Monday, September 24, 2012

Ensure Successful Cross Border Dealings With Business Translation Service


Business communication plays an indispensable role in the success of an enterprise. It should be accurate, precise and intelligible to the other party. This is the reason, why majority of businesses today are very much keen on availing the services of proficient translators. The good part is that, you can easily come across a number of companies, which offer services for translating different kinds of texts. Most of these agencies have in-house translators, having excellent knowledge about diverse business industries. They work with a wide network of qualified linguists to meet client needs by delivering customized services.
Reputed companies also implement quality assurance and quality control practices to make sure that the results are of highest quality. Moreover, the language professionals employed by them are totally dedicated to deliver hundred percent accurate and precise linguistic works. When you hire a translation agency for expert assistance, they assign your project to a translator having in-depth understanding of both, source as well as the target language, along with good knowledge about your business industry. You can expect these professionals to deliver timely results, as they usually have a fast turnaround time. In fact, on many occasions the work is delivered before the specified date. This provides businesses with an opportunity to thoroughly review the work and see if it has been done in line with their requirements.
Besides, translation agencies also maintain the confidentially of your business documents. They usually sign a non-disclosure contract or agreement, wherein they promise that no business or personal details would be divulged to anyone under any circumstance. In today's wide business marketplace, when businesses have to often deal with many foreign clients to expand their reach to wider audiences, services for translation cannot not be overlooked, for sure. If you are also operating your business in the international market, then you would agree that, at many occasions, you have to sign various contractual documents written in a foreign language. Missing out on the essential pointers can adversely affect your business and thus, for successful cross border dealings, hiring a professional translator is a must.
With the expertise held by professional translators, you can be assured of getting your work done effectively. If you carefully choose a translation service, then you can reach out to the worldwide audience, through effective and hassle-free communication. There would be no room for inaccuracy; no matter how complicated is the native language of your potential customers or business associates. So, do capitalize on professional business translation services to ensure successful cross border business dealings.

Sunday, September 16, 2012

How A School Drama Studio Can Make You Money


In these harsh economic times, there is an impetus on public bodies to make as many cost savings as possible and reduce their budget deficits. This includes schools, many of whom have been forced to make serious cutbacks in order to make themselves financially viable. These moves have included cutting back on staff, certain subjects and certain facilities.
One area of education that has suffered particularly badly as a result of austerity is the arts; such as music, art and drama. Drama, in particular, has had a hard time as theatre trips are cancelled and large-scale performances are scaled back in order to provide funds elsewhere.
Oddly, however, drama possibly holds the key to reducing budget deficit for many educational institutions. How so? Through a school drama studio.
It may seem like a lavish investment and slightly contradictory to the overall goal of saving money but in the long term, making an initial investment in a drama studio kitted out with stage lighting, a sound system and drapes can lead to profits in the future - both monetary and in terms of your students' dramatic education.
So how exactly can one make money from a school facility?
Hire Out The Space
Believe it or not, there are a lot of groups looking for theatre-esque performance spaces in which to rehearse but are unable to find one. These amateur and semi-professional dramatists would kill to have a good rehearsal space, which is where your studio comes in.
It's not just amateur theatre groups who'll want to use the space either; there is also demand from businesses holding team-building exercises and bandr looking to hold a gig. By offering your space out for an hourly fee in the evening and at weekend, you have the potential to make a lot of money - potentially even enough that the studio ends up paying for itself.
Hold Events
Aside from hiring out the space out-of-school hours, you can also hold your own money-making space when the studio isn't in use by students. School plays, talent shows or even just a good old bake sale; a studio space is versatile and has many potential applications. Charge an entrance fee for each of these events and the coffers will soon be swelling.
These kind of events also has value in terms of education, providing your students with the opportunity to organise and run their own events, as well as giving them a taste of what it's like to be involved in the staging of an event.
Community Events
Of course, it's not just the parents and students of the school you can serve with your shiny new drama studio. You can hold community events open to everyone, including quizzes, movie nights and even the occasional karaoke night!
Making a large investment in new facilities may seem counter-productive at a time when austerity is at the forefront of everyone's thinking, but by thinking long-term rather than short-term you can not only secure your school's immediate financial future but it's long term prosperity too.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

