Jul
18
Fleur Dan Tontonan Mendidik
Juli 18, 2010 | Tagged Al Qur’an, Anak Pintar, Cara, Download Video, indonesia, Tontonan | Leave a Comment
1. bengkel hati (tpi, minggu-senen pukul 4.30 wib) yang selalu mengingatkan saya bahwa segala ibadah yang kita kerjakan, seperti membaca Al Qur’an, Cara Download Video You Tube diniatkan untuk beribadah kepada Alloh tuk mencapai ridho-Nya, bukan untuk minta selamat atau bahkan biar rumah gak kemalingan, dsb. atau ajaran tuk jangan pernah menyimpan kejengkelan pada sapa pun, karena bila disimpan terus menerus bisa jadi penyakit. acara ini membuat saya selalu ber-istighfar, memohon ampun pada Alloh bila saya melakukan khilaf di masa yang lalu.
2. nikmatnya sedekah (tpi, selasa-rabu pukul 4.30 wib) yang selalu Cara Mengecilkan Perut mengingatkan saya tuk berbagi rizki pada orang lain karena sangat banyak manfaat sedekah selain untuk membersihkan harta.
3. upin dan ipin (tpi, gak jelas tayangnya kapan, tergantung slot acara yg kosong mungkin
) yang dengan caranya tersendiri memberikan pelajaran buat adik-adik yg menonton tentang kebaikan : mensyukuri hujan yg merupakan rahmat Alloh bukan malah sedih karena gak bisa maen di luar, rajin menggosok gigi biar ga sakit gigi kayak si mail, jangan terlalu banyak makan rambutan karena bisa bikin sakit perut kayak si ehsan, dan hal-hal baik lainnya : Download Point Blank Game Gratis
4. mario teguh the golden ways (metrotv, minggu pukul 19.05 wib) yang memberikan pandangan lain akan hidup. nasehat-nasehat pak mario teguh ini sering bikin saya menganggukan kepala
Video Anak-anak Lucu
5. rahasia menuju sukses (tvone, sabtu pukul 20.30 wib) yang dipandu oleh ary ginanjar, si master esq (emotional spiritual quetion). tv show ini mengingatkan saya tuk menyelaraskan hidup antara otak, jiwa, dan hati pada orbitnya seperti layaknya matahari, bintang dan benda angkasa lainnya yang berjalan pada orbitnya, karena bila kita mulai keluar dr orbit, maka yang datang adalah kehancuran. surat cinta
entah kenapa tiba-tiba terpikir untuk membuat postingan ini. mungkin karena tadi baru saja nonton rahasia menuju sukses yang berhasil membuat saya nangis sesenggukan dan ga bisa napas lewat idung plus kuping jd agak bindeng, entah karena efek backsoundnya yang mendukung atau isinya yang membuat saya menyesali segala khilaf saya yang terdahulu. yeaaah, paling tidak saya menangis karena menonton suatu hal yang berbobot, bukan menangis karena menonton kemalangan sang actress di sinetron atau sejenisnya. Cara Membuat Anak Pintar
indonesia butuh tontonan yang mendidik seperti list saya di atas. tontonan yang bisa membawa kepada kebaikan.tontonan yang memberikan nasehat untuk kebaikan. tontonan tuk mengingatkan masyarakat tuk melakukan kabaikan. intinya tontonan yang baik, bukan yang hanya menjual mimpi penuh khayal tanpa tindakan nyata tuk meraihnya. saya yakin masih banyak tv show yang mendidik di indonesia yang luput atau terlupa dari ingatan saya. kalo ada yg ingat, silahkan ditambahkan Cara Menghilangkan Bekas Jerawat
Jun
24
Cara Download Video You Tube Membuat Anak Pintar
Juni 24, 2010 | Tagged Amerika Serikat, Anak Pintar, Download Video, Membuat, Video You Tube | Leave a Comment
Menurut sebuah penelitian di Amerika Serikat, bayi yang diberikan ASI kemungkinan besar akan lebih memiliki prestasi yang baik di SMU dan bisa melanjutkan kuliah dibanding dengan bayi yang dibesarkan dengan susu botolan. Cara Download Video You Tube
Profesor Joseph Sabia dari the American University dan Profesor Daniel Rees dari University of Colorado Denver mendasari penelitian mereka pada 126 anak dari 59 keluarga, membandingkan saudara yang diberi ASI ketika bayi dengan saudara lainnya yang tidak diberi ASI. Cara Membuat Anak Pintar
Dengan membandingkan saudara kandung, penelitian tersebut mampu mencatat pengaruh dari berbagai faktor yang sulit untuk diukur seperti kecerdasan maternal dan kualitas lingkungan rumah.
