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anonymous

What does your career horoscope look like in the year 2019 - Akashvaani - 0 views

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    Vedic astrology readings for the year 2019 are calculated based on your moon sign and not just sun sign as of western astrology. For those people, who are planning to make major career and business decisions and moves in this year, let's look at what is predicted in each sign's horoscopes in relation to career. Saturn is transiting Sagittarius in the Venus Nakshatra in 2019. Those looking for a government job astrology also meet with success in this year. Lot of travel is also indicated and this may upset the work-life balance and increase stress on the job front. Taking some time off is advisable, and overall it is a great year for those in sales and marketing also.
Leslie Camacho

New study tracks student transfers - Inside Higher Ed - 6 views

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    "Invisible Transfer Students February 28, 2012 - 3:00am By Mitch Smith Enrollment managers have long spoken about the mobility of students, citing the high number of credits transferred in and out of their colleges and grumbling that federal graduation rate calculations fail to account for those transient degree-seekers. Data released today by the National Student Clearinghouse back those assertions, showing that a third of those who were first-time college students in 2006 had attended at least one other institution by summer 2011. The study followed 2.8 million full- and part-time students of all ages at every type of institution. Students were counted as transfers if they enrolled at a second institution before earning a degree. Thus, students who moved to a four-year institution after earning an associate degree were not counted, but university students who took a community college class over the summer were. High school students who enrolled in concurrent enrollment courses were not counted as transfers. The Clearinghouse researchers found that a quarter of those who transferred did so more than once and that the greatest number of moves, 37 percent, took place in a student's second year. It also found that 43 percent of transfers were to public two-year institutions, making them the most common transfer destination for students from every type of institution except other public two-year colleges. This study, unique in including part-time students and in following students who might transfer several times, joins a small but growing body of research on the mobility of students. The findings don't surprise Clifford Adelman, a senior associate with the Institute for Higher Education Policy whose research agenda includes national transfer patterns. Loyalties to a particular institution or location, which can discourage transferring, have long been eroding, Adelman said. He calls the phenomenon "geomobility" and said it has called attention to ineffi
anonymous

Chances of Pregnancy - When Science Says no But Astrology Says Yes! - 0 views

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    An expert astrologer would closely analyze the horoscopes or janama kundali of both the man and the woman who are trying to have a child. The astrologer would be able to tell them reasons that are impacting the chances of conception, they can poinpoint the timelines when the chances are highest or lowest, and finally give the remedies and solutions that can be tried to get children.
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