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Sunday, December 13, 2020

Reasons Why Math Is the Core Subject in Most Colleges



Wazzup Pilipinas!

Math is the most debated subject, attracting heated discussion on its essence, especially in specialization areas where it doesn't seem necessary. Are you, like many students, struggling with math to the point of wondering why it is a core subject? Find course details here and practical assistance to help you secure good grades and enjoy a smooth learning experience. Why am I studying math while pursuing literature? It is an intricate question that can't simply be answered by claiming it is part of the course. However, math is a core subject in most colleges for good reasons. Among the clear reasons math continues to be an integral part of all academic paths includes;
Developing mental discipline

Looking at its history, tracing back to medieval times and as a part of the seven liberal arts in Greek, math's transversal nature proves that it is an important part that facilitates the development of mental disciplined needed in various areas. Math facilitates the flow of thoughts that would otherwise be harder to achieve in other disciplines. Being constructive and reflective might seem like a natural process, but math takes it to higher levels needed in navigating various fields. While studying literature, for example, math literacy helps you reflect on various issues and arrive at better conclusions constructively.
Deeper thinking

How do you develop abstract thinking? It is through math, as you solve various problems. Developing logical and critical thinking takes time and practice, a faculty that math addresses. You accumulate unique and powerful ways to analyze a situation, describe it, and apply knowledge to solve the problem and draw reliable conclusions. While solving a math problem, you have to think deeper, analyze the situation, and recognize the key processes needed to solve it. From there, you can draw the solution from the knowledge and experience you've accumulated over time. That's how math facilitates deeper and analytical thinking to draw logical solutions. Logical ideas don't pop out from anywhere, and with math, regardless of your field, you can develop deeper thinking that facilitates innovative discoveries.
Math is everywhere

Sciences, engineering, humanities, mention it, and math is there. It is not just the arithmetic computation and analytical thinking; it goes beyond the face value. Math shapes every industry in more ways than you might initially anticipate. When handling daily activities, you won't start considering algebra to handle the tasks, but certain math skills are in play even without realizing it. From musicians striking those perfect notes, designers crafting incredible designs, chefs making a balance of ingredients for that tasty meal, it all draws from math. Math is an essential skill that eases your activities, regardless of the field, skills level needed, and situation, stressing its importance and hence a core subject in most colleges.
It is the foundation stone

Every industry relies on math to understand and apply knowledge for its betterment. Math provides the needed tools to understand an area and innovatively navigate the field. As an engineer, for example, your measurements are derived from your math skills. In business, market research requires statistical analysis, drawing from math skills. Those are basic foundation elements, and as you dig deeper into the fields, you realize that math shapes its progress. For example, while designing engineering and medical tools, math skills, including analytical thinking and statistical computations, are necessary to facilitate effective and efficient equipment. This shows that math provides the foundation and tools needed to advance in various fields.

Math skills entail more than the manipulation of numbers to arrive at a particular solution. If that were the core, it would have already been phased out by tech advancements, as computers and sophisticated calculators can handle such manipulations accurately and faster than humans. However, the inventions can analyze a situation and reason as humans do, stressing the need to hold math as a core subject throughout academic life.

#PPP4SamaAll Awards Night: The Full List of Winners

Wazzup Pilipinas!

"Cleaners" by Glenn Barit came through with flying colors at the virtual #PPP4SamaAll Awards Night of the 4th Pista ng Pelikulang Pilipino (PPP) organized by the Film Development Council of the Philippines (FDCP).



Leomar Baloran, Julian Narag, and Carlo Mejia of _Cleaners_ received the PPP4 Special Citation for Ensemble Performance

"Cleaners" bagged six awards out of 10 nominations: Best Picture, Best Director for Barit, Best Supporting Actress for Gianne Rivera, Special Citation for Ensemble Performance for Leomar Baloran, Julian Narag, and Carlo Mejia, Best Production Design for Alvin Francisco, and Best Musical Score for Barit.



