Mentoring and Learning at TutorHub – A Personal Review

Tutoring without the proper and tested tools is not easy. As a student, finding the right tutor from just any site isn’t even cool.

There are a lot of students and even ordinary people who want to get credible responses or answers for their school assignments from expert tutors. And they are willing to pay the most reasonable amount to someone who can help them out easily.

TutorHub is an online community site where Tutors and Students meet to help each other on courseworks, homeworks, and exams. Students ask questions and finds their own tutors that they believe will give them the best answers. Likewise, tutors can create their own profiles to advertise themselves and their services to students. What’s great with Tutorhub is that they provide the necessary tools and technology to make the mentoring more comfortable and effective for both tutors and students. Continue reading Mentoring and Learning at TutorHub – A Personal Review

OFW UsapangPiso Singapore: Money By The Book – A Talk on Stewardship

After a very humble yet successful basic personal finance coaching sessions held in Dubai earlier this month, the OFW UsapangPiso Group will host another talk that will awaken the financial souls of our OFW’s in Singapore featuring our well-loved personal finance guru Randell Tiongson, RFP.

This mini-event sponsored by OFW UsapangPiso Singapore entitled “Money By The Book – A Talk on Stewardship” will tackle topics about the principles of ownership, responsibility, accountability, and rewards that will help our OFW’s based in Singapore to withdraw from a worldly view on finances, and begin to see it from God’s perspective. Continue reading OFW UsapangPiso Singapore: Money By The Book – A Talk on Stewardship

To Die In The Name of Education

When I was a naive young student, I used to have grudges against my former university for not letting me take my exams several times after failing to pay the examination fees.

Although I had a scholarship grant in college, this only covered tuition fees and not my daily allowances or monthly stipends.

My scholarship foundation was not directly paying my school. Every month I had to attend the foundation’s regular meetings so that I could collect the cash from their treasurer myself and sign on their receipt logbook. Continue reading To Die In The Name of Education