5TH Interdisciplinary Conference on Aging & Society

Call For Papers.
This Conference will be held 5-6 November 2015 at the Catholic University of America in Washington DC, USA. 2015 Special Focus: Inter-generational Relationships. With an increasing aging population its more important than ever for the generations to learn how to relate to each other.

Conference Themes
• Economic and Demographic Perspectives on Aging
• Public Policy and Public Perspectives of Aging
• Medical Perspectives on Aging, Health, and Wellness
• Social and Cultural Perspectives on Aging

Proposal Submissions and Deadlines
The current review period closing date for the latest round of submissions to the Call for Papers (a title and short abstract) is 14 April 2015*. Please visit our website for more information on submitting your proposal, future deadlines, and registering for the conference. If you are unable to attend the conference, you may still join the community and submit your article for peer review and possible publication, upload an online presentation, and enjoy subscriber access to The International Journal of Aging and Society. *Proposals are reviewed in rounds adhering to monthly deadlines.
Check the website often to see the current review round. Visit the website: agingandsociety.com

6TH International Conference on Urban & Extra Urban Studies

Call For Papers. This Conference will be held 15-16 October 2015 in Chicago, USA. We welcome submissions from a variety of disciplines and perspectives and encourage faculty and students to jointly submit proposals, discussing spaces and flows through one of the following themes:

Conference Themes
• Urban and Extraurban Spaces
• Human Environments and Ecosystemic Effects
• Material and Immaterial Flows
• 2015 Special Focus: Decline Belt Cities: Prospects, Problems, Possibilities

Proposal Submissions and Deadlines
The current review period closing date for the latest round of submissions to the Call for Papers (a title and short abstract) is 18 February 2015*. Please visit our website for more information on submitting your proposal, future deadlines, and registering for the conference. If you are unable to attend the conference, you may still join the community and submit your article for peer review and possible publication, upload an online presentation, and enjoy subscriber access to Spaces and Flows: International Conference on Urban and ExtraUrban Studies. *Proposals are reviewed in rounds adhering to monthly deadlines. Check the website often to see the current review round.
Visit the website: spacesandflows.com



Article Published

March 2, 2015. AIU wants to congratulate one of our students, Kenneth Okocha for his recent achievement. Kenneth has written an article title: “International Organizations and Conflict Resolution: A Theoretical Framework”, that he has developed during his studies with AIU, has been published by the American Open Political Science Journal. Kenneth has completed a Doctorate program in International Relations in Atlantic International University. We wish Kenneth the best on all his future projects and we congratulate him for his great achievement.

Research Published

February 23, 2015. AIU wants to congratulate one of our students, Charles Agwu for his recent success. Charles wrote an article named: “Research Paper on Market Structures and Models: A Situation Analysis”. His effort has been recognized and published on the Web in the International Journal of Management and Commerce Innovations. Charles is a student in our Doctoral Program and we are very proud of his achievements, and we hope that he continues with this success, that is a byproduct of the effort and dedication that he has always shown. Congratulations in behalf of Atlantic Intenational University.



8TH International Conference on e-Learning & Innovative Pedagogies

Call For Papers. This Conference will be held 2-3 November 2015 at the University of California, Santa Cruz in Santa Cruz, USA. 2015 Special Focus: The Future of Education: Advanced Computing, Ubiquitous Learning, and the Knowledge Economy.

Conference Themes
• Pedagogies
• Institutions
• Technologies
• Social Transformations
The digital revolution represents a sea change in the nature of learning and education. Information and communication technologies are transforming academic research and scholarship —introducing a new platform for knowledge and learning. Alongside cloud computing and virtualization, AI and high performance computing are now poised to reshape the nature and scope of education.

Proposal Submissions and Deadlines
The current review period closing date for the latest round of submissions to the Call for Papers (a title and short abstract) is 7 April 2015*. Please visit our website for more information on submitting your proposal, future deadlines, and registering for the conference. If you are unable to attend the conference, you may still join the community and submit your article for peer review and possible publication, upload an online presentation, and enjoy subscriber access to Ubiquitous Learning: An International Journal. *Proposals are reviewed in rounds adhering to monthly deadlines. Check the website often to see the current review round.
Visit the website: ubi-learn.com

International Conference on Tourism & Leisure Studies

Call For Papers. This Conference will be held 22-23 April 2016 at the University of Hawaii at Manoa in Honolulu, Hawaii, USA. 2016 Special Focus: The Sustainability of Tourism and Leisure.

