Monday, December 31, 2012

Significance Of New Year


New year is the the most celebrated festival in the modern world. Modern Calendar known as AD (Amino domini) starts at January 1st. Almost all over the world celebrate the first day on this calendar, regardless of what they follow. It starts from japan and travels along with time all around the world. As the time travels 24 hours around the world this festival also travel along the time and triggers a nonstop festival for world.  Normally every city and groups celebrate the arrival of new year with fireworks and party. The most famous firework is in London, Tokyo, Dubai and the other major cities of the world.

From ancient times, people have welcomed the new year with rituals to attract good fortune.

New Year's Eve, with its emphasis on romance and indulgence, might seem like a totally secular celebration. But underneath all that glitter and sparkle is an ancient holiday with deep spiritual roots. For centuries, and in similar ways, people have been observing the end of one year and the beginning of another.

Ancient Romans celebrated with six days of carousing that would probably be familiar to us today. St. Boniface, a missionary from England who visited Rome in 742, was appalled at how the Romans celebrated Kalends of January, as the New Year was called, with "dancing in the streets, heathenish cries, sacrilegious songs, tables laden with food and women wearing amulets and offering them for sale."

A Time of Rebirth
Because the Winter Solstice is the turning point of the year, beginning the lengthening of days, it has long been viewed as the birth of the year-by pagans celebrating the return of the Sun, and by Christians welcoming the birth of the Son of God. The days between Solstice and the New Year are a magical, luminous time period, when anything is possible. In England, the Twelve Days of Christmas were considered omen days which could be used to predict the weather in the coming year. In Scotland, no court had power during these days; and in Ireland, tradition held that if a person died during the Twelve Days, he or she went straight to Heaven.

In ancient Babylon, the days between the Winter Solstice and the New Year were seen as the time of a struggle between Chaos and Order, with Chaos trying to take over the world. Other cultures (Hindu, Chinese, Celtic) also viewed this as a time for reversing order and rules-celebrants would change roles with servants or dress in costumes for a time until order was restored.

Starting Fresh
While each culture's New Year celebration has its own flavor, there are certain common themes. The period leading up to New Year's Day is a time for setting things straight: a thorough housecleaning, paying off debts, returning borrowed objects, reflecting on one's shortcomings, mending quarrels, giving alms. In many cultures, people jump into the sea or a local body of water-literally washing the slate clean.

In some towns in Italy you have to watch out for falling objects, as people shove their old sofas, chairs and even refrigerators out of their windows on New Year's Eve. In Ecuador, people make dummies, stuffed with straw, to represent the events of the past year. These "ano viejo" effigies are burned at midnight, thus symbolically getting rid of the past.

Whatever preparations are made, most traditions teach that they should be completed before midnight on New Year's Eve. According to British folklore, you should not sweep on New Year's Day, or you will sweep your good luck away, or take anything out of the house-even trash. You only want to bring new things in to insure abundance in the coming year. If you must carry something out, be sure to bring something else in first, preferably a coin concealed outside the previous night. As this medieval poem reminds us:

Take out, then take in
Bad luck will begin
Take in, then take out
Good luck comes about

Rituals (and Underwear) for Good Fortune
Everything you do on New Year's Eve and New Year's Day is freighted with significance for the future. The American custom of spending the night with the one you love and kissing them at midnight insures that the relationship will flourish during the coming year. In Rio de Janeiro, more than a million people gather on the beaches on December 31st to honor Yemanja, the Yoruban "Mother of the Sea," who brings good fortune.

Even the color of underwear Brazilians wear on the first day of the new year has meaning. Pink brings love, yellow, prosperity; and white, peace and happiness.

Source: eazyday.blog.com and beliefnet.com/ Waverly Fitzgerald

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

11th December International Children's day



The International Children’s Day is celebrated only one day… Unfortunately! That makes no sense for those who violate children’s rights … They do it for 365 days a year without a break… I doubt whether one of them knows any of children’s rights or even that children have rights!

