LiftedMan's Posts
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I saw someone engaging the Nigerian immigration on this matter and i just want to use this medium to encourage other Nigerians in Qatar to join and help the person chatting the up the Nigerian immigration on twitter. One persons can't do it alone.
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some people have to fly to Nigeria just renew their passport. just wait till the airports are opened and see how many Nigerian will come to Nigeria for sake of renewing passport. every other embassy works well apart from Nigerian embassy. i read the embassy in Qatar doesn't have a passport machine at all, those folk there have to come to Nigeria when their passport expires. |
skimena:Fake story. |
If not for the ban on Air travel he would have been flow out of Nigeria. What will it cost them to build world-class hospitals in all 36 states for heaven sake? And build world class primary health care system to reduce pressure on the main hospitals. Nigeria. |
Don't believe this useless story. |
Is this how people marry themselves ? |
DMainMan:Thanks a lot. |
DMainMan:Thanks a lot, it's a level 7 Diploma in supply chain management. Offered my OTHM |
Thanks a lot, it's a level 7 Diploma in supply chain management. Offered my OTHM |
AlayeKondogbia:Thanks |
Good day Nairalanders, especially those who stay in UK, I want to start a course online and it's a Post Graduate diploma in SCM from an accredited tutor and it's should cost around £1500 to complete. If you've done any OTHM course, please I need your advise, although have done my own indept research I just want some impute Thanks |
The three allies of the USA have accused them subverting their efforts of securing face mask needed for their citizens especially their health worker. With confirmed coronavirus cases surpassing 250,000 in America this week, are the Americans playing dirty? Source: https://www.rt.com/news/484935-us-takes-masks-germany/
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The health ministry said the new cases had been found in quarantine and not mixing in with public [Sorin Furcoi/Al Jazeera] Qatar announced 238 new confirmed cases of coronavirus on Wednesday saying the number of infections was likely to rise. The number of coronavirus infections in the energy-rich Gulf state is now 262 so far. More:Timeline: How China's new coronavirus spreadCoronavirus: Which countries have confirmed cases?What happens if you catch the new coronavirus? The health ministry said the new cases had been found in quarantine and not mixing among the public. On Sunday, Qatar announced three coronavirus victims who had "shared accommodation". Wednesday's major spike in cases was related to those three expatriate workers. The ministry added the number of people infected "is likely to increase among contacts of previously announced patients". It said "community members to be reassured that all declared cases enjoy a very good health condition and receive medical care at the Center for Transitional Diseases". Coronavirus: Stories of quarantine (2:31) Qatar has not reported any fatalities but closed universities and schools, cancelled many public events, including the MotoGP, and banned travellers from 14 countries entering the country. Contagion spreads Many of the initial cases diagnosed in Qatar - one of the richest nations in the world with a population of about three million - were from a group of citizens and their foreign staff repatriated to the Gulf country from Iran. Iran on Wednesday reported 63 new deaths from the novel coronavirus, the highest single-day toll in the three weeks since the Islamic Republic announced the first deaths from the outbreak. Qatar's health ministry has temporarily banned the entry of travellers from 14 countries: Bangladesh, China, Egypt, India, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Nepal, Pakistan, the Philippines, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Syria and Thailand. Qatar Airways, the country's national carrier, had already suspended flights to and from Italy, one of the hardest-hit countries. Source : https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/03/qatar-coronavirus-cases-jump-238-day-200311154834214.html |
You guys should consider Qatar. No be only UAE. |
AlayeKondogbia:I agree with you that doing this in Naija can be tricky, we need to plan for the future. With 200 million citizens and counting we need to prepare the Nigerian child for the future |