Penelitian tersebut, yang diterbitkan dalam Journal of Human Capital, menemukan bahwa tambahan sebulan memberikan ASI dihubungkan dengan peningkatan poin nilai sekolah dari rata-rata 0,019 poin dan peningkatan dari kemungkinan masuk ke perguruan tinggi dari rata-rata 0,014.
Cara Download Video You Tube nya
“Hasil dari penelitian kami menganjurkan bahwa manfaat kognitif dan kesehatan dari menyusui akan memberikan manfaat pendidikan yang penting secara berkepanjangan bagi anak-anak.” Sabia, seorang profesor kebijakan publik yang memfokuskan pada ilmu ekonomi kesehatan, menyatakan.
“Tapi ini hanya permulaan. Masih banyak lagi pekerjaan yang tersisa untuk diselesaikan untuk membangun hubungan sebab musabab yang menentukan.”
Sabia mengatakan dalam penelitian tersebut, yang menggunakan data dari National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, merupakan yang pertama yang menggunakan data saudara kandung untuk menguji efek menyusui pada penyelesaian sekolah dan masuk perguruan tinggi.
“Dengan memfokuskan pada perbedaan antara saudara kandung, kami dapat mengesampingkan kemungkinan bahwa faktor keluarga seperti status sosial ekonomi mengendalikan hubungan antara pernah diberikan ASI dengan pencapaian pendidikan,” Kata Rees, seorang Profesor ilmu ekonomi.
sumber: perempuan.com
Des
29
Goodbye to All That
Desember 29, 2009 | Tagged job loss, map, sister site, Slate, unemployment | Leave a Comment
Thinking of relocating for the recession? Wondering exactly when the job market got so bad in your area? Slate’s Chris Wilson designed an elegant map to visualize the shrinking employment rate on a county-by-county level:
The economic crisis, which has claimed more than 5 million jobs since the recession began, did not strike the entire country at once. A map of employment gains or losses by county tells the story of how those job losses first struck in the most vulnerable regions and then spread rapidly to the rest of the country. As early as August 2007, for example-several months before the recession officially began-jobs were already on the decline in southwest Florida; Orange County, Calif.; much of New Jersey; and Detroit, while other areas of the country remained on the uptick. See the map.
Des
29
The Bully Wars, Continued
Desember 29, 2009 | Tagged Bullying, Devil Wears Prada, management syle, women in the workplace, XX Factor | Leave a Comment
We’re not done chewing over the New York Times article on women bullying in the workplace. On the XX Factor, Vanessa Gezari pointed out that the “Devil Wears Prada” cultural image of the female boss is just as prevalent as the sugary-sweet mothering figure, and Samantha Henig drew a comparison between the challenges faced by blacks and women at the top of the ladder. Meanwhile, Emily Bazelon argued that even if the figure the Times cited is correct–40 percent of workplace bullies are female–that still leaves men as the bulk of the brute squad. Why aren’t we talking about that 60 percent?
