Anak-anak sangat suka bermain dengan teman-temannya. Mereka bermain untuk menyenangkan diri mereka sendiri dan memiliki teman-teman yang banyak. Salah satu hal-hal lucu di bumi yang disukai anak-anak adalah binatang. Membeli buku-buku yang menceritakan tentang binatang untuk anak Anda adalah hal yang sangat baik untuk dilakukan. Anak-anak usia muda yang begitu sangat ingin tahu tentang lingkungan mereka. Suatu hal yang aneh atau apapun yang mereka lihat untuk pertama kalinya sebagian besar mendorong rasa ingin tahu mereka. Keingintahuan mereka juga bisa dirangsang oleh hewan yang mereka lihat untuk pertama kalinya. Membeli buku tentang binatang dengan gambar warna-warni hewan akan menjamin bahwa itu akan membawa senyum di wajah anak Anda. Cerita hewan adalah salah satu jenis buku favorit yang banyak dibaca anak-anak. Mewarnai buku dengan gambar hewan yang akan diwarnai juga merupakan buku yang sangat menarik untuk anak. Mitos, dongeng, cerita binatang dan habitat mereka sebagian besar direkomendasikan untuk anak-anak karena mereka bisa mendapatkan pengetahuan, kebijaksanaan dan nilai-nilai dari buku cerita hewan tersebut. Jika Anda mengajar anak Anda untuk membaca buku cerita tentang binatang, ia akan bisa mengembangkan cara merawat hewan dan makhluk hidup lainnya. Dia pasti akan melindungi lingkungan di mana hewan-hewan tersebut hidup dan dibesarkan. Ini adalah nilai yang sangat baik yang harus dimasukkan ke dalam pikiran dan hati anak-anak sejak mereka masih kecil karena merupakan fakta bahwa banyak spesies hewan yang menghadapi ancaman kepunahan. Buku tentang binatang tidak hanya menyenangkan untuk dibaca oleh anak Anda tetapi juga terdapat nilai pendidikan di dalamnya dan anak Anda dapat belajar sesuatu yang baik saat membaca buku tentang binatang. Buku-buku cerita tentang hewan juga bisa memperkuat ikatan antara anak dan orang tua. Orang tua dapat membaca dongeng dan cerita hewan lainnya untuk anak-anak mereka sebelum mereka tidur atau mereka dapat mengajarkan anak-anak untuk membaca dengan nada dan ekspresi seperti di dalam cerita tersebut. Anda juga dapat melatih anak Anda untuk menjadi lebih artistik dengan membeli beberapa buku mewarnai tentang hewan . Anak akan dapat melakukan perjalanan ke seluruh dunia hanya dengan membaca dan mewarnai buku-buku hewan favorit mereka.. Jika Anda memiliki hewan peliharaan, Anda juga dapat melatih anak Anda untuk merawat hewan peliharaan Anda dengan menggunakan buku-buku hewan seperti pedoman tentang merawat hewan peliharaan.
Selasa, 11 Desember 2012
5 Situs Terbaik Untuk Bermain Game Mini Online
Limit Komputer | 5 Situs Terbaik Untuk Bermain Game Mini Online - Game Mini adalah sebutan yang diperuntukan untuk game yang memiliki fitur-fitur terbatas dan sederhana. namun siapa sangka bahwa game mini tersebut memiliki pengguna aktif yang cukup banyak, terutama anak-anak.
Nah dalam postingan ini saya ingin membagikan beberapa situs terbaik untuk bermain game mini online gratis untuk kalian semua, berikut ini :
1. Games.co.id
Games.co.id merupakan sebuah situs yang menyediakan berbagai kategory game yang lengkap seperti: Balapan, olahragan, aksi, teka-teki dan sebagainya.
http://www.games.co.id/
2. Y8
Seperti Games.co.id, Y8 juga memiliki berbagai game-game yang unik serta memiliki koleksi game yang mencapai ribuan bahkan jutaan. dalam mengakses game di situs ini kalian tidak akan menunggu lama untuk memainkannya, sebab loading yang cepat adalah fitur utama yang di miliki website ini.
http://id.y8.com/
3. Addicting Games
Situs game yang satu ini di sebut-sebut memiliki fitur-fitur yang lengkap dan menyediakan berbagai kategory game di antaranya: Strategy, Car, Shooting, Puzzle, Sport dan masih banyak lagi.