To make it clear for this minority (I hope), children have rights… The Charter of the Rights of the Child states:

• I have the right to come to life. I have the right to exist.
• I have the right to grow up in a world without violence and poverty.
• I have the right to live in a world that respects and protects the natural environment.
• I have the right to have free access to the magic world of knowledge.
• I have the right to have free time and space to play.
• I have the right to learn what’s good for my physical and mental health.
• I have the right to spend time with my parents.
• I have the right to live in innocence and carelessness my childhood years.
• I have the right to live in a society that protects my personal data.
• I have the right to live in a human world, fair and peaceful. A world in which my children will grow up. (Source: UNICEF)

A few years ago, at school, one of the best teachers I’ve ever met, distributed us a brochure that said something about kids… Nobody paid attention until we were urged to give it to our parents….and he started to read … Unfortunately I do not remember who was the writer, but it  was a well known text as I noticed from a search on web. I quote the text and hope to touch  those who cannot even understand what a child’s soul is!

What would a child say if we could hear them:
• If I live in comprehension , I learn to have patience.
• If I live in justice, I learn to be fair.
• If I live in safety, I learn to think.
• If I live in criticism, I learn to blame.
• If I live in a hostile environment, I learn to wrangle.
• If I live in shame, I learn to feel guilty.
• If I am accepted as I am, I learn to find love in the world.

I’m sure that you couldn’t resist and you smiled too… Do everything you can to make every child smile… It’s up to us!!!

Source: smaragdenia.wordpress.com



Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Helping Children Study


As parents, there are several ways to help your child increase his ability to study and understand academic material. However, unlike teaching specific study techniques, increasing a child’s awareness of what it takes to be successful involves developing her ability to "think about thinking" (metacognition), while understanding that learning occurs both in and out of school and across the lifespan. Here are some steps to help children monitor their learning experience:

Develop the Value of Learning
• Help your child understand that the purpose of learning and studying is not only to please parents and teachers, earn a good grade, or fulfill requirements, but that learning is something that they will have to do throughout their lives, for school, work, and when exploring personal interests. Learning is not just for school!

Goal Setting and Study Planning
• A key aspect of self-regulation is helping children to learn how to set goals independently. Help your child to set goals related to what they have to study. For younger children, it may be necessary to provide more assistance in this process. However, it is important to let them provide extensive input. Goal setting can involve many things, but may include completing a series of math practice questions each day to prepare for a quiz or studying five vocabulary words per night for a test at the end of the week.

• Goal setting should involve breaking down what is required into manageable steps for completion. It should also involve deciding on specific techniques or strategies that will help them to master the material, including things such as finding a quiet place to work, memorizing materials, and connecting information to previous knowledge, among others. Children should ask themselves “what do I have to do, and what will help me do it?” By learning to set specific goals, such as practicing spelling words daily, children develop the ability to understand what it will take to achieve their goal, and are then able to plan accordingly.
• Help children to understand the importance of planning. Related to goal setting, developing a plan of attack to achieve their goals is necessary, and will help children set reasonable goals within a specific time frame. Examples of planning include arranging a study schedule or completing parts of a large project for an hour every other day. At this point, children should ask themselves “what is my goal (what do I want to do) and by when?” Planning can be both long term and short term, but ideally, should be done by the child, thereby building independent planning skills; the point of your efforts is to help your child set goals and plan on his own!

Apply Specific Strategies and Methods and Monitor their Usefulness
• Teach children to use specific study methods depending on the project at hand. If a child needs to read a great deal of material, a common sense way to increase focus would be to help find a quiet place for reading. If a child needs help with spelling words, you may be able to work with her in a drill and practice format, or, she may prefer to write spelling words repeatedly for mastery. You can help your child understand what learning strategies work best for studying different types of materials.
• Help your child to understand which study techniques or strategies works best for him, and why. For example, encourage your child to compare whether or not studying with you or alone is most helpful. Does your daughter or son remember more after studying in the hectic family room, or quietly in their bed room? Is it helpful to associate new vocabulary words with those learned previously, or strictly memorize word definitions? Instilling in your child the importance of self-monitoring whether or not certain study techniques increase success, or decrease success, is an important component of self-regulating the learning process. By identifying what works best for them, children are able to abandon unsuccessful approaches and reformulate their study efforts to increase success.

Increase Awareness of What Helps, What Doesn’t, and Why
• Encourage your child to compare his progress when using different study strategies, and to his achievement before and after developing a study plan. Exploring progress and achievement will help your child understand what has helped them the most, and perhaps, what has helped the least. It is helpful to encourage your child to compare their academic performance to earlier efforts to help re-formulate study approaches. Experiencing successes, while understanding what needs to be done to increase success after a setback, will help motivate your child to continue her hard work.
• Help your child to understand that errors or improper strategy selection-things that they can improve on- are the cause of a poor performance, not their ability to understand a subject or achieve academic success. Children who understand that they can do it if they take the right steps are far more successful than children who believe that failure stems from lack of overall ability.

