Business + Education
Equipping you with the tools you need to succeed.
Learning the Art of Patience: 6 Tips for Life
Whether you have hit a halt in your life or are experiencing a drastic change that is making you question who you are and where you are heading, I am urging you to have some patience with yourself. The movies and our dreams often have a funny way of deluding us about our paths in life. By this age I'm going to have this or that, and all before I'm thirty. Unrealistic and very fanciful. The ugly truth is that all things, especially the really great ones, take time.
Malika AdikiPublished 7 years ago in JournalTapping the Inner Treasure
Have you ever felt as though there was something very valuable inside of you? If there was a way to access this hidden treasure, would you be interested in learning how to do so? I have just the insight for you. Below are the four most profound questions you can ask yourself which will enable you to unveil what I call your "dominant gift". So what is the "dominant gift"? It is an innate/primary endowment bestowed upon each individual to serve humanity and contribute to society. Once discovered and utilized, it has the potential of enabling a person to become great. One of the most significant aspects of this dynamic skill is that it comes already equipped with the necessary knowledge and wisdom needed to operate if effectively.
Damon NailerPublished 7 years ago in JournalGetting the Balance Right
Hi. I'm Sue, a professional actress and cover Drama teacher, working across Essex on a daily basis during Term Time. Over the last few years I have been working as a cover teacher covering just about every subject known to man in both Secondary Schools and Primary Schools.
Sue ThomasPublished 7 years ago in Journal3 Ways to Take Advantage of Your Competitors' Flaws
When it comes to business, you may feel like your competitors are just there to take customers from you. By finding ways to take advantage of their flaws, you'll see that's not true. You can learn a lot about what not to do from your competition.
Kari Ann FallonPublished 7 years ago in JournalHome-Schooling
In the UK, it has been usual to enrol a child in a school at age four or five. Other options would have been considered out of the ordinary. Nowadays, however, more and more parents are choosing other methods.
Sapphire RavenclawPublished 7 years ago in JournalFDA Regulatory Expert Launches Nationwide Consulting Firm to Help Dental Laboratories Stay Compliant
CARSON CITY, NEVADA—According to data from the U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, there are more than 7,000 dental laboratories in the United States. Now regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, they must each adhere to strict and often complicated rules—including the government’s new 21 CFR 820 guidance.
Nikki Gaskins CampbellPublished 7 years ago in JournalWhen Your Passion for Writing Loses Its Luster
I don’t think there is an artist out there who has not gone through the following impasse: “Why am I doing this, wasting my time trying to get folks to appreciate my work and putting so much blood, sweat and tears into something I no longer find enjoyable?”
Vivienne NealPublished 7 years ago in JournalLean In and Sandberg’s Faulty Feminism
Sheryl Sandberg is the Chief Operating Officer of Facebook and in 2013 she published Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead. Her book was met with both profound praise and critique—from women. She is, after all, a woman in leadership with significant power. As such, it seems that women should be excited to hear about her tips for success so that we can be just like her. However, her book is more of a self-help book than the feminist manifesto Sandberg herself touted it to be (Sandberg 2013; Taylor 2017). More importantly, it should not be considered the cornerstone of the new feminist wave. This essay will argue that Lean In is a net loss for feminism. I will first discuss the positive impact that Sandberg and Lean In deserve credit for. After, however, I will argue for the negative impact of her book with a discussion of Risman’s (1998) idea of the three levels of gender and the capitalistic incentives behind the marketing of Lean In. I will finish with some ideas on how Lean In could have been better, and how the new LeanIn.org community can perhaps correct some of the book’s mistakes.