http://www.addictinggames.com/
4. Friv Games
Friv Games adalah situs game mini yang menarik, mudah dan simpel serta memiliki koleksi game yang beragam.
http://www.friv.com/
5. Games Keren
Situs ini menyediakan berbagai game mini terbaik dan mudah di gunakan serta bahasa yang di pakai adalah bahasa indonesia.
http://www.gameskeren.com/
Nah dalam postingan ini saya ingin membagikan beberapa situs terbaik untuk bermain game mini online gratis untuk kalian semua, berikut ini :
1. Games.co.id
Games.co.id merupakan sebuah situs yang menyediakan berbagai kategory game yang lengkap seperti: Balapan, olahragan, aksi, teka-teki dan sebagainya.
http://www.games.co.id/
2. Y8
Seperti Games.co.id, Y8 juga memiliki berbagai game-game yang unik serta memiliki koleksi game yang mencapai ribuan bahkan jutaan. dalam mengakses game di situs ini kalian tidak akan menunggu lama untuk memainkannya, sebab loading yang cepat adalah fitur utama yang di miliki website ini.
http://id.y8.com/
3. Addicting Games
Situs game yang satu ini di sebut-sebut memiliki fitur-fitur yang lengkap dan menyediakan berbagai kategory game di antaranya: Strategy, Car, Shooting, Puzzle, Sport dan masih banyak lagi.
http://www.addictinggames.com/
4. Friv Games
Friv Games adalah situs game mini yang menarik, mudah dan simpel serta memiliki koleksi game yang beragam.
http://www.friv.com/
5. Games Keren
Situs ini menyediakan berbagai game mini terbaik dan mudah di gunakan serta bahasa yang di pakai adalah bahasa indonesia.
http://www.gameskeren.com/
Health Care Hired Managers Not Playing by the Same Rules - the Example of Lancaster General Health
That all people in the US do not play by the same rules, and that more specifically the richest people do not play by the same rules as the somewhat or a lot less rich, became a topic of discussion after the 2008 global financial collapse/ great recession. A powerful discussion of this theme appeared in Predator Nation, the book by Charles Ferguson that followed his award winning documentary, Inside Job:
He focused on the culture of finance, but as we have seen, this culture has overlapped the culture of health care. Thus we have shown multiple examples of those who have become rich due to their positions in health care, almost always positions as high-ranking hired managers of health care organizations. They get paid according to different rules than apply to other hired employees, and live by different rules than their less-favored fellow employees, again by virtue of their positions.
Some of these examples were of CEOs of huge, for-profit health care corporations, However, we have increasingly seen hired managers of moderate size non-profit organizations who also appear to play by different rules than their fellow employees.
The Executives of Lancaster General Health
The latest example appeared through reporting found in LancasterOnline, the web presence of several newspapers in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, about a regional community health care system, Lancaster General Health. The system includes one major hospital, Lancaster General, an obstetrics hospital, and a variety of satellites and out-patient facilities.
The system was facing challenges in 2010:
That lavish total compensation included "perks" that were likely not furnished to lesser employees, for example
This relatively lavish pay was part of a pattern. Executive compensation had been increasing out of proportion to any obvious benchmark for a while.
So note that CEO Beeman's compensation was for less than one full year's worth of work. His annualized rate would have been even more.
A companion article noted that part of CEO Beeman's bonus for 2010 was justified by his efforts to keep in touch with the institution while he was physically not present, and was, in fact off-site for an extended period fulfilling a military reserve commitment
Note that this verified that Beeman got more than $1 million in compensation despite not having worked a whole year, since it was necessary for two other executives to take over his work.
I seriously doubt that the hospital system is committed to "generous" pay to get "top talent" for all of its job openings. Again, I doubt the generosity includes full pay for leaves taken for military service, or, for that matter country club dues.
Another version was offered by the chair of the system's board of trustees:
Note that no one who defended the compensation given to CEO Beeman or other top managers provided evidence that they are "top" or "blue chip" talent, or that they, rather than the health care professionals who work at or for the system save lives.
Summary
Unfortunately, the otherwise excellent articles on Lancaster General did not challenge any of the defenders of executive exceptionalism to better justify their assertions. Nor were they asked to consider its adverse effects.