Parental Support and Home Environment
Educational research consistently demonstrates that parental interest, involvement, and participation in their child’s education, at home and at school, are the number one predictors of academic success. Providing a home environment that fosters study and encourages achievement increases the likelihood that your child will be successful in school. In order to help your child maximize study time, providing adequate support at home, including a positive attitude, educational materials, and organizational support, will ensure that your child is adequately prepared to begin work.

Attitude is Everything
• Perhaps one of the greatest contributions a parent can make to their child’s study efforts is to maintain a positive attitude toward school and study. Although friends are undoubtedly a strong influence in your son or daughter’s lives, children most often model their behavior and thoughts after their parents'. Keep a positive attitude toward study and learning regardless of how challenging a study task may appear, and your child will as well.
• Help your child to believe that he or she can succeed academically. Expecting success lead to greater motivation, and increased motivation leads to greater study success.
• Set high (but reasonable) expectations for your child. Increased expectations are related to increased goal setting and increased academic success. Oftentimes, if you expect little you will get little in return.
• Let your child know that studying and homework are priorities. Do not create an environment where study is considered a punishment, or promote situations where being able to skip study time is considered a reward.
• Establish meaningful, consistent, and fair consequences if study is not completed.
• Reward or praise your child for sticking to their study plan. Make sure they know that their successes please you, but that their attempts and hard work please you just as much.

Study Tools
Like any job, being a student involves a great deal of work and requires many tools. Parents who are aware of the types of tools and support necessary for study are able to ensure that their child is prepared before they begin to study. To prepare your child for study, you can:
• Help your child to discover what type of study environment works best for them. While some students study best in an environment that is quiet without distractions, others may be more successful if there is a moderate amount of noise, or if family is around. It may be beneficial to help your child determine what works best for them by comparing their productivity in different environments with different degrees of background activity.
• Designate a specific area for study in the appropriate environment in which your son or daughter likes to do work. This work place does not necessarily have to consist of an entire room, like a bedroom, but may include an area within a room, such as at the kitchen table. Sometimes children are able to study well with their parents or siblings around, while other times they work best alone. If your children share a bedroom, it may be best to separate them during study time if they seem to work better independently. However, it is important to let your child decide what works best for them after evaluating their academic progress. Not all children work their best in a quiet room without distractions.
• Provide appropriate supplies, including lighting, paper, highlighters, notebooks, rulers, and index cards, for study.
• Provide reference materials, including dictionaries, thesauruses, and encyclopedias, when possible. Teach your son or daughter how to access these materials online if there is a computer in the home. If possible, help your child to get to the library when needed.
• If there is a computer in the home, ensure that your child has appropriate access to it for study purposes. Let your child know that their school related computer needs take priority over casual internet surfing by other family members. If you have more than one child who needs to use the computer, prioritize according to study needs and due dates. Designing a computer usage schedule may be helpful in families with more than one student.
• When using the computer for study purposes, ensure that your child is doing their work as opposed to checking email or instant messaging friends.

Organization
Get organized! Lack of organization is a key characteristic of students with academic difficulties. Help your child learn to:
• Designate different folders for different subjects or tasks. When study materials are used from different folders, encourage your child to put materials back where they belong. When take home assignments are completed, make sure they are in the book bag and ready to go back to school.
• Keep notebooks clear of unwanted pages, and keep book bag clear of junk or unused materials.
• Provide your child with a study agenda or notebook in which she can write all homework or study tasks; teach him to fill it in appropriately when at school. (Oftentimes schools provide them for students, and help them to fill them out in class as a group).
• Teach your child to prioritize study tasks in order of importance or by due date to avoid "forgotten" quizzes and tests, or tests that are far in the future. Use the study agenda to help in this process.
• Help your child to learn how to bring appropriate materials home for study according to quiz and test dates. Doing so may help your child to avoid the "all or nothing" approach to brining text books and notebooks home.
• If your son or daughter forgets to bring study materials home, make it a point to retrieve them from school immediately if at all possible. If not, use an alternate study task in its place. Taking an active and firm approach to study will help them understand that forgetting materials, accidentally or purposefully, will not get them out of study obligations.
• If your child appears to avoid certain study tasks, take time to explore the reason why. Is it because the work is difficult? Do they not understand a topic? Don't like the subject? Haven't been successful so far? Understanding why students avoid study of certain or all subjects may help you come up with a new study plan that takes their needs into account. Exploring study difficulties will also help you to work directly with teachers, school psychologists, or school counselors to develop interventions at home and at school if difficulties continue.