Elijah Canlas from He Who Is Without Sin was awarded the PPP4 Special Jury Prize for Performance in a Lead Role

Jason Paul Laxamana's "He Who Is Without Sin" took home four awards, namely Special Jury Prize for Performance in a Lead Role for Elijah Canlas, Best Screenplay for Laxamana, Best Cinematography for Emmanuel Liwanag, and Audience Choice Award for Feature Film Category.



PPP4 Best Actor Gold Azeron from Metamorphosis, which received the PPP4 Special Jury Prize for Film




PPP4 Best Actress Hana Kino from Come On, Irene

Other big winners of the night were "Metamorphosis" by J.E. Tiglao, which won the Special Jury Prize for Film, Best Actress Hana Kino from "Come On, Irene," Best Actor Gold Azeron from "Metamorphosis," and Best Supporting Actor Henyo Ehem from "The Highest Peak."



PPP4 Best Supporting Actor Henyo Ehem from The Highest Peak


"Kintsugi" director Lawrence Fajardo was given the Best Editing trophy while "The Highest Peak" director Arbi Barbarona won for Best Sound Design. The Audience Choice Award for CineMarya Short Film Category is "Night Shift" by Mariel Ong.


Considered for the #PPP4SamaAll Awards Night nominations were nine out of the 13 films from the Premium Selection Section, which are the ones that had limited releases in the country or had Philippine premieres at PPP4. 


These are “Cleaners,” “Metamorphosis,” “He Who Is Without Sin,” “The Highest Peak,” “Kintsugi,” “Come On, Irene” by Keisuke Yoshida, “Blood Hunters: Rise of the Hybrids” by Vincent Soberano, “Sila-Sila” by Giancarlo Abrahan, and “The Helper” by Joanna Bowers.


The other PPP Premium Selection films were non-competition titles: opening film “Ang Lakaran ni Kabunyan: Kabunyan’s Journey to Liwanag” by National Artist for Film Kidlat Tahimik and the restored versions of “Markova: Comfort Gay” by Gil Portes, “Batch ’81” by Mike de Leon, and “Brutal” by Marilou Diaz-Abaya.


The online #PPP4SamaAll Awards Night was held on December 12 and was streamed on the YouTube channel and Facebook pages of the FDCP. Hosted by Kakki Teodoro, it featured musical performances by Raf Bernardino, Acel Bisa, Bayang Barrios and Naliyagan, Joey Ayala, Ice Seguerra, and Ms. Regine Velasquez.


The PPP4, which runs until December 13, has a 170-film lineup of 90 full-length feature films and 80 short films. The online festival has drawn 8,000 subscribers, held 32 virtual events, and had 64 event partners and supporters since its October 31 opening. 


The Official List of Winners and Nominees of the #PPP4SamaAll Awards Night:


BEST PICTURE

WINNER: Cleaners

He Who Is Without Sin

Metamorphosis

Kintsugi

The Highest Peak


SPECIAL JURY PRIZE FOR FILM

Metamorphosis


BEST DIRECTOR

WINNER: Glenn Barit (Cleaners)

Jason Paul Laxamana (He Who Is Without Sin)

J.E. Tiglao (Metamorphosis)

Lawrence Fajardo (Kintsugi)

Arbi Barbarona (The Highest Peak)


BEST ACTRESS

WINNER: Hana Kino (Come On, Irene)

Sarah Chang (Blood Hunters: Rise of the Hybrids)

Nats Sitoy (Come On, Irene)

Hiro Nishiuchi (Kintsugi)


BEST ACTOR

WINNER: Gold Azeron (Metamorphosis)

Ken Yasuda (Come On, Irene)

Gio Gahol (Sila-Sila)

Elijah Canlas (He Who Is Without Sin)


SPECIAL JURY PRIZE FOR PERFORMANCE IN A LEAD ROLE

Elijah Canlas (He Who Is Without Sin)