Follow the whole the conversation on the XX Factor
Des
29
Relocating for the Recession: Part Two
Desember 29, 2009 | Tagged astaga.com lifestyle on the net, family, Festival Museum Nusantara, job hunt, life, mobility, moving, recession, relocating, unemployment, wor | Leave a Comment
Emily Bazelon has been writing an ongoing “recessionitis” series on how the recession is affecting family, work, and life. At the end of her last piece, she asked readers whether they’d been forced to move homes, cities, or even countries because of the economic downturn. She’ll be posting her piece with the results next week, but there were too many moving stories to include in one article. So this week, the On-Ramp will be running serialized excerpts of emails from readers who were kind enough to share with us their stories of the recession and mobility. astaga.com lifestyle on the net
“I have quite a history with living overseas due to economic circumstances. My mother raised three children with no outside support and only a high-school education. My siblings and I all earned scholarships and college degrees from reputable schools (the first in our family), but none of us have earned more than $30,000 per year. Living overseas was the only feasible way I could support my brother’s education and my mother’s bills. I worked for seven years as a teacher in Korea, as an actor in the Philippines for one year, and for several months teaching in Japan as well. I recently decided to attend law school and have returned to the U.S. for the first time in 8 years, but now I have to go back to work in Japan in order to make my mother’s mortgage payments; she was laid off last year; my sister last week. Korea’s exchange rate has bottomed out soFestival Museum Nusantarabadly that I would need to double my paycheck there just to make the same amount in dollars as I did 15 months ago. My sister has followed work from Chicago to North Carolina to Arizona. I have followed work from Seoul to Manila to Tokyo and back again. Almost all of my extended family has dispersed in order to find work which barely puts them above the poverty line, if at all. —John astaga.com lifestyle on the net
“My husband and I are actually stuck in a place we don’t like because of the recession. We’re both originally from Maryland, and when we graduated from college there three years ago we decided to strike out. I got a job in New York and he got one way out in New Jersey, so we settled in a New Jersey suburb. Our jobs are okay, but we hate New Jersey and miss Maryland. We had planned to stay in our current jobs for about 2 years to get some experience under our belts, then start looking for jobs in DC. Right after we hit year 2, the economy went into free fall mode, and now there are no jobs to be had. We might be able to get one back in DC, but can’t survive on one of our incomes. I know that we’re lucky to have jobs, especially because more than 20 percent of the workforce at my company has been laid off, but to look at the foreseeable future in a place that we don’t like that’s a four-hour drive away from our families and friends is really bleak.”—Marie astaga.com lifestyle on the net
“I have been looking for a job in Atlanta, GA (my hometown) for months now. I grew up in the suburbs of Atlanta, went to the University of Georgia, got a job in Atlanta and moved 25 miles away from my entire family. Next week I am moving to Baltimore, MD. It is the only place that was actually hiring. It was a horrible decision. I had to choose a job over my family, all my friends, and my boyfriend who has a great job in Atlanta and can’t even consider moving anytime soon. In this economy, though, I had to take the job. It was an increase in salary for essentially the same job I was doing. And I didn’t know if anything would present itself in Atlanta. So this Southern girl is packing up and moving above the Mason-Dixon line to Maryland where I know no one. It was economic stability versus people, and in these times unfortunately I had to go with the job.”—Jennifer Festival Museum Nusantara
Des
29
Recession Briefing 5.14
Desember 29, 2009 | Tagged astaga.com lifestyle on the net, country music, dollar stores, Festival Museum Nusantara, flex time, jobless claims, news briefing, recession, recessionwire, road trips, work Recessionwire | Leave a Comment
Despite the sour economy, mainstream music has been remarkably free of songs about tough times. Country music seems to be the exception. (Associated Press) astaga.com lifestyle on the net
Dollar stores are cleaning up: Nearly half of all U.S. households now shop at the low-price stores each month. (Los Angeles Times) astaga.com lifestyle on the net
Faced with tough economic realities, more adult children are moving back into their parents’ homes. The AARP found that 11% of adults between 35 and 44 were living with their parents or in-laws. (New York Times)
More than half (55 per cent) of employees are working from home more frequently since the financial crisis began. (BusinessWeek) Festival Museum Nusantara
New unemployment claims rose to 637,000 last week, despite expectations that they would fall. Ongoing claims also set a record at 6.56 million. (Bloomberg) Festival Museum Nusantara
With a growing number of people competing for a dwindling number of job openings, some employers are driving down pay and benefits for new hires. (Associated Press)
Not so long ago, three-button power suits - slickly conservative, oversize and overpriced - blared of Wall Street success. Now, with banking out of fashion, the suits are remaining on the racks at retail stores. (New York Times)
Responding to the recession, many top universities are shrinking their PhD programs. (Inside Higher Ed)
Many Americans are driving less in order to save money, but with gas prices down from last summer road trips are poised to make a comeback. (Wall Street Journal)
Retail sales fell unexpectedly in April, indicating that rising unemployment is prompting consumers to conserve cash. (Bloomberg) Festival Museum Nusantara
Tips for using credit to help you manage your cash flow and get back to the work of delivering great products and services. (Recessionwire)
Direct-sales businesses that rely on home-based representatives to peddle their wares are seeing their sales forces rapidly expand
Des
29
Is Playing It Safe Such a Good Thing?
