Mike4S's Posts
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You're right! Have you applied? H Melsan: |
I just checked. It is some hours to start Melsan:
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Who has applied for the ongoing LASG recruitment of teachers? Please share the website. |
Even Biz Admin! Henryedom: |
I suspect GNLD kingzic: |
Most time we consider these proprietors and their peanuts because of the home lesson opportunities. Instead of me to be idle I will go with even N40k salary in Lagos Island provided I'll have lessons and stay around there. |
I was not invited Aim07: |
Yes. I've told the boss that I can't afford to leave home lessons. endtime1: |
I'm aware. The most salient reason why I want a change is that I've been in this particular location for almost 2 decades. Tpappie:THANKS |
Good morning Friends, I am ambivalent on whether to take a teaching job at a place far away from my home or not. I was promised accommodation but the remuneration is not encouraging. The only thing encouraging is the lesson that is paying in that environment. The lesson can be N50k or above depending on ones bargaining power. My fear now is the usual fear of unknown such as: 1. I have not lived in a school before. How can I be going for home lesson if I secure any? 2. Living my current place of abode to that place may be a way of quitting finally because I cannot cope paying the dual burden e.g. NEPA bill. 3. If I call it a quit to my present place of abode, can I last in this new place because I never knew what they are up to 4. Privacy Please folks, advice me |
Aim07:did you honour that interview? If yes mail me on how it went |
SO IT IS THE REASON BEHIND THIS: Name: Number: MTNPulse Content: Dear Customer, please be informed that the Pulse night plan is N25 for 125MB and N50 for 250MB Time: 17/08/2018 11:21:07 |
The poster should know that economic hardship in Nigeria is the most salient factor most Nigerians consider before making that move. In general, handsome salaries usually make people to sit tight because we believe here that: "A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush." While I've never met with the poster, my conjecture about her is that she has left Nigeria long ago. Nigeria today is not encouraging for job-seekers. Only those that are benefitting from the status quo are averring that all is well. Those from economically disadvantaged backgrounds will always leave Nigeria to look for opportunities because there is no hope for them. As for me, I'm completely unmoved by every blandishment the poster is trying to use in her desperation to stop me from immigrating to the west if I see the opportunity. There is a growing consensus that the situation is dire-and looking bleaker everyday. When it comes to making decision that affects other people, you had better base those decisions on consensus reality. The only way to escape the economic hardship in Nigeria is to leave Nigeria at all cost. Come back to Nigeria you will see that our government's ruthless policies have caused the population to try any available wild escapade. It is better to receive execrable treatment outside than to receive it from your own people. If only you have searched for jobs and did not get it just because you don't have anybody at the top to help you, you will understand what I mean. If only you have paid for electricity bill that you did not consume you will know that it is better to stay in a place where you will be paying as you consume. If only you have lived outside your state and you got a treatment that placed you as a second citizen you will understand what I mean. As I'm typing this, my continue stay in Nigeria is contingent upon my ability to raise what will take me out to any first world country. Even though it is to enter into servitude and work as an unpaid labour for sometimes many Nigerians are ready to do it. Here in Nigeria, we are ready to work but we are not offered work. |
This is to inform the general public that the Lagos SUBEB has not called for the submission of applications for Y2018/19 Recruitment Exercise at its Maryland office or any Local Government Education Authority in the state. sign. Management MzDarocha: |
Evathyst:This is what I saw when I checked:
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MzDarocha:I just checked and I saw this;
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I can't wait for those Lekki schools to call me! |
for those concerned;
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check your email Aim07: |
A teacher works anywhere. If I may ask, were you not exposed to Intro to pry edu in 100-level? sprints1:A six-digit figure that's rarely earned as a teacher and you're here still saying it is an underemployment! You need to come and join those in unemployment line so you can learn your lesson. |
Stop coming here to tantalise job seekers with a job that does not exist. phaya: |
I'd a dream last night and it was Atiku that won the PDP primary election. |
