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896 Educators providing Courses

Finishing Touches Corporation

finishing touches corporation

Dagenham

Eno is a Training and Management Consultant with experience across the private, public and voluntary sectors both as an employee, employer and consultant. She has a passionate belief that people are the key to success in any organisation. She has a passion for training people to learn, a more sustainable approach than training people to be trained. Eno is the CEO and director of Finishing Touches Corporation. A full-service training and consulting business, which has run since 2000 . Eno commissioned the Corporate Solutions Unit after successfully establishing Finishing Touches Corporations, a successful education, etiquettes and events management company. Her experience in progression of training needs assessment, instructional design and development, project management and management is invaluable to her approach in viewing training. As a trainer, consultant and project manager, Eno has helped thousands of people learn how to use the tools related to their jobs, gain an understanding of how they learn best and improve their overall skill level. She has developed and implemented training plans for major organizations in the UK ,Europe and Africa, and has designed and delivered training courses in management development and performance management. Eno is able to design, develop, train, facilitate, evaluate and offer consultancy advice to support increased knowledge, skills and understanding related to all aspects of people development. Her consultants, strategic partners and clients say she is reliable, engaging, professional, flexible, creative, and committed to ensuring a project's success. As an accredited coach and trainer, Eno works with Directors and Managers in areas such as personal and career development, leadership support, and transitioning into new roles. An ardent believer in hard work, she presently leads the companies strategy for leadership development programmes , corporate affairs and coordinates activities for the companies outreach project - "Friends of Africa Network" and Setapart Academy.

mathscool.com

mathscool.com

The Tutors ! LayerSlider: Multiple jQuery issue It looks like that another plugin or your theme loads an extra copy of the jQuery library causing problems for LayerSlider to show your sliders. Please navigate from your WordPress admin sidebar to LayerSlider -> Options -> Advanced and enable the "Include scripts in the footer" option. Choosing the right tutor Once you've decided to opt for tuition, the most important decision is to pick the right tutor. So, if you sign your child up for a faceless brand, you are selecting a programme and you don't know who the tutor is? But you should! No really, you should: According to the governments own figures (and pretty much every international study); the level of a teacher's prior education is directly linked to the attainment of their pupils. A pupil's attainment is directly linked to how highly educated their teacher is If your child is being taught by "Bradley", who's only just finished his AS in maths (but proclaims he's "all-white at maffs"), then you can't really expect him to understand how the mistakes he makes in the way he teaches you child G.C.S.E. maths won't show up now - they will rear their ugly heads when your child is doing A-level maths. (I should know - I spend too much of my time sorting out Bradley's mistakes.) Of course, by then, Bradley will be long gone… The more knowledgeable the tutor, the better able the pupil is to learn (Wossman 2003) Incidentally, the government wanted to regulate the tuition profession. They wanted all tutors to have at the very least a degree in a subject relevant to the subject they are teaching. (In fact, they only give P.G.C.E. bursaries to graduates with a FIRST or a 2:1 degree.) That's not too much to ask is it? But pretty much all the tuition organisations opposed it… Why? Because so there are so many unqualified tutors out there! How would "B

King Charles I School

king charles i school

Worcestershire.

We are proud of our school; it has a very long heritage and a very bright future. The foundation of our school is an old one. We are the only secondary school, in the United Kingdom, to bear the name of King Charles I. Although he gave us our charter in 1636, the foundation was established by Thomas Blount, esq., Lord of the Manor of Kidderminster, some 70 years earlier. A document dated 1609 describes the origins of the school. Various lands acquired by the Parish Church of St. Mary and All Saints as investments were confiscated by the State during the Protestant Reformation and early in the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, Roger Maunsell of Pedmore purchased them. He levied penal rents and following an appeal from the tenants to the Lord of the Manor, Thomas Blount bought the lands and arranged in 1566 that the rents should be used to endow a free grammar school in Kidderminster “for the instruction of youth in good letters and manners”. In the 1630s an inquiry was held into the administration of the endowments and as a result of this the charter was granted by King Charles I in 1636. This charter which was part of one given to the town, laid down the manner in which the school should be run and lasted over 200 years. From 1566 to 1848 the School was carried out in the Chantry of the Parish church of St Mary and All Saints although it was not a chantry school. In 1848 the school moved to the site known as Woodfield on Bewdley Road. In the mid-nineteenth century King Charles I School, like most other ancient schools in England, was reorganised under schemes devised by the endowed schools commissioners and the charity commissioners to meet an increasing demand for secondary education in which england seemed to have fallen woefully behind other european countries. In 1902 the school became ‘grant aided’ within Worcestershire County Council; this status was continued as ‘voluntary aided’ until after 1944. In order to provide finance for accommodation thought necessary in the late 1950’s the school became ‘voluntary controlled’ in 1958 and remained as such up to April, 2012 when it became an academy.