Before I read this article, I thought about thus and I felt this should be done in Nigeria, not knowing the Americans are already implementing it. Tech is the future, Please read. At every high school, students are required to show proficiency in certain subjects to graduate. Now there’s a push to include computer coding as one of those subjects. The idea is that such a skill will be invaluable in a world that increasingly runs on computer technology. What’s more, many companies report shortages of workers with programming skills. Nearly 20 states have already passed legislation requiring public schools to make computer-science classes accessible to high-school students, according to Code.org, a nonprofit founded by tech investors that says coding and other computer skills should be seen as essential in the 21st century. Critics don’t like the fact that many of the leading advocates have direct ties to the tech industry—companies that would arguably benefit most from a bigger pool of job applicants with software-writing skills. They also argue that adding a coding requirement for graduation is at odds with the very purpose of public education, and its focus on humanistic values. Prof. Robert Sedgewick at Princeton University argues that proficiency in coding is good for students and society in the 21st century. Larry Cuban, a professor emeritus of education at Stanford University, says public schools should not be turned into job-training sites for tech companies. Teaching students to code introduces them to logical thinking, as well as fostering creativity and problem-solving skills. It encourages experimentation, develops persistence and promotes collaboration. Learning to think as a coder gives one a valuable set of strategies for understanding a variety of situations that one will encounter later in life—particularly those who are working outside of tech. A more code-literate set of Iowa Democrats might have been able to foresee problems with the poorly designed app that contributed to the recent fiasco in the Iowa caucuses Then there’s the societal benefit: Our technology-driven economy needs coding-literate citizens who are competitive, astute and discerning in the global marketplace of ideas, opportunity and commerce. Some critics say there is no research proving that learning to code carries such benefits. But I’m not aware of any research showing that each and every thing taught in math, science, English, history and foreign language offers more benefit than coding. I would agree that one purpose of public education should be to develop proud, literate, humane citizens who give back to their communities. But can one claim to be proud of not understanding how one’s phone or the internet works? Can one claim to be literate without being able to understand even the simplest piece of code? Can one be humane and ignore the role technology can play in addressing the problems of the developing world? Today’s reality is that many community values and the development of many aspects of one’s character cannot be addressed without a basic understanding of technology. Values like security, privacy and honesty are threatened precisely because most citizens do not understand technology sufficiently well to be able to push back. Our public-school curriculum, as ever, needs to evolve to stay relevant. Making room for coding and computer science may not even require any reductions in teaching of other subjects. In fact, I believe the opposite is true: Having coding-literate students will enhance the teaching of many other subjects. For instance, students in biology can search for patterns in genomes; in physics they can simulate the motion of planetary bodies; in math and science they can study large data sets or write programs to control robots and drones. Perhaps the most important reason to integrate coding and computer science into the K-12 curriculum is to eliminate gender-based and economic equality gaps. Coding needs to be a standard component in public-school curricula, not just an enrichment program for the well-to-do. The drive to democratize coding literacy is led by concerned individuals who, instead of acting in their own self-interest, understand that coding is a critical skill for the 21st century. It is not vocational training any more than English is vocational training for journalists or economics is vocational training for business executives. I have personally taught thousands of teenagers coding and computer science (and many more online). Only a fraction of them work in tech companies—the rest have gone into a broad variety of careers, feeling empowered to face technological challenges. Coding literacy is not limited to Silicon Valley companies and IT departments. It is becoming a necessity in such sectors as health care, social assistance, business services, construction, entertainment, politics and manufacturing. The basis for education in the last millennium was reading, writing and arithmetic. Now, it is reading writing and computing. Source: https://www.wsj.com/articles |
Ope4Christ:Thanks |
I'm not sure we have many nairalanders here in Qatar. |
LiftedMan:House pls help me. |
Hello house, who has contact at the Nigerian embassy in UAE, I want to come from Qatar to renew my passport soon, I don't want to go to Nigeria. I also want to know if I can get the passport within a week? Thanks |
House please. How long does it take to renew passport at the embassy in UAE. I plan to fly to UAE from Qatar for that purpose but I want confirm this First. Please help me. And in case you have contacts at embassy, please kindly help me with the details. Thanks |
All this fake stories shaa. |
Zombiekiller010:This is a topic single both men and women need to study well, especially the early signs. |
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Things happen that u can never imagine, this may sound like a facade but if you look closer someone you know will tell u a similar story. |
ednut1:In real life? Everybody has their own reality. |
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