cutieme:Since you are allowed to get PGDE, you have no case here. Those of us that majored in Education don't tolerate dabblers like you. Can a teacher go to other professions and make a case for their strict rule of limiting job opportunities to themselves? The answer is no but you are here making a case for a profession that allows others if only they can go for a year course (PGDE). It is not even allowed in most schools as recruitment is thrown open to every Tom, Dick, and Harry. My friend you have no case here. |
PDP all the way |
Researchers have long sought for answers on the best way to help people quit smoking. Often, it comes down to two options: quitting cold turkey or gradually tapering a smoking habit. But which one works better? “A lot of people think that the common sense way to give up smoking is to reduce the amount they smoke before quitting,” says Nicola Lindson-Hawley of the University of Oxford, who led a new study published in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine. But the results suggested just the opposite: quitting cold turkey is best. Lindson-Hawley and her colleagues looked at almost 700 people in England who smoked at least 15 cigarettes a day but who were planning to quit. They all set a quit date for two weeks. Half of them were randomly assigned to smoke normally until their quit date, then to stop abruptly. The other half gradually reduced their smoking over the two weeks leading up to the appointed day. Both groups had behavioral counseling, nicotine patches and nicotine replacement therapy from products like gum, lozenges and mouth spray. The way the researchers measured success was by looking at smoking abstinence for four weeks after the quit date, and then six months later. Those who quit abruptly stuck to it the best—about 25% better than the gradual-cessation group. And 49% of the abrupt group were successful, while 39% of the gradual group were. At the half-year mark, 22% of the cold-turkey group were still smoke-free, while 15% of the gradual group were. Interestingly, more people said they preferred to quit gradually rather than abruptly. But a person’s preferences didn’t make much of a difference in their success. “Even if people wanted to quit gradually, they were more likely to quit if they used the abrupt method,” Lindson-Hawley says. The research didn’t look at other potential forms of smoking cessation, including e-cigarettes, which have yet to be definitively proven as an effective smoking cessation tool. And even though quitting cold was better, Lindson-Hawley says, “the quit rates we found in the gradual group were still quite good.” In future research, she plans to explore the methods of gradual quitting to see if they can be made more effective. “If there are people who really feel they can’t quit abruptly, and they want to quit gradually—otherwise they won’t try to quit at all—we still need to support them to do that.”
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A Russian man is divorcing his wife of 14 years after she criticised Lionel Messi's performance in the World Cup. Arsen, 40, and Lyudmila, 37, bonded over their shared love of football when they met in a sports bar in Chelyabinsk, Russia, during the 2002 tournament. They wed less than two years later despite the fact they were fans of rival Moscow football teams - and he backs Barcelona while she supports Real Madrid. And it was Arsen's love for Argentine striker Messi and his wife's preference for his biggest rival Cristiano Ronaldo that ended their marriage last week, afi.ru reports. He said that he and his wife regularly joke with one another about Messi and Ronaldo – but this World Cup provided 'the last straw.' Arsen said Argentina's disappointing debut during the World Cup this year led to his wife mocking the player's performance. He ignored her – but when he was celebrating Messi's goal against Nigeria, he snapped when his wife began mocking the star player again. 'From the very beginning of the World Cup, Lyudmila constantly mocked me and my beloved player, saying that he played poorly and couldn't even score an important penalty in the game with Iceland,' he told the newspaper. He said he was extremely worried for Argentina during the game against Nigeria. 'When she once again started speaking unkindly about Lionel and his performance, I got angry and, in turn, expressed everything I thought of her handsome Ronaldo, the Portugese national team, herself and all the other clubs Lyudmila is crazy about. 'Then I took all my things and left her for good.' The following day, he filed for divorce. Both Argentina and Portugal crashed out of the 2018 World Cup in the round of 16 stage. source:http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5945613/World-Cup-Lionel-Messi-lead-Russian-couples-divorce.html?ito=social-twitter_mailonline |
This is not applicable to Part-Time graduates. Whether you are under thirty or not you will be served exemption certificate |
I was there some years back and all I saw was a huge crowd that was attended by a single HR. Rbae: |