REFLECTION

On Tuesday, January 17, 2012 0 comments


Three grading down and one more to go. In my ICT-IV class, I’ve learned a lot. That HTML thing makes my world go round and made my head ached. Honestly I’m not a computer addict that’s why at first I really hate it. But as time passed by, I’ve learned to love it. Yeah, it’s confusing but when you listen attentively to the class, it will be an easy subject. HTML tags were quite hard for me but because of my teacher, Mrs. Evelyn Vera Cruz, I learned to love it. I did my best to finish all the requirements my teacher gave. I enjoyed this grading and I hope it will be the same on the next grading.  As usual, my unending problem is TIME MANAGEMENT. I always forget the things to do. I hate myself for that attitude which I have. Since, there was nothing to memorize that much this period, it was quite a relief.  But I have managed to do my homework and projects on time. So, I am proud of myself even though I have this annoying attitude.  Moving on, I still have to improve this attitude of mine to reach my goals and be successful in the future.
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New Year, New Me!

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Now I am not going to change myself, that’s not what this is about. I am not going to decide to have all these New Year’s resolutions that make me a different person from the person I was in the past. I just want to keep that same outlook on.
I really just want to begin to grab opportunities more. Before, in school, I wasn’t apart of as many groups as I could have been and didn’t see my friends as often as I should have. Now I want to do those things. I want to start doing the things I didn’t have time for before because I was busy in school. I have more time on my hands to think about myself and what I want to do, rather than what I have to do.
Now you may think that this all makes me sound like a selfish brat. If it does I really don’t care. I don’t want to say that the new me is a selfish person who only thinks about herself, because it’s not like that. I just think I need to be more selfish than I was being. Think about myself more than I did in the past years. I have huge goals and. Now I can focus on me, myself and I more often. It’s a good feeling to know that I can do that! HAPPY NEW YEAR ALL.
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Keeping in mind our mother tongue!

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Mother language has a very powerful impact in the formation of the individual. Our first language, the beautiful sounds of which one hears and gets familiar with before being born while in the womb, has such an important role in shaping our thoughts and emotions. A child’s psychological and personality development will depend upon what has been conveyed through the mother tongue. With this in mind, as psychologists say, it matters tremendously that language expressions and vocabulary are chosen with care when we talk to children. A child’s first comprehension of the world around him, the learning of concepts and skills, and his perception of existence, starts with the language that is first taught to him, his mother tongue. In the same manner, a child expresses his first feelings, his happiness, fears, and his first words through his mother tongue. Mother language has such an important role in framing our thinking, emotions and spiritual world, because the most important stage of our life, childhood, is spent in its imprints. A strong bond between a child and his parents (especially mother) is established by virtue of love, compassion, body language, and also through the most important one, which is the verbal language. When a person speaks their mother tongue, a direct connection establishes between heart, brain and tongue. Our personality, character, modesty, shyness, defects, our skills, and all other hidden characteristics become truly revealed through the mother tongue because the sound of the mother tongue in the ear and its meaning in the heart give us trust and confidence.
Keeping mother tongue in a foreign country does not happen spontaneously. Instead, it is an achievement that requires commitment and determination, especially from the family. Parents must establish a strong home language policy and make consistent efforts to help their children develop good literacy skills in their first language.
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Christmas

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Christmas time was always a magical time of year for me. The beautifully decorated shopping malls, with toys everywhere you looked, always fascinated me. And the houses, with the way their lights would glow upon the glistening snow at night, always seemed to calm me. But decorating the Christmas tree and falling asleep underneath the warm glow of the lights, in awe that Santa Claus would soon be there, was the best part of it all. As a child, these things enchanted me. Sure, the presents were great, but the excitement and mystery of Christmas; I loved most of all. Believing…that’s what it was all about. Believing there really was a Santa and waking up Christmas morning, realizing he’d come, as my sleepy eyes focused on all the fancily wrapped presents before me.

Ah, to be a kid again. How wonderful it would be to relive the magic of Christmas. Don’t get me wrong, I have always been a kid at heart and a true lover of Christmas. But as we get older and we realize that Santa Claus and the North Pole were just stories our parents told us so we’d behave, Christmas starts to lose that magical feeling. No matter how much we might still love it, Christmas time just isn’t the same as when we were young. And at a time of all the aggravating shopping hustle and bustle, dents in the pockets, headaches, traffic jams and long lines, I begin to realize that God has sent me the most magical Christmas gift of all,  my FAMILY.
Christmas magic come alive once again…only through their eyes this time. At that moment, I knew their thoughts and could almost envision their dreams, for I dreamt them once myself. There’s just one little difference…all the toys and gifts they could ever imagine can never compare to the most precious gift of all, my family..


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Equal rights, equal opputunities

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Discrimination towards women and girls, or what is known as gender-based discrimination, is one of the most pervasive human rights violations. It severely limits the ability of women, girls and the communities they live in to protect and promote their health.
Gender-based discrimination is irreversibly connected to negative health outcomes for women and girls. Its associated poor health outcomes are often compounded by other forms of inequality related to socioeconomic status, civilization, sexual orientation, religious association or geographical location. While these challenges are impressive, and often encoded in "normalized" ways of living, International Women's Day renews our commitment to condemn violations in human rights and to challenge unequal systems, structures and practices that we must be responsible for health inequalities across the world.
Gender equality is good for health.

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