iForex’s Forex Trading Two Part Learning Guide

December 21st, 2011 by admin No comments »

The matter of forex is actually not an unfamiliar topic anymore. This online business opportunity has attracted so many people to give it a try and there is quite big amount of them who can find success in this field. Of course, you might also be attracted to try this opportunity.

However, as the beginner, you will totally be confused about how to start the trade. Well, for such matter, you do not need to worry at all. iForex has just launched or revealed its forex trading two part learning guide. Inside the guide, you will be able to learn everything which is related to this kind of trading. The contents of the guide are totally easy to follow even for the people who are really new in this field.

The guide is really easy to follow because you can find the comprehensive example that will make everything clear for you. For addition, this guide in forex trading has appeared in several languages including Indonesia and Spanish. Therefore, if you are confused in starting the trading in forex, you can put your trust on this guide and in no time, you will find that forex is not a complex thing anymore. That way, you can earn our success more quickly and easily.

Tally Ho! Abacus Education for Home Schools

December 9th, 2011 by admin No comments »

Enter a classroom in any abacus center in India and you will see children busy with something that looks like a toy — tiny brown beads compiled neatly in columns. On the wall is propped a similar toy, though bigger with large, shiny yellow beads.

The teacher calls out a complex calculation, almost like an open challenge. A little boy, barely seven, comes forward and recites a seemingly funny rhyme. He also moves the yellow beads up and down and gets the answer down pat. No furious adding, counting or subtracting! Amazed?

Welcome to the world of abacus education, where rigid arithmetic takes a backseat and visuals and imagination gain centre-stage. Here children learn to use the abacus, an ancient Chinese invention, to solve basic arithmetic sums with speed and accuracy. Institutes, which offer abacus education, claim that they use arithmetic as a tool to develop mind skills, memory and lateral thinking abilities.

Popular in Asian countries like Malaysia, Taiwan and Thailand, abacus education is relatively new in India. But several entrepreneurs have been quick to tap the business potential of this non-formal education tool.

Scientific theories associate the left hemisphere of the brain with numerical and academic abilities, and the right hemisphere with creativity and intelligence. Proponents of abacus education claim that while formal education focuses merely on left-brain development, the abacus brings about “whole brain development”.

“If the brain is not developed at an early age, one’s mental abilities can start declining by 20 years of age. That’s why we must tap them young,” says Dhaval Shrimankar, CEO, NurtureMinds.com.

The brain gyms — as these institutes are called — are not stand-alone entities, but, instead, operate through a network of local franchises in urban and semi-urban areas. The reach and popularity of abacus education can be gauged from the burgeoning franchisee network.

Today, the same innovative education is available in the US and Canada. The system has taken the home-school communities by the storm. Private centers just like Score or Kumon are springing up from west coast to the east coast.

As an alternative to investment for a franchise, books are directly sold to the interested customers. Many of the patrons take up on roles of tutors as well as franchise owners.

» Read more: Tally Ho! Abacus Education for Home Schools