Desember 29, 2009 | Tagged gender, Kerry Howley, mancession, recession, stereotypes | Leave a Comment
Women haven’t been hit with job losses quite as hard as men during this downturn, in part, it’s thought, because they’re more likely to take jobs in recession-proof industries like health care and teaching. Kerry Howley, writing on XX Factor, doesn’t think playing it safe is necessarily occasion for applause.
Her beef: “Must an article on gender and the recession immediately go all Mars/Venus on the subject? Since the start of the credit crisis we’ve seen this kind of pseudo-feminist drivel all over the place. The crash itself was supposedly “testosterone-driven.” Women, on the other hand, “might have been able to temper the excesses that led to the current financial crisis.” Women could have prevented the whole thing, apparently, by playing prudent schoolmarm to their cowboy colleagues. It’s not a particularly inspired vision of the future of women in business.”
Des
29
Recession Briefing 5.19
Desember 29, 2009 | Tagged auction, compassion, credit, daily briefing, home sales, optimism, P.F. Chang's, personal finance, recession, recessionwire, yacht | Leave a Comment
Fire-sale auctions of mansions, yachts, sports cars and other trappings of wealth have become increasingly common as the rich become less rich. (Wall Street Journal)
New home building figures have unexpectedly hit a record low, with unemployment and foreclosures deterring builders. (CNN/Money)
“Green shoots of human compassion abound,” writes Derek Thompson. “So should we all stop worrying and learn to love a world with much less money?” (The Atlantic)
The unemployment rate for adult men is ahead of the national average at 9.4 percent versus 8.9 percent for all workers. The implications may hamper the recovery as families that once had male breadwinners struggle. (Reuters)
As the national economy transforms in the wake of the economic crisis, growth and development across the country are moving away from the suburban and exurban fringe and toward center-cities and close-in suburbs. (The Big Money)
Hollywood’s response to the recession? Maintain a fabulous facade on the cheap while paring expenses behind the scenes. (New York Times)
With home prices having dropped, the majority of those being sold now in the U.S. are considered “affordable.” The most “affordable” city in the nation by this metric is Indianapolis. (CNN/Money)
When restaurant chains are floundering, what accounts for the sizzle in P.F. Chang’s wok? The company has avoided wholesale restructuring and panicky discounting. (Slate)
The era of operating easily on borrowed money is over, at least for now, for businesses as well as consumers. That in turn is changing the way companies operate. (New York Times)
“Only the optimists survive” would be an appropriate motto for leaders in today’s and tomorrow’s business climate, writes Waren Bennis.