 Time Management
• Help your child use time wisely and efficiently:
• Help your son or daughter to learn to identify when they need to study. Use of the study agenda may be helpful in this process to determine how far in advance study should begin. It is also important to help your child understand that study is not only necessary for tests and quizzes, but is needed when they do not understand topics covered in class.
• Get into the routine of things! Working with your child, help him or her develop a routine study schedule. Be sure to consider other commitments, such as sports and appointments, when planning study. Using a study organizer or schedule with days of the week and time intervals will help to plan study after school and on weekends.
• Depending on the complexity of each study task, help your child to estimate how much time studying will take. Plan study accordingly.
• Plan to study challenging or complex topics when they feel most awake and prepared. Break long study tasks into smaller components.
• Encourage your child to study in short intervals with frequent, short breaks. Taking such an approach will avoid fatigue and increase retention of study material.
• Be cautious that activities started during study breaks do not make it difficult to continue with priority number one: study. Play and social activities are important parts of the day, but should not be mixed with study if your child has a difficult time getting back to work. Brief breaks are important, but avoid encouraging activities that may be difficult to discontinue once started.
• Encourage your child to reflect on their study experiences. What has worked so far? Have they had enough time to study? What might work better next time? Reflecting on successes and weaknesses will help them to plan better in the future.

Getting Extra Help
Good students learn to realize when they understand material, and when they don’t. It is important that your child:
• Learn to determine whether he understands the material he is learning.
• Learn to identify what parts she understands, and what parts she doesn't understand.
• Learn to ask for additional help or clarification at school when he does not understand material completely.
As parents, it is important to provide appropriate support for your child while she is studying. It is also important to be accessible in the event that he needs assistance or clarification. When your child is studying:
• Do make yourself available in the event she needs your guidance.
• Don’t do his work for him. It is important that you provide support, but not answers, so he becomes an independent learner.
Examples of ways to provide positive support during study include:
• Helping your child to clarify directions or concepts.
• Helping your child to review by asking questions or quizzing if it is helpful to her.
• Helping your child learn how to find answers…not finding the answers for them.
• Helping them to brainstorm suggestions regarding the best ways to study certain topics.

Source: teachersandfamilies.com




Sunday, November 25, 2012

New social media? Same old, same old, say Stanford experts

By Cynthia Haven

Two scholars of the 17th and 18th centuries say the earlier era prefigured the "information overload," with its own equivalents of Twitter, Facebook and Google+. Social networks have been key to almost all revolutions – from 1789 to the Arab Spring.

If you feel overwhelmed by social media, you're hardly the first. An avalanche of new forms of communication similarly challenged Europeans of the 17th and 18th centuries.

"In the 17th century, conversation exploded," said Anaïs Saint-Jude, director of Stanford's BiblioTech program. "It was an early modern version of information overload."


The Copernican Revolution, the invention of the printing press, the exploration of the New World – all needed to be digested over time. There was a lot of catching-up to do. "It was a dynamic, troubling, messy period," she said.

Public postal systems became the equivalent of Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and smartphones. Letters crisscrossed Paris by the thousands daily. Voltaire was writing 10 to 15 letters a day. Dramatist Jean Racine complained that he couldn't keep up with the aggressive letter writing. His inbox was full, so to speak.

Stanford's Mapping the Republic of Letters project, which forms part of the context for Saint-Jude's remarks, shows that 40 percent of Voltaire's letters were sent to correspondents relatively close by.

Not-so-profound correspondence

What was everyone saying? Not necessarily much. Rather like today's email. "It was the equivalent of a phone call, inviting someone to tea or saying, 'OMG, did you know about the Duke?'" said Dan Edelstein, an associate professor of French and the principal investigator for the project. He will be teaching a course in the spring called Social Animals, Social Revolutions and Social Networks.

Clearly, something had changed: Commercial postal services were on the rise. Though their prototypes had existed down through the centuries, they had mostly served government officials, and later (via the Medicis, for example) merchant and banking houses. Suddenly they were carrying private correspondence.