As we have frequently said, current policies about paying hired health care managers leave the managers unaccountable for the effects of their actions on patients' and the public's health, and worse, fail to deter and may even encourage ignorance of the health care mission, frankly mission-hostile behavior, self-interest, conflicts of interest, and outright corruption. Meanwhile, paying nearly all top managers as if they were brilliant, while setting much harsher standards for the employees who actually take care of patients, including health professionals, demoralizes those on whom patients actually depend for care.
As we have said endlessly,.... Health care organizations need leaders that uphold the core values of health care, and focus on and are accountable for the mission, not on secondary responsibilities that conflict with these values and their mission, and not on self-enrichment. Leaders ought to be rewarded reasonably, but not lavishly, for doing what ultimately improves patient care, or when applicable, good education and good research. On the other hand, those who authorize, direct and implement bad behavior ought to suffer negative consequences sufficient to deter future bad behavior.
If we do not fix the severe problems affecting the leadership and governance of health care, and do not increase accountability, integrity and transparency of health care leadership and governance, we will be as much to blame as the leaders when the system collapses.
Ponder the toxic effects of too much wealth, too much power, the new culture of American investment banking, and a life conducted within the cocoon of America's new oligarchy. [p 112]
He focused on the culture of finance, but as we have seen, this culture has overlapped the culture of health care. Thus we have shown multiple examples of those who have become rich due to their positions in health care, almost always positions as high-ranking hired managers of health care organizations. They get paid according to different rules than apply to other hired employees, and live by different rules than their less-favored fellow employees, again by virtue of their positions.
Some of these examples were of CEOs of huge, for-profit health care corporations, However, we have increasingly seen hired managers of moderate size non-profit organizations who also appear to play by different rules than their fellow employees.
The Executives of Lancaster General Health
The latest example appeared through reporting found in LancasterOnline, the web presence of several newspapers in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, about a regional community health care system, Lancaster General Health. The system includes one major hospital, Lancaster General, an obstetrics hospital, and a variety of satellites and out-patient facilities.
The system was facing challenges in 2010:
In 2010, times were getting tougher for Lancaster General Health.
The mammoth [sic] health care system would notch record revenues of nearly $1 billion that year. But its annual surplus fell for the fourth straight year. Though destitute by no means, galloping expenses and uncertainty in the marketplace were hammering LGH's business model, prompting changes. Two units were closed, some positions were eliminated, and 170 employees were reassigned.
However, despite these difficulties,
Two executives — CEO Tom Beeman, who was on military leave part of the year, and Executive Vice President Jan Bergen, who helped fill in for Beeman in his absence — earned more than $1 million in total compensation; another six got at least $500,000.
And those top 21 executives collectively received more than $2 million in bonuses and incentives.
That lavish total compensation included "perks" that were likely not furnished to lesser employees, for example
The IRS form lists few explicit perks, save one: LGH paid $1,044 in social club dues for Beeman in 2010.
Said Regina Mingle, LGH's executive vice president of human resources: 'In this community, if you need to do business, you do it at the Hamilton Club or Lancaster Country Club. We decided ... we would pay those fees.'
It seems doubtful, however, that any other employees who felt that they did "business" at country clubs or similar establishments were entitled to subsidized dues.
This relatively lavish pay was part of a pattern. Executive compensation had been increasing out of proportion to any obvious benchmark for a while.
In fiscal year 2005-06, CEO Tom Beeman earned a comparatively modest total compensation of $646,094. By 2010, that had more than doubled, to $1.35 million. That figure included a base compensation of $606,728, along with $345,000 in bonuses and incentives and $279,511 in retirement and other deferred compensation.
Bergen, who along with Executive Vice President Marion A. McGowan took on some of Beeman's duties when he left in October 2010 for a nine-month military leave of absence, saw her compensation rise from $332,823 in 2005-06 to a total of $1.1 million in 2010. The latter figure included $425,967 in base pay, $177,752 in bonuses and incentives, $111,383 in retirement and other deferred compensation, and $320,208 in what the IRS calls 'other reportable compensation' such as employee contributions to 401(k) or 403(b) retirement plans.
The third highest-paid LGH executive in 2010 was McGowan, whose compensation package totaled $772,978, including $456,789 in base pay and $192,226 in bonuses and incentives. Fourth on the list was
Dr. Lee M. Duke II, senior vice president and chief physician executive, whose compensation totaled $746,830, including $405,083 in base pay and $140,377 in bonuses and incentives.