Conference Themes
• Changing Dimensions of Contemporary Tourism
• Changing Dimensions of Contemporary Leisure
• Tourism and Leisure Industries
• Critical Issues in Tourism and Leisure Studies
In these times of unprecedented social, economic, and environmental change, the conference will attempt to map an agenda that addresses fundamental questions about the spaces and practices of leisure and tourism and explore sustainable courses of action for the leisure and tourism industries.

Proposal Submissions and Deadlines
The current review period closing date for the latest round of submissions to the Call for Papers (a title and short abstract) is 22 March 2015*. Please visit our website for more information on submitting your proposal, future deadlines, and registering for the conference. If you are unable to attend the conference, you may still join the community and submit your article for peer review and possible publication, upload an online presentation, and enjoy subscriber access to the Journal of Tourism and Leisure Studies. *Proposals are reviewed in rounds adhering to monthly deadlines. Check the website often to see the current review round.
Visit the website: tourismandleisure.com

11th Global Conference on Business Management and Social Sciences 24th -25th April 2015, Dubai, UAE

Academic Business Management Conferences (ABMC) with collaboration of world renowned academic institutions and corporate sector organize conferences on contemporary themes at different attractive places in the world.

GCBMS-2015 provides a platform to meet 100+ professionals from 30+ countries, and enables presenters to publish with our strategic partners, ISI Indexed and Refereed Journals. Publication fee in associated journals of all presented papers shall be sponsored by conference secretariat.

Abstract and paper submissions by 15th March, 2015 at www.abmconferences.com/submit-paper.php. Registration by 27th March, 2015 Conference Tracks: Social Sciences, Emerging technologies / technology management, business models organizational studies, International business, Strategic management, Operations & supply chain management, Social entrepreneurship and SME management, Marketing management, Human resource management, Finance & accounting, Economics. www.abmconferences.com/gcbms.php



16TH International Conference on Knowledge, Culture and Change in Organizations

Call For Papers. This Conference will be held 19-20 April 2016 at the University of Hawaii at Manoa in Honolulu, Hawaii, USA. 2016 Special Focus: Climates of Change: Organizations in a Time of Ecological and Social Vulnerability. Organizations function like communities that have internal aspects: values, behaviors, and culture of the organization itself.

Conference Themes
• Management Education
• Change Management
• Knowledge Management
• Organizational Cultures
What are the leadership opportunities in a time of environmental vulnerability and social uncertainty as organizations face society? What might be the shape of new modes of leadership exploring opportunities for the development of ethical models of organizational growth and the emergence of new sustainability practices?

Proposal Submissions and Deadlines
The current review period closing date for the latest round of submissions to the Call for Papers (a title and short abstract) is 19 April 2015*. Please visit our website for more information on submitting your proposal, future deadlines, and registering for the conference. If you are unable to attend the conference, you may still join the community and submit your article for peer review and possible publication, upload an online presentation, and enjoy subscriber access to The Organization Collection of Journals.

*Proposals are reviewed in rounds adhering to monthly deadlines. Check the website often to see the current review round.
Visit the website: ontheorganization.com



Illustrating Examples

Assignment: Develop a 5-10 page essay based on the guidelines below. Be sure to use MyAIU and its elements to compliment the article. Bibliography (include at end of essay): Anker, Susan. Real Essays with Readings with 2009 MLA Update: Writing Projects for College, Work, and Everyday Life. Palgrave Macmillan, 2009.

www.aiu.edu/online/etempl/fin/pdf/Real_Essays-Susan_Anker2.pdf This AIU assignment uses the book, Real Essays with Readings. The link to the book is given above. This book teaches how to write essays. You will read different parts of the book to understand how an essay is written. Then you will write a certain kind of essay. The kind of essay for this assignment is Illustrating Examples. First, read the following pages: o Chapter 1, pages 1 – 21. (Basics of writing & organizing your schedule) o Chapter 2, pages 36 – 41. (Moving from reading to writing) o Chapter 3, pages 48 – 52. (Understanding the structure of paragraphs & essays) o Chapter 4, pages 62 – 73. (Developing your topic & prewriting techniques) o Chapter 8, 110 – 124. (Writing a draft) o Chapter 21, 369 – 374. (Use a list of works cited at the end of your essays.) Then you will read Chapter 11 on the essay of Illustration. Then you will write the essay using the knowledge covered in the above readings.