More people were writing, and more people could respond quickly, not only with friends and family, but across far-flung distances with people they had never met, and never would. Rather like some of our Facebook friends.

According to Saint-Jude, it was an era, like ours, of "hyper-writing," even addictive writing. The aristocratic Madame de Sévigné wrote 1,120 letters to her married daughter in Brittany, beginning in the late 1670s, until her death in 1696. It was important to keep her kid up to date with the goings-on in Paris. Although she is remembered today for her witty epistles, she never intended them to be saved, let alone published.

For a time, the streets of Paris were littered with little bits of papers – les billets – filled with a few words of scabrous and politically defamatory verse that were thrown to the public. Sound like Twitter?

The little bits of paper in your pocket could cause big trouble – Voltaire landed in jail for his verse. Nonetheless, these short, anonymous postings bypassed the government censor. It was also a way of organizing uprisings. Edelstein points out that Egyptian social networks were critical to coordinating demonstrators and drawing large crowds this year.

Indeed, he noted that social networks are key to almost all revolutions. "The Egyptian youth organizers may have excelled at mobilizing people at a moment's notice, but interestingly it's another kind of social network that seems to be taking advantage of the post-revolutionary situation – the Muslim Brotherhood," he said.

"This network may be less agile, but it has created longer and better sustained bonds between members over time." Unlike Facebook networks that almost anyone can join, the Brotherhood echoed the older, more exclusive networks that vetted prospective members, such as France's Jacobin clubs. "Flash mobs quickly splinter into cacophony," Edelstein told an assembly of incoming freshmen last month.

Dangers of misplaced letters

What is public? What is private? More correspondence meant that letters could fall into the wrong hands. Laclos' epistolary novel, Les Liaisons Dangereuses, showed the dangers and disgrace that could befall the writers of wayward correspondence. In our own era, need we mention the fate that befell the indiscreet Rep. Anthony Weiner?

Meanwhile, modern journalism was born, via a precursor of the blog. Nobles, such as Cardinal Mazarin, hired their own "journalists" to report on scandal and sex in the city. These writers set up bureaus around Paris to get the juiciest news, and it was written and copied and distributed to subscribers. Literary reviews and newspapers soon blossomed, along with letters to the editor and a new environment of literary and cultural criticism.


These new networks flexed a new kind of media punch. For example, Edelstein noted that across the ocean in America, the Declaration of Independence was signed on July 2. The news was published in a newspaper on the legendary 4th. "What we're really celebrating is not the fact that 56 men signed the declaration, but rather that a new network of people emerged around the published declaration – a network that would ultimately become the United States," he said.

The poster was invented to invite more and more people to more and more public events – theater, for example, became the dominant art form in the 17th century. Posters mobilized these slow-motion "flash mobs."

The new spaces we have created are virtual, not physical. But the physical spaces of the 17th century and Enlightenment were just as much of a psychological earthquake – l' Académie française, l'Académie des sciences, the celebrated salons. That large groups of people were getting together to chat about literature, discovery, ideas, revolution, or simply to watch a show, was a change from the carefully manicured guest lists of the court, where the principal order of business was big-time sucking up.

These spaces evoked new questions: How does one conduct oneself? How does one appear to others? Managing your public profile became vital. The result? A new self-consciousness was born, and a new social nervousness. The players had the same questions we have today, said Saint-Jude: "How do you curate all this information?"

"Relax," said Saint-Jude. "You're in good company. There's nothing new under the sun."


Source: news.stanford.edu



Saturday, November 24, 2012

Does reading a book make us happier?


By Joan Bakewell, Broadcaster

Public libraries face an uncertain future but the value of reading is irreplaceable, says Joan Bakewell in her A Point of View column.

I was returning a library book last week. It had been important in some research I was doing so I sought to renew it. "No, I'm afraid it's in demand by someone else," came the reply.

A book first published in 1964 was still needed. I'm not surprised. Many books last a lifetime and go on being read. Then, on the library counter, I noticed printouts from our local newspaper. The headline was a question - Libraries slashed? - it asked.

I recall a Latin grammar construction defined as "expecting the answer 'yes'". I felt this applied to the headline. We in the London borough where I live know there will be massive council cuts. In London as a whole there are fears that 130 libraries could go.

