Out of This World - Blog Turns Supernatural or Spiritual

A Continued Commitment... TO OUR NATIONS FUTURE!

There are thousands of social service agencies, both publicly and privately funded, as well as individual caregivers. Information and access to these services is fragmented. Many providers do not even have a presence on the web. Consumers of social services need help finding available and accessible resources quickly and in one place. iNforma Nation offers verified information such as links to resource sites, articles, community events, professional and educational workshops, and more for free. Professionals and agencies alike can add free resource and event content, and consumers can use the site to request help in finding the resources or information they need.

Inspiration Matters


While searching data statistics having to do with government policies and funding guidelines to ensure education for our nations vulnerable children, I came across a newspaper article that led me to Cheap Therapy! I was amazed to see such efforts and talent Lisa expresses through her work. Click on the picture to be taken directly to her website!

Making Cents Of Poverty




A Continued Commitment to Our Nation's Future...

A Look at Children and the President’s FY 2011 Federal Budget

President Obama’s 2011 Budget signals the Administration’s continued commitment to children and families even in these extraordinarily tough economic times. It reflects the President’s understanding that investing in children now will ensure a more stable economy and a healthier, more competitive workforce in the future. The recommendations in the budget are consistent with the President’s assertion in his State of the Union address that “the best anti-poverty program around is a world-class education.” In education and throughout other areas of the budget, there is attention to the needs of children of all ages and recognition of the crucial need for investments in prevention and basic supports that reach across systems and focus on the whole child in order to help reduce the multiple risks that many children now face.
The President’s Budget tackles the deficit and at the same time makes important investments in children and low income families. It proposes to reduce the deficit with $750 billion in tax adjustments, a three year freeze on non-security domestic discretionary programs, the establishment of commission to reduce deficits by 2015, and passage of health reform legislation this year. At the same time the budget significantly increases investments in education for all children and includes other investments in early childhood programs to help children start school ready to succeed and parents work. It supports the kind of dramatic transformation we need in education in America to prepare all of our children for success in the 21st century. These steps will be reinforced when significant improvements in children’s health coverage, also key to school performance, are enacted.

The challenge now is to ensure Congress enacts these deficit measures and the investments in children and low income families described below to ensure children and families will truly benefit from them.


What Annoited Touch will seek out possible funding for the up cumming year in efforts of "Making Cents of Poverty"

Tis The Season of Giving...Gifts

Winner will be selected 12/12/2010






Tips For Aspiring Interviewers



The recent increase in evidence-based practice and policy-making means more people have to know how to interview. This article provides simple tips to ease the way.


Who to Interview?

The guide to who to interview should be the questions that need answering. It is only useful to interview someone who can provide answer to the questions being asked. Therefore, always ask the question before trying to set up an interview, "Can this person ask the question I need to answer?" If the answer is "No", then its pointless asking the question.


What Sort of Interview Should be Used?

If the project involves finding out very specific information, then a series of highly-focused, and relatively closed, questions is what’s needed. These will provide specific information about the various elements of a topic. To conduct this type of interview, the interviewer is required beforehand to be quite knowledgeable about the topic.

If the interview is intended to provide background information, perhaps because the interviewer is less knowledgeable about the topic, then a more general interview is called, using general more open question with specific follow-up questions designed to fill in the grey areas revealed by the more open answers.

An in-depth interview, on the other hand, will pursue a relatively narrow area or topic in great depth and will allow the interviewer to explore a greater variety of aspects of the topic than either of the other two. Sometimes it is necessary to return for a second interview, if the material is too rich to obtain at one go. Remember, however, to check whether this is possible before committing all the available time to just part of the topic.


What Should an Interview be Like?

An interview is best if both interviewer and interviewee come away from it feeling as though they’ve each had a very good conversation about a topic they’re both very interested in. This requires three things of the interviewer.


The interviewer must be prepared. If the interview is to be recorded, make sure the machine is working. Make sure the questions make sense. Make sure the questions ask what they should ask. It is very easy to have a question with two meanings. That makes analysis very difficult.

The interviewer must be polite and well-mannered. This does not necessarily mean getting dressed-up in formal dress, but it does mean the interviewer dressing appropriately, behaving well and remembering that the interviewee is giving their time, almost always, free.

The interviewer must be focused. If this is not the case, the interviewee may well feel that his time is being wasted and stop the interview early. An interviewer should not outstay his or her welcome. Once the required information has been obtained, interviewers should take their leave of the interviewee. This then allows the interviewee to go somewhere quiet, a cafe or a park bench possibly, and write notes and reflections about the interview as soon as possible after its conclusion and certainly before the next interview.


The Skill of Interviewing

Interviewing is a skill. Get it right and the analysis and conclusions will follow naturally, Get it wrong and bad policy and practice recommendations are bound to follow.

Tis The Season of Giving...Gifts (Simple Leave Comment)

Winner Will Be Chosen On 12/7/2010

Thumbtack

ThumbTack.com is a great way to promote your business, products and/or services!
You can see my service on thumbtack.com, a website for service professionals

My professional listing is now available on Thumbtack, a social community where buyers meet service providers