Thứ Hai, 27 tháng 8, 2018

Waching daily Aug 27 2018

Barış Arduç is looking for a partner in the series

The Posta newspaper informs its readers that in the near future Barış Arduç will return

to the screens of Turkey in a new romantic comedy that will be released on Star TV.

As you know, success for the actor came along with the series Love for Rent, but he could not

repeat it in the film Time of Happiness, which was filmed immediately after a successful TV project

Now the main problem for an actor is don't miss the chance.

Barış believes that his new partner should be a young girl of about 20,

unknown to a broader audience.

Success to her will come along with the success of his new series.

He is personally involved in the auditioning of young actresses for the lead role.

20 contenders have already passed the auditions, but so far "the girl" is not found.

Gupse Özay is present on the auditions as well.

She helps Barış to make the right choice

For more infomation >> Barış Arduç is looking for a partner in the series - Duration: 2:27.

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College education is failing us all. Can we design something better? - Duration: 7:07.

Fifty percent of high school students don't go on to higher education.

Of the 50 percent that do, 43 percent of them don't graduate.

Of those that do graduate the average graduation time is six years.

The average age of a current college student today is about 25.

And I think 25 percent of college students today actually have a child.

So if you ask me those statistics suggest two things.

The current system is not producing what it was designed to produce for the types of people

that go, the number of people that go and what they need.

And it has not kept up with the modern world in terms of how it makes itself available

and what it charges students to be able to get what they need.

So it's a combination of availability; It doesn't seem to work for the majority of

students, because the number one reason that students don't go on to further education

or drop out of college, it's a combination of two things which essentially means the

same thing: It's too expensive, or they can't get the classes at the time of day

they're available.

And that's because: of the 70 percent of kids that go to state schools, 40 percent

of them work 30 hours a week or more.

All of this is to say that schools are no longer programmed at the right time.

They take too long.

They're too expensive, and what they program is incomplete.

It's not necessarily bad.

our view is the education system needs to evolve to the way we do everything.

Everything we do today comes to us (rather than us go to them).

An example, today we would never wait out in the rain for a car and hope that we can

get a cab.

We'll just hail Uber and it comes and it takes us exactly where we want to go.

Today we wouldn't go rush home to watch a TV show at eight o'clock on a Thursday

night.

We watch it on the device we want to watch it, when we want to watch it, when it's

convenient for us.

Only education continues to require you to come to it, pay a fortune to do it, and have

it be a choice between eating or reading or learning and earning.

And so what Chegg is trying to do is reverse it, is try to say let's use what the internet

does best.

Let's make it online, on demand.

Let's make it personalized.

You do it the way you want to do it, not the way it's taught singularly to everybody.

Adaptive which means when we watch what you do and we learn about you, let's actually

adjust how we teach you or what we teach you, what we give you more of and what we give

you less of based on your actual abilities.

And then let's make it exceptionally affordable.

And if we do that you'd be amazed how many students need to learn, want to learn, are

willing to learn.

So we think that the modern university system has become too expensive; incomplete programming,

inconvenient locations, inconvenient time of day for the modern workforce which doesn't

have the time to do both.

So even if you look at for-profit colleges they were a mess because they became a scam

for a lot of people.

But if you realize 3.6 million people at one time were actually taking it, you realize

the demand was there to be able to learn in your own environment in your own way.

Why?

Because the average person was a 30-year-old woman who could not leave her family or her

workforce, or in some cases both.

So I just think that the modern education system needs to acknowledge who the modern

student is, what the demands on that modern student are—there's more of them, they're

more broke, they have more diverse needs.

They enter the system with different education, different backgrounds, different financial

situations, and no "one size fits all" is going to work anymore.

And so what we've got is we've got a lot of schools – now we're not talking about

the top 50 or 100 schools.

Those schools have huge endowments.

They'll be protected for a long time and they'll probably continue to be able to

teach the smaller part of the population that can take four years.

But the ramifications are—well, here's a question for you.

Why is there something called a four year school?

Why does college take four years?

That's a random number.

Why does a certain course take two years?

That's a random number.

It has to do with how many classes they're willing to program that you're able to take.

Not how long it takes you to learn the material.

Ninety-five percent of the time that you're at a four year college you're not in a classroom

in any way, shape or form.

In today's world we binge watch everything that we want.

You can binge watch entire series, albums, learn anything you want.

Why can't you binge learn your education?

If you're willing to put in the time at nights, weekends, days, whatever it is and

learn and master the subject, why can't you finish when you've learned the things

you're supposed to learn in order to get you a job?

So the ramifications are colleges are going to have to take less time to get somebody

from learning to earning.

There is no reason why it should take four years.

Very little of the population has the time or the finances to delay earning by four years.

Only a small subset do.