Fifth was Chief Financial Officer F. Joseph Byorick Sr., whose total compensation of $652,667 included $397,160 in base pay and $140,500 in bonuses and incentives.
So note that CEO Beeman's compensation was for less than one full year's worth of work. His annualized rate would have been even more.
A companion article noted that part of CEO Beeman's bonus for 2010 was justified by his efforts to keep in touch with the institution while he was physically not present, and was, in fact off-site for an extended period fulfilling a military reserve commitment
In October 2010, Lancaster General Health had a problem.
Its CEO, Tom Beeman, was shipping out for a military tour of duty, to serve as deputy director of the National Intrepid Center of Excellence in Bethesda, Md. Two other administrators — Executive Vice Presidents Jan Bergen and Marion W. McGowan — would step into Beeman's shoes while he was away.
Yet Beeman stayed involved. 'We had regular Skype [video-conferencing] calls,' said Alex Henderson, chairman of the LGH Board of Trustees.
That, LGH officials believed, merited a bonus. So Beeman got nearly $90,000 for his efforts in absentia.
Note that this verified that Beeman got more than $1 million in compensation despite not having worked a whole year, since it was necessary for two other executives to take over his work.
Furthermore, while US law does mandate employers to re-hire employees who take leaves to fulfill military reserve commitments (look here), I suspect that very few employers pay employees anything while they are away (although reservists are certainly paid by the government for their reserve duty). However, Beeman got a bonus merely for keeping in touch while he was away doing another job. I further suspect it is extremely unusual to pay an employee a bonus for trying to keep in touch during his or her military service.
So the reporting on compensation given to top hired managers at Lancaster General emphasized that executive pay is set using very different rules than are used to set the pay of other employees.
The Talking Points Reappear as Justifications for Exceptional Compensation of Hired Managers
So the reporting on compensation given to top hired managers at Lancaster General emphasized that executive pay is set using very different rules than are used to set the pay of other employees.
The Talking Points Reappear as Justifications for Exceptional Compensation of Hired Managers
Furthermore, the justifications made for the Lancaster General top executives' large compensation packages echoed talking points used to support such largess for top hired managers in other health care settings, but did not explain why hired managers merit exceptional treatment. We first listed the talking points here, and then provided additional examples of their use here, and here. The talking points are:
- we pay what everyone else pays
- CEOs work hard and are brilliant, and so deserve high pay
- high pay is needed to attract and retain competent, if not brilliant people.
None of the examples of these talking points we have seen so far explain why these apply to CEOs and other top hired managers, but not to other kinds of employees. .
We Pay What Everyone Else Pays
A third article in the LancasterOnline series noted that executive compensation was based on information on what everyone else pays,
CEOs Work Hard and Are Brilliant, and So Deserve High Pay
High Pay is Needed to Attract and Retain Competent, if not Brilliant People
- we pay what everyone else pays
- CEOs work hard and are brilliant, and so deserve high pay
- high pay is needed to attract and retain competent, if not brilliant people.
None of the examples of these talking points we have seen so far explain why these apply to CEOs and other top hired managers, but not to other kinds of employees. .
We Pay What Everyone Else Pays
A third article in the LancasterOnline series noted that executive compensation was based on information on what everyone else pays,
nonprofits must hire consultants to study how similarly sized nonprofits pay their executives.
LGH's consultant is a firm called Mercer, headquartered in New York City with an office in Philadelphia. Charlie Scott, of Mercer, has in recent years helped LGH determine what to pay its highest-compensated executives.
'Our role is to be [an] independent source of market norms,' said Scott, determining 'levels of compensation available in the market for executive positions, as well as how compensation is paid.
This is an interesting variant of this talking point, because it essentially blames the reasoning on the Internal Revenue Service. The article did not explain how Mercer determined the extent of the appropriate market, nor how it obtained a representative sample of data about that market.
CEOs Work Hard and Are Brilliant, and So Deserve High Pay
High Pay is Needed to Attract and Retain Competent, if not Brilliant People
These justifications are often combined. In the case of Lancaster General, the examples included
At LGH, officials say the generous compensation is necessary to attract and retain the top talent. Said Lancaster attorney Alex Henderson III, chairman of the Lancaster General Health board of trustees and its compensation committee, which decides what to pay top execs: 'Demand for top-notch hospital executives has grown, and we have to respond to that.'