The Printed Word Is the eBook


In an earlier article I wrote about the technology myth. This is the assumption that if people are saturated with technology from birth then they will become experts in its use. This idea is akin to the scientific explanation of osmosis whereby an object absorbs elements from its environment due to high concentrations in its surroundings. Whilst this might work for objects being studied in Petri dishes it is illogical to assign the same principle to how human beings learn, practice and use technology.
As we may have learnt from history, common sense and misguided thinking drives decision making in education. Technology osmosis is the current driver of the idea that all young people are experts in technology.
This misguided and inaccurate view of how children and adolescents experience technology - a generation referred to as digital natives (a loathsome term because of its overuse and inaccuracy) - dismisses the key ingredients of a proficient technology user: interest, aptitude and practice.
Another misguided and inaccurate assumption is that youth are so enamoured of computer screens, smart phones and eBook readers that they are abandoning printed books and magazines for electronic versions on Kindle, Nook, iPads, Android or similar devices.
I teach a range of students between the ages of 14 and 18 who repeatedly stress their distaste for reading texts online. Some of them worry that the printed text will become obsolete and begrudge the assumption that they enjoy technology in all its forms. They do not want to sit at computers all day in classrooms nor do they want to read everything on a screen.
In contrast, older generations, for whom printed texts have involved carrying, losing, borrowing, loaning and inevitably abandoning them to dusty bookshelves, the eBook is a preferable alternative. Printed books - particularly trashy, cheap novels in bargain bins - are considered a waste of paper.
I want eReaders to hasten the death of print. This wish is motivated by saving trees from becoming paper pulp. I also prefer the ease of using a Kindle and its lightweight accessibility.
Books, particularly hardbacks, are expensive, take up room and are easily lost when moving house. An eBook, however, can be stored amongst thousands of other eBooks without taking up any room other than a few bytes in cyberspace.
Nonetheless, younger adults and teens do not always share my enthusiasm for back-lit screens. Whilst the over 35s might prefer an eBook, the printed book is a novelty for younger adults.
All that radiates is not necessarily gold.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Ghana Life: God and Money


Ghanaians express their hopes and beliefs in the mottoes and slogans they display on their public transport vehicles, especially taxis, trotros and mammie wagons. There is no doubt that the most frequently recurring themes are God and money. The two concepts seem to be held in roughly equal regard and the slogans 'Nyame ne hene' (God in king) and 'Sika ne hene' (Money is king) vie for popularity. However it should not be construed that the two concepts are in any sense in competition but rather that they are closely bound up in the practice of religion.
Many people the world over follow a religion in the hope that it will better their lives, and the improvement they hope for is usually economic. In Ghana, as well as elsewhere, there are churches promising their worshippers a short cut to riches. In pursuit of this dream the followers contribute to the church as much as they can afford and the one person who is certain to drive a luxury car is the founding pastor. It is generally considered that all priests and pastors are wealthy, and many clergymen trained in large international churches break away to found their own commercial enterprises. The result is a multiplicity of churches with a bewildering variety of names.
The traditional fetish religions of Ghana place great value on blood sacrifice as a means of gaining the desired reward. Human sacrifice was replaced by animal sacrifice, and with the coming of Christianity the blood sacrifice of Jesus was enthusiastically embraced. Today, the Pentecostal and evangelical churches recite 'Yesu mogya nka w'anim,' let the blood of Jesus splash your face, and 'Yesu mogya,' blood of Jesus, is another common trotro message. People with reddened faces expect generous material reward but individuals who gain wealth too rapidly are often accused of having made a pact with the devil.
Those who achieve great wealth or political power quickly are usually suspected of employing occult forces. Many people think that the successful trader, politician or rich person has been helped by black magic, cannibalism or Satan. The popular press in Ghana often reports witchcraft accusations and stories about 'sika duro' (money medicine) rituals in which vampires suck the blood of innocent relatives in order to gain riches. Those people who adopted Christianity called for active opposition to this work of the powers of darkness.
In Ghana, the Pentecostal churches were the first to introduce services of exorcism for the purpose of casting out evil spirits. This increased their popularity and they began to draw adherents from the mainstream churches: Catholic, Anglican, Presbyterian, etc. One by one the mainstream churches were compelled to follow suit to maintain the strength of their congregations. By the end of the twentieth century, services of exorcism were available to any churchgoer who was unfortunate enough to have been seduced by Satan.
In the post-colonial era, people from Ghana and other former colonies have moved to Britain and other Western countries. They have either taken their churches with them or created new ones in their image. This has greatly broadened the choice available to the ardent seeker and helped to ensure that there are alternatives available for everyone who is dissatisfied with their present supplier. However, one is unlikely to see 'Sika ne hene' and 'Nyame ne hene' painted in large letters on the side of big red double-decker buses, circulating in the City of London; the first would be taken as obvious, and the second relegated to the concern of the immigrants.