This essay assignment requires you to give real examples from your own life experience to support an idea that you develop in an essay. This is a very powerful form of supporting your essay’s main point. Examples create a profound impression upon the reader of your essay. If your examples are good, the reader will most likely agree with your ideas. The reader will also better understand why you personally think the way that you do.

Find the rest of the instructions at: www.aiu.edu/pressroomnew.asp?ItemID=800&rcid=73&pcid=63&cid=73



Graduation Ceremony

April 2015



António Jinga
Doctor of Education
Education
Angola
R. Andres Hurtado Garcia
Bachelor of Science
Marketing
Colomb ia
Emmanuel Essah Afari
Bachelor of Science
Industrial Enginee ring
Ghana
Kodikaragama A. Tharindu Nalaka
Bachelor of Science
Architecture
Kuwait
Carmelino João Diogo Ponta
Bachelor of Science
Mechanical Enginee ring
Angola
Mwenze Mutengu Mick-Oscar
Master of Science
Information Technology
Congo
Hayford Danso
Doctor of Business Adm inistration
Business Manageme nt
Ghana
Kaoxiong Songzacheng
Master of Science
Environme ntal Enginee ring
Lao People’s Dem ocratic Rep ublic
Beatriz Asunción Frouté
Doctor of Psychology
Psychology
Argentina
Juan Manuel Hidalgo Fermin
Bachelor of Science
Mechanical Enginee ring
Dominican Rep ublic
Joseph Amonoo-Warden
Bachelor of Science
Chem ical Enginee ring
Ghana
Blessings Karaani Chipendo
Doctor of Business Adm inistration
Finance
Malawi
Roberto Chacón Escobar
Bachelor of Science
Industrial Mechanical Enginee ring
Bolivia
Bernabé Ruiz Flores
Bachelor of Science
Comp uter Information System s
Ecuador
Justice Essuman
Master of Business Adm inistration
International Manageme nt
Ghana
Chrissie Mangulenje
Bachelor of Developme nt Studies
Project Manageme nt
Malawi
Erasto Mlyuka
Master of Business Adm inistration
Business Administration
China
Jacqueline Davenport
Doctor of Forensic Psychology
Psychology
Ecuador
Erick Oswaldo Díaz Contreras
Bachelor of Science
Business Administration
Guatem ala
Dulce María Patricia Vidal Licona
Doctor of Philosophy
Psychology
México
Benjamín Quintero Piedrahíta
Doctor of Arts
Arts
Colomb ia
Nanci Judith Encalada Cordova
Doctor of Philosophy
Health Care Administration
Ecuador
Alvaro Raul Pineda Matute
Bachelor of Science
Business Administration
Honduras
Karina Eichner Stern
Doctor of Science
Psychotherapy
México
Giovanni Fernando Jaimes Santacruz
Bachelor of Science
Electrical Enginee ring
Colomb ia
Mohammad Gaber El Sayed
Doctor of Business Manageme nt
Manageme nt and Globalization
Egypt
Pedro Pablo Ramírez Ortiz
Bachelor of Science
Agronomy
Honduras
Miguel Perez Martinez
Master of Marke ting
Marketing
México
Erick Gustavo Pérez Chacaliaza
Business and Economics
Business Administration
Perú
Frieda Roxana Del Águila Tuesta
Doctor of Philosophy
Legal Studies
Perú
Luis Alberto Lizárraga Pérez
Master of Business Adm inistration
Finance
Perú
William Martínez Martínez
Bachelor of Science
Business Administration
Puerto Rico
Mohammed Deyab M. D. Al-Sahly
Master of Business Adm inistration
Business Administration
Qatar
Nazar Bashir Al Tayeb Ahmed
Doctor of Science
Human Resources Manageme nt
Saudi Arabia
Mohammed Makame Mohammed
Doctor of Philosophy
Economics
Tanzania
Anuradha Viswanathan
Master of Science
Physics
UA E
Edwin Otoniel Palencia
Doctor of Philosophy
Educational Administration
USA
Kabila Banza Bertin
Master of Science
Social Sciences
Zaire
Jimmy Chitulwa
Master of Science
Civil Enginee ring
Zamb ia
Yvette Hamusonde Munakaampe
Doctor of Philosophy
Curriculum Design
Zamb ia
Juan Hernán Ortiz Zambrano
Master of Business Adm inistration
International Manageme nt
Colomb ia
Waleed Abd Elrahmen Ibrahim Elmallah
Master of Science
Project Manageme nt
Egypt
Newell, Elymas Davidson
Doctor of Theology
Pastoral Theology
Italy
Umoru Andrew Okhenoaghue
Master of Science
Organizational Leadership
Nigeria