'We're not looking to be average.'
I seriously doubt that the hospital system is committed to "generous" pay to get "top talent" for all of its job openings. Again, I doubt the generosity includes full pay for leaves taken for military service, or, for that matter country club dues.
Another version was offered by the chair of the system's board of trustees:
Trustee Henderson said that as LGH's goal isn't to maximize revenue but save lives, executives can be doing a fantastic job — worthy of six-figure bonus and incentive pay — even when the system's financial performance slips.
Consider an executive who devises a way to shorten stays for patients, Henderson said: 'That's great for the patients, for insurance companies, for nurses who don't have to take care of people who don't need to be here' — but it's bad for LGH's bottom line.
Left out of the first part of the statement was how one could attribute lives saved to the work of a hired manager, especially, as in the case of CEO Beeman, a manager with no direct experience caring for patients. Mr Beeman's official hospital bio listed this educational background,
Prior to joining Lancaster General Health, he served at Saint Thomas Health Services as its President and Chief Executive Officer, and the Senior Vice President for Hospital Operations and Executive Director of the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.
It did not include any former positions that would have involved direct patient care.
Health care actually does not save lives that often, but hopefully does often ameliorate disease and injury, reduce suffering and improve function. However, the people who actually directly accomplish this are health care professionals, nurses, doctors, therapists, etc, not managers who sit in offices.
I will merely note that Mr Henderson's second example apparently was theoretical. There was no example given of an executive who actually did shorten length of stay.
In a third article in the LancasterOnline series, the compensation consultant employed by Lancaster General Health reiterated the argument that one must pay top dollar for scarce managerial talent:
[Mercer consultant Charlie] Scott said that the law of supply and demand that applies 'to any type of talent pool applies to health care executives. There's normally a lack of supply of what's considered blue-chip talent ... [and] the increasing complexity of the health care industry requires an increasing level of talent and capability.'
Note that no one who defended the compensation given to CEO Beeman or other top managers provided evidence that they are "top" or "blue chip" talent, or that they, rather than the health care professionals who work at or for the system save lives.
Summary
In our last US election campaign season, a few candidates pledged to level the playing field so that rich and poor would play by the same rules. Other candidates scoffed at the importance of the problem, or called its invocation class warfare. Meanwhile, in health care, we just accumulate more examples that different people play by different rules.
So we have yet another particular example of how top hired managers, particularly CEOs, of even modestly sized, non-profit health care organizations get to play by different rules than those affecting other employees, and other people who work in health care. As in previous cases, the justifications provided for these different rules were basically a repeat of poorly conceived arguments that have been cited often by defenders of executive exceptionalism.
The "we pay what everyone else pays" is basically an appeal to common practice fallacy. Why we have to do so is never stated. In any case, the argument did not include why the limited selection of comparator hospitals and executives used is a representative sample of "everyone." Furthermore, as we noted here, what evidence there is suggests that skills required to run one organization do not necessarily transfer to another, suggesting the comparison to "everyone" makes no sense.
As is usual, the "CEOs are brilliant" argument is basically an appeal to authority fallacy, and provided no evidence that the particular CEO is brilliant. In fact, it seems that everyone who has used this talking point before claims his or her CEO is brilliant. (Look here for example.) Obviously, all CEOs cannot be above average.
Finally, as noted here, there is no evidence that without high pay worthy leaders could not be hired or retained.
So we have yet another particular example of how top hired managers, particularly CEOs, of even modestly sized, non-profit health care organizations get to play by different rules than those affecting other employees, and other people who work in health care. As in previous cases, the justifications provided for these different rules were basically a repeat of poorly conceived arguments that have been cited often by defenders of executive exceptionalism.
The "we pay what everyone else pays" is basically an appeal to common practice fallacy. Why we have to do so is never stated. In any case, the argument did not include why the limited selection of comparator hospitals and executives used is a representative sample of "everyone." Furthermore, as we noted here, what evidence there is suggests that skills required to run one organization do not necessarily transfer to another, suggesting the comparison to "everyone" makes no sense.
As is usual, the "CEOs are brilliant" argument is basically an appeal to authority fallacy, and provided no evidence that the particular CEO is brilliant. In fact, it seems that everyone who has used this talking point before claims his or her CEO is brilliant. (Look here for example.) Obviously, all CEOs cannot be above average.
