Archive for January, 2010

Pediatric Physical Therapist Jobs

January 27th, 2010

A pediatric physical therapist deals with the rehabilitation of children recovering from injuries, fractures and other ailments. Pediatric physical therapist jobs provide immense job satisfaction because you can help in reshaping the lives of children and have the gratification of assisting the little ones get back to their routine lives.

Pediatric physical therapy job involves relieving pain, preventing injury or disability, and improving the clients’ functions. It has the complete well-being of the child as the main objective. Through physical exercises and medication, pediatric physical therapists help the patient regain his/her physical capabilities. The treatment process is well-coordinated and includes proper diagnosis, formulating the best treatment plan, educating the children to perform physical exercises, evaluating different stages and more.

Basic Requirements for a Pediatric Physical Therapist Job

Individuals having good academic credentials can soar high in this job. They should have a minimum of a bachelor’s degree in physiotherapy. They should be professional, at the same time, sociable for effective interaction with the patients and other caregivers. Ability to organize, supervise, resolve specific health problems of the patient, plan treatment programs, and set goals, are the necessary qualities needed for an ideal physical therapy professional. Above all, the candidate should be licensed after undergoing training in an accredited institute.

Job Opportunities in Reputable Medical Firms

Home health agencies, school systems, outpatient clinics, hospitals, nursing homes and many other medical facilities offer job vacancies for physical therapists. Finding a proper place with excellent remuneration meeting all your individual requirements, might involve a lot of time and effort. Nowadays, people depend on recruiting agencies to find ideal jobs. When vacancies arise, these agencies inform their clients from where they will direct them to the right job providers. This gives the candidates the freedom to choose the job suiting their needs. Thus you can find highly rewarding jobs in the medical industry which will put you in a position where you can help the infants and children recover their health.




By: Brad Jones

Students Learn Flexibility at Academic Summer Camp

January 27th, 2010

The academic summer camp for teens and pre-teens, SuperCamp, tells students to get off what’s not working. Shift perspectives. Maintain the ability to change what you’re doing to get the outcome you desire.

Flexibility is being prepared for change and having the willingness to do things differently. If a strategy is not working, try something different until you find something that does work. Many times every day you face situations that look different from what you had planned. You could be rigid and continue to do things the same way over and over. Or you could be flexible and respond by adapting to the changing situation. Which response is more likely to produce your desired outcome in the long run?

Go on  make a change  try something different People in their eighties and nineties looking back at their long lives have said that their regrets are more often about the opportunities for change they didn’t take than the ones they did. More often than not, change pays off. Hockey player Wayne Gretzky put it this way: “You miss 100% of the goals you never try for.” Then why don’t people make more changes? What keeps people from trying new things? Comfort? Convenience? Fear of the unknown? Using old methods feels easiereven though it often isn’t. How well do you handle change? Do you hold on to old ways of doing things even when you know they don’t work? We all do sometimes. It’s not easy to recognize or admit when something isn’t working. Some people routinely fight against change. You’ve probably known rigid, inflexible people who refuse to adapt to new circumstances. But let me ask you: How many highly successful rigid people do you know? What’s flexibility? It’s the capability to adapt to new or changing situations to obtain the outcome you want. It’s the ability to get off what’s not working and find what does work. And it’s a prime ingredient of a successful life in a changing world. Why Flexibility? Every day we face situations that are different from what we expected or planned. But we do have choices when this occurs. We can be rigid and stick with a set of behaviors that no longer fit the planor we can adapt and handle the situation with flexibility. We all know that life does not follow a rigid plan. It’s fluid, dynamic, and ever-changing. Staying flexible means having the courage and openness to change when your situation changes. Every aspect of our lives demands flexibility. You’re running six mornings a week to train for a tennis tournament but you sprain your ankle; instead of giving up, you swim in the mornings until you heal. You’ve planned lunch with an old friend at an upscale bistro, but when you learn that she’s bringing her four small kids you opt instead for a burger restaurant with a play area for kids. You’re planting a bed of red roses and need six more to finish, but your local nursery is out of the red varietyyou alternate red with white. You get a great promotion, but at the same time your mother falls ill, so you defer your job change for three months so you can take care of her, but while you’re there you study to prepare for your new position. Life can require flexibility in the greatest and smallest of situations.

Be ready to change what you’re doing to reach your goals Flexibility challenges you to let go of what’s not working and try new things until you hit upon what does work. It’s hard to recognizeeven harder to admitwhen something’s not working. You’ve invested time, money, prideand you’ve convinced yourself it has to work. To become flexible, develop the ability to recognize when it’s time to let go of an unworkable method and try something different. It’s hard on the ego, but until you admit you’ve got a problem, you can’t take the next step. Try these steps to move toward greater flexibility:

* First, you have to accept the reality of change. Recognize that it’s normal to change the way you do things because it’s inevitable that circumstances change. It’s nothing personalit’s just the nature of life. The best plans in the world can become impractical or obsolete. Make it okay for something not to work.