Testimonial

Hayford Danso
DBA in Business Management
February 23, 2015

“I will like to categorize my experiences in these major contexts: Economic, Professional, Socio-Cultural and Academics. Economic. My vision as a student from childhood was to gain my doctorate at a reasonable period of time. I realized that my major impediment was going to be financial. AIU not only helped me to achieve such a dream, but also did that at a reasonable cost. The flexible payment plan coupled with it’s comparative low cost made AIU an ideal and economically prudent place for my study.

Professional. Professionally, the training at AIU has enhanced my decision making skills in the fields of Operation, Finance, Relationship Management and Strategy. This was possible through the wider references made available at the University library and various books read during the course. I made personal visits to companies to understand their operational challenges, and how they overcome these challenges. Socio-Cultural. The demands of AIU gave me an opportunity to relate with people from diverse cultural and social backgrounds.

This has changed my way of life and thoughts towards people and places in the world. I have tried to rethink the way I see people and accept their views on an issue while I pursue my professional endeavors. I have come to accept that every situation is a learning one and everyone irrespective of his social and economic background has something meaningful to share. I have built a network of professional from AIU which has started yielding some results in my professional and social life. A book I read during the course ‘Fractal Time’ has also changed my view about this world and how things happen therein. Academics. Knowledge, they say is power. AIU has helped me to acquire the requisite power deserving of an Academic. The flexible, self-learning experience, self-curriculum development, referencing and consultation in the academic process at AIU make you unique in Academia.

Professor S. N. Lartey, one of my consultants in Ghana once said “an intelligent person is the one who can search for what information he wants and use it to solve his problem. I think Atlantic International University has implanted that power in me and they have logically made me an intelligent person to face all the challenges of life and profession.

AIU, in a nutshell, has helped me to experience quality in Academic, Social, Cultural, Economic and Professional pursuits as I expected. I wish to admonish all and sundry to make Atlantic International University the University of choice in their academic pursuit. Thank you to the Tutors, Advisors and Staff of AIU. Long Live the University!

Testimonial

Samwel Medukenya
Bachelor of Civil Engineering
March 8, 2015

“My learning experience with AIU has been challenging yet rewarding. My dreams had for many years been to acquire a degree in Civil Engineering, but it was not easy for some reasons including time and financials. However I did not stop until September 2013 when I found AIU while surfing on internet. In fact it was not easy to make a decision to contact the university because I was worried about getting into online scam. Many products online are not regulated and neither do educational institutions. AIU with its dedicated and well organized tutors, advisors, a powerful online library, and the method of payments, curriculum design and the flexible learning calendar has grabbed my attention than any other online university that I have ever conducted.

I would like to express my heart feeling gratitude to the entire AIU team, the tutor, advisors for their unconditional support they rendered to me though out my study at the university. Ms. Renata De Silva for example is actually the one who convinced me and gave me guidelines that eventually made me successful. The AIU online library is a powerful tool that has helped me complete my papers and as matter of fact it has made me understand the andragogy education better and how to cite sources throughout my degree courses. The hidden functionalities provided by the library has made me learn many other important things in life for example use of excel and many other in daily life. The library has really helped me accomplish my assignments smoothly.

Although technology revolution has many benefits, online scams are reported every day making us aware and sometimes afraid of exploiting the use of new money transfer technology. However, AIU has a very convenient and flexible methods of payment For example Wire transfer is the method that I used throughout my payment transfer and it was awesome.

Designing curriculum myself has been a wonderful experience because I planned it to fit my needs in my carreer and this helped me solve the challenges facing the construction industry in my country. Although online education is challenging compared to traditional education, I would recommend AIU distance learning degree for it is the best and other online institution should adopt that. I will not hesitate to recommend my friends to pursue their degrees at AIU. In conclusion, I would say that studying with AIU has been remarkable and a milestone in my life. Ultimate goals in life can be achieved through continuous struggle. With this spirit therefore I will begin my masters degree of course with AIU before long.