Finally, as noted here, there is no evidence that without high pay worthy leaders could not be hired or retained.
Unfortunately, the otherwise excellent articles on Lancaster General did not challenge any of the defenders of executive exceptionalism to better justify their assertions. Nor were they asked to consider its adverse effects.
As we have frequently said, current policies about paying hired health care managers leave the managers unaccountable for the effects of their actions on patients' and the public's health, and worse, fail to deter and may even encourage ignorance of the health care mission, frankly mission-hostile behavior, self-interest, conflicts of interest, and outright corruption. Meanwhile, paying nearly all top managers as if they were brilliant, while setting much harsher standards for the employees who actually take care of patients, including health professionals, demoralizes those on whom patients actually depend for care.
As we have said endlessly,.... Health care organizations need leaders that uphold the core values of health care, and focus on and are accountable for the mission, not on secondary responsibilities that conflict with these values and their mission, and not on self-enrichment. Leaders ought to be rewarded reasonably, but not lavishly, for doing what ultimately improves patient care, or when applicable, good education and good research. On the other hand, those who authorize, direct and implement bad behavior ought to suffer negative consequences sufficient to deter future bad behavior.
If we do not fix the severe problems affecting the leadership and governance of health care, and do not increase accountability, integrity and transparency of health care leadership and governance, we will be as much to blame as the leaders when the system collapses.
All in the Game by Neil Ward
Neil Ward is Chief Executive of the Welsh Football Trust (WFT), the FAW’s registered charity set up in 1996 to encourage more people – males and female – of all ages to play football.
It is vital for us that we are able to grow the game of football in Wales and that we can cement our place as the number one participation sport.
Football should be accessible to everyone, regardless of their personal circumstances or background. That is why we are fully supportive of the work Sport Wales and Stonewall Cymru have done to raise awareness of the issues being faced by lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) individuals wanting to participate in sport.
We have made some excellent headway recently by setting up different projects and programmes to encourage more people to play football.
Women and girls and disability football has become a particular focus. There has been successful growth in participation where we have seen a 45% (women and girls) and 42% (disability) growth in registered participants respectively since 2008.
Recently we played our first ever international game for people with learning disabilities, while it is imperative we capitalise on the opportunities to get more women and girls involved in football through the Women’s UEFA under 19’s championships being held in Wales next year.
This is the first major tournament on our doorstep and will give us a platform to put in place a lasting legacy to grow the game and get more people participating, coaching and volunteering. A particular focus will be provision for age groups at under 10 and under 8 age-groups.
The LGB research has highlighted a significant potential demand for participation in team sports and it is our responsibility to ensure that those who want to play feel comfortable to get involved in a local club.
The FAW’s ‘Behind the Line Behind the Team’ campaign – while not being a direct response to the research issues – is one way we are already looking at improving the environment at football clubs, both on the pitch and on the sidelines. We want everyone to enjoy being involved in the game of football and the campaign includes a safeguarding policy that we feel is increasingly important in today’s society, which is highlighted by this report.
There is much work to be done but I feel we are moving in the right direction.
The ‘banter’ highlighted by those questioned for this research is not something that is limited to football and is an issue for society. But we realise the responsibility we have because football has a reach into our communities that means we can highlight the issues more prominently.
I wouldn’t want anyone to be put off getting involved in football because of poor behaviour they see or perceive to be a normal part of the game.
There is no doubt we need more role models as they can help us more than anyone with the messages we are trying to get across. Professional footballers have a unique platform to talk to and communicate with the public. But I also think that this cannot be forced onto individuals to come out and speak openly if they are not comfortable in doing so.
I agree that administrators and club officials must be supported to understand the perception that some people might have about their club or the culture that might exist. Clubs exist to serve their members and the local community so it is important to lead by example and show that they are welcoming to people from all walks of life.
Finally, I just want to go back to our work on tackling work on those traditionally more excluded from football. The report highlights the pigeon holing of males and females into sports like football and rugby for boys and netball and hockey for girls.
I believe anyone still nurturing these stereotypes is well behind the times.
I still come across instances where school sport is governed by the interests of the PE staff, which should not be allowed to happen.
If anything, this report is yet another piece of evidence pointing towards the need to listen to pupils and provide them with the opportunities and environment so they take part in the sports they enjoy and want to try out.
If we don’t do this we risk losing them for good.
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