And things are bad across the country. Buckinghamshire is said to be considering closing among others the Great Missenden library, inspiration for Roald Dahl's Matilda, who read library books. He would be appalled.

Another book event. Last week I helped celebrate the publication of probably the definitive account of the life and art of the painter LS Lowry, by Dr Tom Rosenthal. It was held in the gorgeous setting of Christies sales rooms, where a fine array of Lowry's work graced the walls.
Later in the week some 20 of his paintings sold there for nearly £5.2m. There was an irony in seeing Lowry's bleak depictions of the Lancashire poor going for such high prices. Here they were, the huddled masses, hurrying from the factory, to the football match, crowding round a street accident, or spending their unsmiling leisure still fully clad on Lancashire's beaches.

Lowry's work divides people There are those who admire his bleak vision of the world he knew in the 30s and 40s, and those who demean it as nothing more than a host of matchstick men. I am of the former persuasion.

My reason is more than aesthetic, I have a local connection. My own great aunt lived in Salford at Crescent View, just such a row of terrace houses as Lowry painted. I knew the feel of Salford's streets, its little picket fences, and I loved the smell of Nana's stuffy kitchen, full of cooking and drying clothes.

The meaning of books came to me from just such a background. From the age of seven my father attended what was then called Chetham's Hospital in Manchester, a charity school for 40 poor boys founded in the 17th Century as the legacy of Humphrey Chetham. He was a wily old wool merchant whose motto "Quod tuum tene" - hold on to what is yours - just about sums up the industrial revolution that was to engulf the city and make it rich and make it poor.

But Chetham was a philanthropist and left provision not only for a school, but for a library within the same building. That library survives in its original glory - theology, law, local records, leather bound, beautifully preserved. Its Jacobean setting is one of the unsung treasures of Manchester, part of what is now the illustrious Chethams Music School.
The schoolboys in my father's day didn't read such books of course, they had their noses into Rider Haggard and Harrison Ainsworth. But my father - and his brothers - held the library in awe, acknowledging as everyone then did that learning and scholarship are among man's highest pursuits.

In the poverty that was then Salford, libraries were cherished. They were seen as the resource for the poor, where they could learn and begin to understand about the world beyond those Lowry streets.

The book I was returning to my local library is subtitled A Study in Protest. It is in fact an account by Christopher Driver of the rise of the anti-nuclear bomb campaigns of the late 50s and early 60s. Then as now, unruly groups grabbed the headlines. They always do.

But the book tells of concerted and sustained action to bring pressure on world powers to abandon nuclear weapons. We know they failed, but along the way they influenced public and world opinion to an extent that perhaps contributed to the test-ban treaties that were to be signed in the 1960s, in the years after the Cuba crisis.

The young have again been out on the streets in their thousands and students are meeting and plotting more protests even now. Will those of us who love libraries be able to make our voices heard? It would be hard to combat allegations of middle-class elitism, and indeed there is a case to answer. If the pressure on finances is so great, at least as far as the coalition believe, then the availability of free books for all will need its
defenders.
My defence should not be seen as the attempt merely to rescue a small building in a particular borough, or any other particular places threatened with closure. Rather it is a rallying call for the concept of free libraries. In our culture the library stands as tall and as significant as a parish church or the finest cathedral. It goes back to the times when ideas first began to circulate in the known world. I worry where wisdom will come from.

I am a major consumer of information on the internet. I know that academics and students access information there more quickly and more specifically than they can faced with a shelf load of books. But it's not that relationship I'm concerned about.

I offer you two scenarios. I am on a train going north, the scenery beyond York is glorious and in the slanting light of a winter afternoon has a magical quality not to miss. So I put down the paperback to enjoy it, then I resume my read. Again, on holiday, deck chair beside a blue swimming pool, a landscape of rolling hills and green pastures unfolds before me. I set aside the paperback to enjoy the view, and then return to the pages.

I live with the tensions between the world out there I want to see and even contemplate, and the inner world to which the book gives me access. It is the inner rewards of reading a book in a private and concentrated way that lead you into realms of your own imagination and thought that no other process offers. Something happens between the words and the brain that is unique to the moment and to your own sensibilities.
It is why, at such moments, it is so awful to be interrupted - and why I am frequently late at meetings because I find it hard to tear myself away. Any society that doesn't value the richness of this encounter with ideas and the imagination will impoverish its citizens.