Ciudad Bolívar Space Germination Elements

“How nice it sounds a little tiple and what it costs,how much it costs a rifle and so fierce that thunders.”
–Jorge Veloza

Recognition of the territory Within the configuration of each human being there skills and attitudes that show what their true skills for different areas in which they can develop. Now, Ciudad Bolivar is one of the most depressed areas of Bogotá City; besides its geographical constitution, infrastructure problems, illegal residents have educational deficiencies that limit their academic, artistic and cultural developments. To get to Ciudad Bolivar is necessary move south ends of the city, mountains begin to blur with aggressive ways to give notice to the city and the road to the eastern hills but where should I start a tour amid Nature only are houses, piled one upon another as if they were eruptions of the mountain. The ascent to Ciudad Bolivar is 3100 m; during the tour each curve gives the feeling of emptiness but also the image that meet a new world, one by one clump children behaving as spectators evidencing the arrival of a new character possibly leading new educational alternatives, dynamic or play with so isolated and high locality. Search Element Within each of these confines, endless stairs, houses anchored inside the mountain, children’s cheeks burned by wind and sun, of parents who work around the clock to provide a livelihood to its moderately family of stray dogs that are mixed between citizens and are the first peek at the entrances of schools or centers of education, and that is where we see those infants who are immersed in the most hidden of its being an element that will allow leave her so close and complicated Ciudad Bolivar to form a new life project. Some visionaries with the ideal of building a better country and a better society to present the world have stepped into this place marginalized to provide new areas of knowledge and socialization for children in the sector; achieved many of the children attend school journalism, dance, Capoeira, soccer and music with the goal of finding your Element and generate new life projects. Unfortunately the lack of support and resources prevents this job done long term and end when they finish the few income of teachers or when there is a notorious shortage of materials. Entering a classroom is to discover the sacrifices they make teachers with true vocation of service to generate new knowledge or discover the item in its students with biased elements within reach. A social communicator and journalist provides tools for children to generate their own opportunities for participation and dissemination of information, to start the process is performed with an exercise that allows students to know their level of creativity, writing and reading, this is the automatic writing. In this assault the unconscious innate abilities that have children on the outskirts of Bogotá for poetry, short stories and even music are discovered; likewise the rejection or aversion to generate some by the academy and study. What would these kids that show their artistic qualities in the exercise of automatic writing if your gift to be promoted as fine art?

At the same time, a group of 30 children, mostly boys are located in the green area of the school that is only a small patch of dry land where they make their physical activities; and that is where they find the practice of Capoeira martial art mixed with dance that allows them recognition of a world and a different and alien to their culture environment; As in other practices this web of new opportunities and capoeira as an artistic expression of Ciudad Bolívar children reveal new possibilities, new talent; each has within itself an element that constitutes the axis propelling new talent. The practice of Capoeira Capoeira children requires the body and mind a willingness both to perform specific movements and coordinated follow the teachings and rules of behavior, such as organizing time to practice. Dance is the action or way of dancing. It is the execution of movements to the beat of the music that can express feelings and emotions. In children participating arts groups within these great promises of dancing and dance show; haplessly the existence of genres like reggaeton have only permeate the dance possibility of this population skewing his body language, artistic dimension and expression of Colombian folk music, Afro- Antillean music and other rhythms anything outside of sexism and misogyny. In conclusion, Colombia is a country with millions of surrounding elements in many children, unfortunately their immediate environment has not allowed his life plan is drawn from this virtue. Not the mere discovery of element but its strengthening, projection, unfolding and exposure is necessary, for this reason, the embodiment of the present Master in Sociology aims primarily to build a better society for Colombia to Bogota but above all fight to rescue the elements Day after day walking the steep streets of Ciudad Bolivar.

Publications by Students: aiu.edu/StudentPublication.html





Education for Evolution

By Dr. Rosa Hilda Lora M. / Advisor at AIU

The empirical concept we have of Education is people who have good manners or people with studies. From this we can infer there is an education that provides the society, it is called informal education, and another education where we have to go to a school, that is formal education.

Education in a school means that there is an organization for it and it has a norm that we receive everything we have to do already programmed.

What we have experienced is that everything that is organized in the school or college we attend, there are subjects that we do not like and wonder why we need them, what will I do from learning them.