Des
29
Recession Briefing 5.18
Desember 29, 2009 | Tagged chocolate, clergy, daily briefing, deregulation, financial news, NEWS, organ harvesting, police, presciption drugs, recessionwire, SPAM, tanning | Leave a Comment
Popular consumer items in the recession include: chocolate, Spam, self-tanning products, running shoes, and cheap wine. (Associated Press)
“Will the global recession push more people to sell their organs? Apparently, the answer is yes,” writes William Saletan. (Human Nature)
Want to get the most bang for your food dollars? Mark Gimein finds the most caloric food items for the least money. (The Big Money)
Pfizer will give away free Lipitor, Viagra, and a host of other drugs to Americans who have lost their jobs since January 1. (Associated Press)
Local police services are reportedly being limited by the recession, forcing some agencies to close precincts, merge with other departments or even shut down. (USA Today)
Danish brand consultant Martin Linstrom talks about how neurology, as much as economics, drives consumer behavior during the recession. (Time)
Hard economic times are hitting the United States’ youngest citizens, threatening to roll back decades worth of gains in health, safety and education, according to a report released today. (Reuters)
A contracting national economy has led congregations across the religious spectrum to cut or downsize clergy positions, hire part-time lay people instead and delay filling vacancies. (New York Times)
“We’re absolutely seeing an increase in crime at hotels,” says Philip Farina, CEO of Enterprising Securities. Security industry veterans like Farina say that hard economic times are especially driving up incidents of theft. (USA Today)
“It is more than a little convenient for America’s political class to blame deregulation for this financial crisis,” writes Niall Ferguson. “Not only does that neatly pass the buck, but it also creates a justification for . . . more regulation.” (New York Times)
Des
29
Baby’s Bottom Line
Desember 29, 2009 | Tagged abortion, children, choice, contraception, decision-making, personal finance, recessionwire, The Big Money | Leave a Comment
Deciding when and whether to have kids is one of those huge questions that bundles together an examination of just about every variable in a woman’s life-including finances. So how has the recession complicated an already-complicated decision?
Lauren Sandler, a recession mother herself, crunched the numbers on The Big Money:
While stocks tumbled in the first few months of 2009, Nielsen reports that sales of condoms and morning-after pills rose more than 10 percent in the United States. Essure, a permanent method of contraception for women, has seen a jump in sales of 28 percent over last year. In Iowa alone, the number of women seeking contraception is up nearly 40 percent. Also up 40 percent are clicks on physician profiles at Vasectomy.com, which Maya Wank, whose name may have fated her position as the company’s chief operating officer, told me is the point at which visitors are “decision ready” to get snipped. She added that many urologists say vasectomies are up because salaries are down; clients tell them their sudden desire for sterility is motivated by fear of job loss and that they are rushing to get the procedure while they still have health insurance.
On Double X, Annie Murphy Paul looked into the economics of abortion, arguing that even if the recession has increased abortion rates, money is hardly a new factor in the decision:
A report by the Guttmacher Institute, a nonpartisan research organization focused on sexual and reproductive health, demonstrates the persistence of economic concerns in women’s decisions about whether to have a child. The study, titled “Reasons U.S. Women Have Abortions,” draws its results from a survey of 1,209 abortion patients, and in-depth interviews with 38 more. When asked why they were having an abortion, the second most common reason, given by almost three-quarters of the respondents, was that they “could not afford a baby now.” The most common reason was that children would interfere with their education, work, or ability to care for dependents-concerns that are also largely economic in nature. (According to other Guttmacher research, 57 percent of U.S. women obtaining an abortion are economically disadvantaged, 61 percent have one or more children already, and 67 percent are unmarried.) The study was published in 2005-when the Dow was still riding high and the housing bubble seemed it would never pop.
Meanwhile, Deborah Seigel writes on Recessionwire about the optimistic terror-and forced flexibility—of having a baby, or two in her case, when you can’t afford motherhood on paper:
Marco’s unemployed status is prompting us to ponder with conscious intention a new configuration of work and parenting tailored to our modern lives….[snip]…I have no idea how we’ll achieve this worthy goal. I have no idea when our apartment will sell, or when Marco will find steady work, or how we’ll afford that night nurse that friends who have had twins tell me we just can’t live without.”