And so I think the ramifications are you're going to see fewer colleges, you're going

to see them combined, more of them are going to have to get online.

They're going to have to expand their curriculum to include job skills, and I think you're

going to see a resurgence of institutions that primarily serve people online.

Not because—a teacher can make the argument there's nothing better than one-on-one in

a classroom.

That may be true.

That may be true for a lot of kids.

It's certainly not true for everybody.

But it's also 100 percent not available to anybody.

Nobody gets to learn one-on-one in a classroom anymore.

And so our opinion is it's unfair to say "Because this is the best way, we're not

going to do the other way" when 90 percent of the people have no access to the best way.

So if education is really going to grow, it's really going to proliferate, it's got to

be online, increasingly.

It's got to be on demand.

It has to be multimodality.

Some people learn by taking tests.

Some people learn by watching videos.

Some people learn by human intervention and human help.

All of those ways need to be available.

There's no benefit in teaching somebody who learns this way, this way over here if

that's not going to work for them.

And when you look at the scores 43 percent drop out, they drop out with $7,000 to $9,000

in debt.

The ones that survive have $37,000 in debt.

So I mean you just look at the math and ask yourself, do you want to put your kid into

that system?

The answer has to be no.

Why are we taking the most valuable people, the future of this country and delaying their

ability to be productive in the workforce, delaying their ability to make money, and

saddling them with debt larger than anything else they may do in their life (with the exception

of buying a home), and doing it at 18 years old?

To me it just sounds unfair and unfortunate.

For more infomation >> College education is failing us all. Can we design something better? - Duration: 7:07.

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Omarosa Manigault: Trump Is Trying To Use His Limited Intellect To Fool People | AM Joy | MSNBC - Duration: 26:26.

For more infomation >> Omarosa Manigault: Trump Is Trying To Use His Limited Intellect To Fool People | AM Joy | MSNBC - Duration: 26:26.

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Justin Bieber's mustache is back - Duration: 1:31.

 The Biebs and his 'stache are back together again.  After a brief interlude as a clean-shaven young man, Justin Bieber, 24, has regrown his beloved mustache, despite his fiancée Hailey Baldwin's protests

 On a post-church stroll around Beverly Hills with Baldwin, 21, on Sunday, the "Sorry" singer wore a bright blue Hawaiian shirt, ripped black denim shorts and checked slip-on Vans, with his shoulder-length hair pulled back into a low ponytail to better showcase his fresh facial hair

 This resurgence of Bieber's mustache comes after the pop star told fans in early July that his model girlfriend was the real reason behind his close-shaven face

At the time, he responded to fans' excitement over his newly-hairless upper lip by saying, "Yeah, Hailey made me shave it off

"  Clearly, Bieber's bride-to-be has relaxed her stance towards the presence of his 'stache — at least until the wedding

For more infomation >> Justin Bieber's mustache is back - Duration: 1:31.

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Why the gold to silver ratio is important - Duration: 10:10.

For more infomation >> Why the gold to silver ratio is important - Duration: 10:10.

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Frightened owl is trapped and can not free itself – now watch its reaction when a guy comes to help - Duration: 1:58.

A motivated superintendent at an Austin golf course was able to free a great horned owl

that was tangled in fishing line.

When Lost Creek Country Club superintendent Craig Loving started his work day back on

March 18, 2017 he probably did not know that he would end up in waders trying to free an

owl.

Once the hard working Austin area golf course super learned that a great horned owl was

tangled in some waste fishing line near the first tee, Loving sprang into action.

This owl has spent the night perched here, and it's all into the day now and the creature

does not seem bothered to even change positions.

Well, they have to investigate.

Turns out, the poor thing is caught up in a fishing line and can not get free, and now

he's forced to just stay there feeling sorry about himself.

But humans are kind people, especially when the Lost Creek Country Club is involved.

That's how Craig Loving gets into the picture.

The video here captures that epic moment when this guy approaches the owl.

His intentions are clear.

This creature needs to be free and taken care of, and this man is not going to give up until

that happens.

Watch him in action!

You will surely fall in love with this.

Drop us your comment and be sure to SHARE the clip on Facebook.

Even Mr. Loving's mom got into the action saying, "I'm so proud of you son.

It's a great video and job well done.

Mom" It was great to see the easy touch with which

he cut the line and untangled the owl, and as much as it was about caring for the animal

it was also something to do with self preservation.

Loving said in the video, "A LITTLE INTIMIDATING, ESPECIALLY WHEN

HIS BEAK STARTED SNAPPING AT ME, BUT IT WAS COOL, IT WAS DEFINITELY VERY COOL!

Well said and congratulations on a great save!

Thanks to the Lost Creek Country Club FB page for sharing this unique and thoughtful

What do you think.

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