Of course, there are loads of books around. You can pick up a paperback for a few pounds that will last many years (my shelves are full of ageing paperbacks whose yellowing pages crack when I open them - only hardbacks last forever). Publishers think books are worth publishing, supermarkets think they are worth stacking on their shelves. But these are market transactions. The free public library service is the only way for everyone to have access for free to objects that carry the world's wisdom.

Soon we will all be asked to tell the state what makes us happy, what increases our well-being. No doubt someone will come up with measurements of stress and depression. We might be asked about our sense of neighbourliness or degrees of family closeness. Whether we are hungry or cold or neglected.

There are clearly data about social conditions that are worth collecting, but happiness is a dangerous word. It embraces all the subjectivity of our emotions and inner serenity. It is a reflection of our character, the degree we are wracked by ambition or resentment, by envy or greed. It embraces what might be called spiritual well-being, the sort that might be underpinned by a happy marriage, a satisfying career, deep religious conviction.

Already television vox pops have asked people in the street what makes them happy and had replies that range from their children's laughter, to the music of Beethoven.

I think there might be many who consider one kind of happiness to be a deep armchair, a warm fire and a favourite book.

Source: bbc.co.uk


Friday, November 23, 2012

Screen addicts


Children spend more time in front of a computer or television every day than they spend exercising every week

By Liz Thomas

Children in Britain sit in front of a TV or computer screen for four-and-a-half hours a day, alarming research reveals.

Youngsters now spend an average of one hour and 50 minutes online and two hours 40 minutes in front of the television every day.

A report released by research firm ChildWise suggests that screens are increasingly turning into electronic babysitters and young people in the UK are spending more time plugged in than ever.

It found that children spend more time in front of a screen in one day than they spend exercising in the entire week.

The worrying research found that 97 per cent of 11 to 16-year-olds own a mobile phone – eight per cent more than the percentage of adults who own one.

And it showed that young girls have a voracious appetite for celebrity magazines such as OK! and Heat rather than more traditional teenage fare such as Jackie.

The study came as an academic warned that youngsters are using mobile phones to learn about each others’ bodies and access X-rated porn rather than learning about such matters ‘behind the bike sheds’.

Dr Emma Bond, an expert in childhood and youth studies, said adults ‘need to take our heads out of the sand’ about what is happening to young, impressionable children.

‘The research shows how children are using mobile phones in obtaining sexual material, developing their sexual identities and in their intimate relationships with each other,’ she added.

The Monitor Report 2010-11 found that children spent only two hours a week exercising in school, and taking part in physical activity out of school.

Two in three children aged between five and 16, and 77 per cent of children aged 11 to 16, have their own television or personal computer and, despite fears about online safety, almost half have internet access in their own room.
2m under 13s now use Facebook, while the average child spends 1hr 48minutes online daily

The study questioned almost 2,500 five to 16-year-olds about their computer, TV and reading habits. The findings show most go online daily and spend much of their time on social networks and video sharing sites such as YouTube.

But despite the popularity of the internet, the next generation is still likely to be one of telly addicts.

Around 63 per cent of children have a television set in their room but as the popularity of laptops increases and programmes are increasingly available online this is likely to drop.
A spokesman for ChildWise said: ‘The number of children with a laptop or PC now matches those with a television but TV continues to play an important role. The way they are watching is continually changing. Children are seeking out programming that they want, when they want it.

‘Children’s online activity is moving towards personal access for all, so that, in the not too distant future the disadvantaged child will be the one without a laptop of their own.’

Despite Facebook supposedly being restricted to over-13s, more than two million children under that age now have a profile on the social networking site. It is named as their favourite website.

The research found a third of all seven to ten-year-olds visited Facebook in the last week, along with 71 per cent of 11 and 12-year-olds and 85 per cent of 13-16-year-olds.

Even with the wide choice from digital and satellite channels and dedicated youth stations such as ITV2 and E4, BBC1 remains the most popular TV channel.

EastEnders and The Simpsons are among their favourite programmes, along with the crude Channel 4 comedy about school life The Inbetweeners.

Margaret Morrissey of lobby group Parents Outloud, said children could not be blamed for spending time on the computer or in front of the TV.

On many housing estates gardens had been reduced to the size of a pocket handkerchief, she said. ‘We cannot complain as the generation in charge when they (children) use the things we have provided and don’t have space to do recreational things outdoors,’ she said.

From dailymail.co.uk