get the school to recycle and encourage “going green.” As the club’s vice president, I help educate my fellow classmates on the importance of preserving the environment. We also hold meetings to share ideas with other environmental clubs. One meeting occurred at NJIT where we met with professionals to learn more efficient methods of recycling. Last spring, our club went to the elementary schools to educate younger children on the value...
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...Intro___________________________________________ Born into Brothels; a documentary directed, produced and written by Zana Briski and Ross Kauffman which revealed one of the darkest sights of rising INDIA. It is based on eight children of prostitutes in Calcutta’s red light area. This American documentary film was released in 2004 won the academy award in the Best Documentary Feature category. The film was also honored into various prestigious film festivals such as- Bermuda International Film Festival (2004), Cleveland International Film Festival (2004), National Board of Review Award for Best Documentary (2004). The Happenings_____________________________________ Basically the documentary started when Briski, a documentary photographer, went to Calcutta and made friendship with eight little kids (Kochi, Avijit, Shanti Das, Manik, Puja Mukerjee, Gou,r Suchitra and Tapasi Mamuni). Briski taught those kids basic photography and the children quickly adopted the lesson. In the movie the children talked about their fear, dream and sorrows. As an example- Suchitra tells about her fear that she could be forced to join as a prostitute worker, Avijit tells about his dream and his family. Zana Briski and Ross Kauffman tried to bring out the picture of the life of those children who dare to see dreams. Briski also showed her effort to send the children’s to the school and to help them create their new identity. Technical Insights________________________________ The movie is not a...
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