The organization that each school or college has follows a Curriculum. What is that, a Curriculum; it sounds like CV or Curriculum of life, and often we tell people send your Curriulum but they send their resume and work experience. So what is a Curriculum? Let’s see, what those working in these documents say are: “We define the Curriculum as a plan that norms and leads a specific process for specific teaching and learning that takes place in an educational institution.” Arnaz (2009, p. 9). If the Curriculum leads a process then we have to see what goes into the process input. The process has a concept of university, a concept of science, a concept of human being and a concept of society with its production form. According to the above to develop a curriculum much research in each of these areas is needed and that is the reason so many people work on it on fixed-term. The Curriculum of AIU (Atlantic International University) comprises:

Mission: “To be a higher learning institution committed to the generation of cultural development alternatives that are sustainable to give the world and the environment a more efficient management; exercising human and community rights through diversity with the ultimate goal of achieving satisfaction and global evolution. Home of AIU. http://www.aiu.edu

Vision: “The strengthening of the individual to achieve world convergence through sustainable educational design based on Andragogy and Omniology”. Home of AIU. http://www.aiu.edu

Organizational structure:
It is the way teaching and administration are integrated.

School structure:
comprising the system in terms of degrees and accreditation. The Descriptive Letters are exclusive to students, since being an international university each student can be a full person in their home and in the global society. I can see from the above that when I am admitted to college I accept everything that was determined in each of these areas. Miracle! There is a university that tells me: you can do within the elements that make up your own Curriculum your own Descriptive Charter, which is the subjects program you want to study. When they say that, it seems the world falls on me and I go: and, how will I do such a document, I need to be contacted, why do they not give it to me as in other universities; I am a teacher but they give me my programs ready-made; My God! who asked me to enroll in this university? To make your own Descriptive Charter it is the greatest gift you can receive because you can build the project of your life. What do I have to do? Find out what development projects has my country because they are what I am going to be working, see what international development projects are, find out what is the knowledge society because this is how we learn now, seek information about transdiscipline, have a project about what I want to be as a person, have information on what needs we have as a global society originated from values. With all these tools find the format the above is presented. The format tells me I need to put some goals, objectives of anything is what I intend to achieve. The description is what I will encompass: that’s the breakdown for each subject and means item by item how far it will go; activities mean what I will do to learn the subject with their subsections: I’ll do an essay, I’ll do a multiple choice set, I will build a project to solve this or that, with a likely extension of...; sources means, shall it be in books, magazines, shall I go to a company, to a lab? And finally, the bibliography, which is to detail each document or item identifying them perfectly to current science standards. I get the great opportunity of my life, to build what I now want to be, and given as I have grown I do not realize this is the greatest gift: I have my passport to be what I consider better as a professional, as individual and as a member of society that is my country and the global village that is the world in which we live today: can I have an activity where I live or across borders, given the communication society, besides managing the platform and doing my homework using the Virtual Library of AIU allow me to advance in the digitized world which I am part of it whether I like it or not. I have to bless the good decision I made and devote myself to study, to build the new person I will be. Happiness is not given away; we win it and here I go.











Free-Range Kids

A new parenting trend is on the rise. Some may know it as free-range parenting, and others from a bygone era will fondly remember it as the way that life once was. In past decades, kids would leave the house not to return until the street lights turned on.



It was a time where smart phones, texting and tablets were non-existent, so there was no way of getting in touch with your child or your child getting in touch with you unless they ventured back home. Yet parents did not worry, and their children usually returned home safely, just in time for dinner. This all sounds like it was very normal and wholesome. A community of parents kept an eye on each other’s kids –it does take a village after all– and the child possessed a sense of independence to add to his or her set of life skills.

So why is it that today the other village members appear to have gone mad? Parents are calling 911 on other parents, and in-turn these families are suffering from not just scrutiny, but harsh penalties like visits from child protective services or job loss. For example, after these Maryland free-range parents let their two children walk a mere half mile away from home, the kids were picked up by the cops, and then the entire family was subjected to visits from the local child protective agency. Free-range parents believe that letting their child stay home alone independently or walk to school by themselves is a way to create an independent and confident kid that will consequently grow to be a responsible adult that has retained those vital qualities. A free-range kid might carry a laminated card stating so, and it perhaps will also state that they are not lost. Anti-free-range parents who encounter these children often intervene in a manner that some would consider an overreaction –even if a child is not in distress or in need of any additional assistance. So what is the big deal? Let’s looks at some of the reasons why these other parents are getting so panicstricken by free-rangers. One reason is that in prior eras, society did a better job at looking out for each other’s families. Remember, the whole village thing. As a whole, neighbors were more neighborly, but particularly in the area of raising children. That was the case so much that in the 1950s and 1960s, parents would even discipline other people’s children, and that was thought of as completely normal.

