Monday, November 20, 2006

Games on Space

Thursday, November 09, 2006

Wrong Major?




You scored as Religion/Theology. You should strongly consider majoring (or minoring) in Religion, Theology, or a related major.



(Err... excuse me ah, should I be that upper one or this one?)


It is possible that the best major for you is your 2nd, 3rd, or even 5th listed category, so be sure to consider ALL majors in your OTHER high scoring categories (below). You may score high in a category you didnt think you would--it is possible that a great major for you is something you once dismissed as not for you. The right major for you will be something 1) you love and enjoy and 2) are really great at it.







(What about this one or that one?)


Consider adding a minor or double majoring to make yourself standout and to combine your interests. Please post your results in your myspace/blog/journal.



WHAT MAJOR IS RIGHT FOR YOU?




Religion/Theology

100%

History/Anthropology/LiberalArts

100%

English/Journalism/Comm

88%

HR/BusinessManagement

88%

Psychology/Sociology

75%

French/German/Spanish

75%

PoliticalScience/Philosophy

75%

Biology/Chemistry/Geology

75%

Education/Counseling

75%

Nursing/AthleticTraining

69%

Accounting/Finance/Marketing

69%

Visual&PerformingArts

50%

Physics/Engineering

38%

Mathematics/Statistics

13%



Or this one? hehehe...

Aiyah, no need to think too much lah. Let God and JPA decide... :P



Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Barna Teenagers Music Survey

  • Peers are the most common source of teenagers’ information about CD copying (32%) as well as about music downloading (28%). Other sources of information related to CD copying included teachers (13%), parents (11%), newscasters (9%), other people on TV (4%), siblings (2%), TV commercials (1%), radio DJs (1%), MTV (1%), newspapers (1%), and the police (1%).

  • The sources of information for the morality of downloading music are: peers (28%), teachers (13%), parents (11%), newscasters (9%), musician/artist (8%), other people on TV (4%), TV commercials (3%), pastor (3%), newspapers (2%), youth pastors (2%), siblings (1%), and radio DJs (1%).
  • 86% of teens believes that music piracy – including copying a CD for a friend or downloading non-promotional music online for free – either is morally acceptable or is not even a moral issue. 8% claim that such activities are morally wrong. (2004)

  • 21% of teens said that both CD burning and downloading are morally okay. (2004)

  • 65% of teenagers believe music piracy is not a moral issue. (2004)

  • Just 10% of Christian teens believe that copying CDs for friends and unauthorized music downloading are morally wrong, compared to 6% of non-born agains (the four-point difference barely qualified as statistically significant). (2004)

  • 64% of born again Christian teens believe that copying CDs for friends and unauthorized music is not a moral issue, compared with 66% of non-Christians. (2004)

  • 4 out of every 5 teenagers (80%) have engaged in some type of music piracy in the past six months – including making copies of CDs for other people, downloading free music (other than promotions or giveaways), or uploading their own music files to the Internet to share with others. (2004)

  • Active church attenders (78%) were just as likely as non-attenders (81%) to engage in piracy; born again Christians (77%) were just as likely as non-born again Christians (81%). (2004)

  • 84% of teenagers said they had purchased a CD or cassette from a music store in the past six months. (2004)

  • Only 48% of teenagers have ever heard anyone discuss the morality of music downloading. (2004)

http://www.barna.org/FlexPage.aspx?Page=Topic&TopicID=37

    What World Leader Are You?

    Friday, November 03, 2006

    Inspirational