* Second, in order to let go of things that aren’t working, learn to detach your ego. We get our pride wrapped up in our methodswe take the need for change as a personal attack on our intelligence or our ability. Or sometimes we just get stubbornly attached to our way of doing things because it’s “our way.” Make sure your ego doesn’t get in the way of your flexibility. Take your work, not yourself, seriously. What you want is more important than looking good.

* Third, challenge your assumptions. In order to see when change is needed, you have to become conscious of your beliefs about a situation. Don’t judge (and condemn) alternate paths before you’ve tried them. To increase awareness of your assumptions, become a rigorous questioner of your thoughts, beliefs, and feelings. Question your authority! Learn to ask yourself, “Why do I think that?”

* Finally, learn to recognize the difference between a plan that’s not working and a temporary setback. When things are not going well it could be because the method is bad and doomed to fail, or it may simply be a momentary pause in a massive upswing. How will you know the difference? Your gut will tell you. Tune in to your gut, then measure your results. New ideas don’t come to those with closed minds. When you realize it’s time to reformulate your actions, break yourself wide open. Start by promising yourself to be wide open to new thoughts. Learn to suspend your assumptions and listen without judgment. Brainstorm. Branch out. Get creative. Explore as many possible solutions as you can. By throwing yourself open to the possibilities, you’ll discover avenues for success that you would never have considered before. You might even find ways to improve things that are working.

If you want to experience whole-life success, learn to dance with change. To succeed, you have to look for ways to make everything better. Suspend your assumptions, seek new ground, throw yourself headlong into the unknown. Borrow ideas from other subjects, other applications. If you can find wisdom in the way a violin is tuned, that same method may apply to the way an annual report is written. If the patrol method used by Canadian geese to safeguard their flocks works for them, the same method might work to keep a group of nine-year-olds safe on a camping trip. Be willing to cross borders, mix and match, move methods from one application to another, and stand them on their heads.

Don’t fall back into rigidity if you find a possible solution and it doesn’t work. If the old method wasn’t the method, this new one might not be it either. Be ready to try several new methods! Assign a deadline to the experiment and give it all you’ve got for the duration. If, in that time, it yields few results, let it go. Complacency is the enemy of success. When you get comfortable, you stop moving forward. You dig in, shut down, doze off, disengage. Your spirit falls asleep. If complacency is the enemy of success, change is its best friend. Change wakes you up, gets you on your feet, and engages you. But change for its own sake isn’t what I’m talking about here. It doesn’t work to simply change things randomly. The rule of thumb when it comes to change is to keep what’s workingand let go of what’s not.

Commit to Flexibility – it’s fun, and it works!

When you commit to Flexibility, you’ll discover a side benefitlife’s more fun when you’re flexible! Being open to change as you meet the unknown can be a thrill! A friend who’s president of a state university told me he knows he’s on track, moving things forward, when he feels a bit of fear. Do you sometimes find yourself tingling with fear? Do you experience that heightened sense of alertness and readiness that comes with facing change? Excellent! That’s how you know you’re flexible enough to enjoy the challenge of changeand the success it brings. Affirmations for FLEXIBILITY:

* I challenge my assumptions in order to see when change is needed.

* When something isn’t working, I try another way.

* I change strategies whenever it’s necessary to attain my goals.

“When you’re through changing, you’re through.” Bruce Barton




By: Jim Hartley

Job Hunting Survival Tips

January 27th, 2010

We are known for what we do rather than what we are. This is an unfortunate reality but one has to accept it. Getting a job is not that simple, but before that the most important thing is knowing what sort of job you are capable of doing and want to do.

First up, consider and revise the goals you have set for yourself. If you don’t have any then make some. Be sure about what you want to achieve and only then can you pursue it. When considering what type of job you want, think about your weaknesses and strengths and then look for a job that suits you best.

The next step is to make a list of all the companies/organizations that you want to apply to. Having done that, it is time to write and send them your resume. Writing an impressive and honest resume is important. Leave out any information you feel would give them a wrong impression if that is possible and focus on highlighting your achievements and positive aspects of your academic and extra curricular activities.

Do some research on these companies and find out on what basis they tend to hire their employees. Find someone recently employed if possible and inquire about the type of questions they can possibly ask. Prepare yourself for the interview and be confident. If your academic results are not good enough, show them that they do not reflect what you are capable of. Companies usually tend to employ people who are confident, show good management skills and are acute learners, rather than based on their academic records.

When you appear for your interview, keep in mind you are about to become a professional, so start acting like one. Dress properly in a business suit and stay upright. Show them you are confident and that you were made for this job. While expressing your point of view on some question they might ask, hold back your biases for a while and make them hear what they want to hear. If you are asked about your future plans and goals, be realistic when you answer.

The amount of competition in this world keeps growing and getting a job becomes more and more challenging. You might fail in your first few interviews but eventually you will find a good job that suits you. Keep trying, because giving up or accepting defeat will be the beginning of a troublesome and worthless life.




By: Jonathon Hardcastle