Furthermore, these days, both parents often work outside of the home, and the statistics of a family containing two working parents with children under the age of 18 is rapidly increasing. When school is not in session, it leaves a lot of time for kids to be unattended or looking out for themselves. Parents are not even available to help with their own children, let alone other people’s. This is no longer a world where one can rely on other moms to be available all day while they are homemaking, to serve lunch to the neighborhood children or at the very least, keep a watchful eye on them. Neighbors don’t borrow sugar, or welcome new folks with a basket of cookies, and we can’t keep our doors unlocked either. In reality, kidnapping and other crimes against children are climbing. As a matter of fact, an average of 2,185 children under the age of 18 are reported missing each day, statistics tell us. That means that more than 797,500 children go missing annually. While some cases are runaways, “Each year there are about 3,000 to 5,000 non-family abductions reported to police, most of which are short term sexuallymotivated cases. About 200 to 300 of these cases, or 6 percent, make up the most serious cases where the child was murdered, ransomed or taken with the intent to keep.” Still, the numbers also tell us that more children die in car accidents each year, than as result of crimes specifically against them.

We acknowledge the concern and validate the reasoning of people who don’t quite agree with free-range parents –it is the child’s well-being you are worried about– but calling the cops on another parent when they are not committing a crime, is just way too extreme. Besides, policing all parenting, may be doing more harm rather than benefiting. Is there another way of handling something like that? Waiting with the child until their parent arrives, then chatting with them about the matter and your concerns over the safety of the child might just suffice. Although, that would be way too “village-member” or 1950s of people. It would be very human, and in our society of depersonalizing everything, it is so much easier to call the police and then forget about it while driving away. Source: Can Free-Range Parenting Work in Today’s World? by Catherine Gill. www.care2.com





Closing the Gap

In a recent issue of Science, researcher Kevin Boehnke puts forth a compelling argument for what has long been known as a “well rounded” education, one that includes a sprinkling of humanities classes in a science education for the purpose of keeping scientific studies diverse. These classes are often regarded as a chore by science students, who are eager to return to the purpose of their work, but he points out that humanities education is important —yes, even for scientists. He’s joining a growing movement of researchers and authorities who believe it’s time for science to leap across the humanities gap. The move benefits not just science, but the world in general. However, it would require a retooling of science curricula, especially at schools with a focus on the hard sciences.

Boehnke points to the fact that there’s a fundamental divide in how scientists and others approach information and challenges. Scientists tend to come up with clear hypotheses and questions, working to solve them through provable and repeatable methods –a researcher might want to illustrate how a chemical operates within a cell, for example, and would run a series of experiments to learn more about the process before writing them up in detail for other researchers. In the humanities, the very “facts” are questionable, highly malleable depending on who is telling them and why, and most questions are openended and unsolvable. We still don’t really know who Shakespeare was, for example, or the logic behind the decisions of great military leaders. For scientists, studying the humanities can be an exercise in frustration, as their training has accustomed them to clearly delineable situations that have provable answers, even if it takes time to arrive at those answers. Even unproved and unanswered theorems like some of those in math, such as the Goldbach Conjecture, are theoretically solvable, even if we don’t have the tools to do so right now. Meanwhile, those in humanities, accustomed to open-ended conversations that require critical thinking outside the box but often don’t arrive at ultimate conclusions, find the sciences intimidating and frustrating. Scientists joining the call for humanities education speak of the need to break their students and colleagues out of the “trap of certainty” and the tendency to insist on rigid and rules and explanations for the world around them.

“Today’s scientists,” Boehnke says, “need to be prepared to tackle complex challenges in a globalized (and multidisciplinary) world, to think critically about how we solve problems, and to communicate persuasively with diverse audiences.” He points to the unexpected benefits of his humanities training when it came to understanding problems from a social context, not just a scientific one. In his case, his focus on clean water from a scientific perspective illustrated that there were clear scientific solutions to the problem –but he found that it was taking place within a larger community framework. In order to solve the problem, he had to be able to understand that framework and communicate within it. His comments raise another important issue: Many scientists have poor communications literacy. When talking to other scientists, they can engage in deep, detailed conversations about subjects of interest. They have a harder time, however, taking that to the lay community. The ability to communicate clearly and in understandable terms can help researchers familiarize people with the work they perform –and make science more accessible to everyone. Source: Text by S.E. Smith. www.care2.com