SPECIAL CITATION FOR ENSEMBLE PERFORMANCE 

Leomar Baloran, Julian Narag, and Carlo Mejia (Cleaners)


BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS

WINNER: Gianne Rivera (Cleaners)

Iana Bernardez (Metamorphosis)

Yayo Aguila (Metamorphosis)


BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR

WINNER: Henyo Ehem (The Highest Peak)

Phi Palmos (Kintsugi)

Topper Fabregas (Sila-Sila)

Roweno Caballes (The Highest Peak)

Allan Gannaban (Cleaners)


BEST SCREENPLAY

WINNER: Jason Paul Laxamana (He Who Is Without Sin)

J.E. Tiglao and Boo Dabu (Metamorphosis)

Glenn Barit (Cleaners)

Herlyn Alegre (Kintsugi)

Daniel Saniana (Sila-Sila)


BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY

WINNER: Emmanuel Liwanag (He Who Is Without Sin)

Boy Yñiguez (Kintsugi)

Steven Paul Evangelio (Cleaners)

Takeyuki Onishi (Blood Hunters: Rise of the Hybrids)

Tey Clamor (Metamorphosis)


BEST EDITING

WINNER: Lawrence Fajardo (Kintsugi)

Noah Loyola and Che Tagyamon (Cleaners)

Mai Calapardo (He Who Is Without Sin)

Renard Torres (Metamorphosis)

Annika Lok Yin Feign (The Helper)


BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN

WINNER: Alvin Francisco (Cleaners)

Hai Balbuena and Rolando Inocencio (Kintsugi)

James Arvin Rosendal (Metamorphosis)

Lars Magbanua (He Who Is Without Sin)

Fritz Silorio (Blood Hunters: Rise of the Hybrids)


BEST SOUND DESIGN

WINNER: Arbi Barbarona (The Highest Peak)

Shichihei Kawamoto and Yuji Akazawa (Come On, Irene)

Dale Martin (Blood Hunters: Rise of the Hybrids)

Aian Louie Caro and Erlyn Tomboc (He Who Is Without Sin)

John Michael Perez and Daryl Libongco (Cleaners)


BEST MUSICAL SCORE

WINNER: Glenn Barit (Cleaners)

Arbi Barbarona (The Highest Peak)

Peter Legaste (Kintsugi)

Dale Martin and Tamara dela Cruz (Blood Hunters: Rise of the Hybrids)

Igo Gonzalez (Sila-Sila)


AUDIENCE CHOICE AWARD FOR FEATURE FILM CATEGORY

He Who Is Without Sin by Jason Paul Laxamana


AUDIENCE CHOICE AWARD FOR CINEMARYA SHORT FILM CATEGORY

Night Shift by Mariel Ong

Speech of His Highness SheikhTamim Bin Hamad Al Thani Amir of the State of Qatar at the opening of the 49th ordinary session of the Advisory Council

Wazzup Pilipinas?

In the Name of Allah the Most Merciful, the Most Compassionate

Brothers and Sisters Members of the Advisory Council,

It pleases me to extend to you my sincere congratulations on the occasion of the opening of the new session of your esteemed Council, wishing you success and rectitude.

I would like on this occasion to commend your efforts and the parliamentary tasks you carried out at the local and international levels during your previous session, one of the most important of which was organizing the 7th Conference of the Global Organization of Parliamentarians Against Corruption held in Doha.

It pleases me also to congratulate your esteemed Council for unanimously electing His Excellency Brother Ahmed bin Abdullah Al-Mahmoud, as chairman of that organization for the next session, and to express our sincere appreciation for your fruitful efforts in reaching the agreements concluded with the United Nations on establishing the Office of the United Nations Counter-Terrorism for Parliamentarians, and selecting Doha to host its headquarters. 

Brothers and sisters,

Our meeting today comes while we are still facing, together with all humanity, the dangerous COVID-19 pandemic, which has put everyone against difficult tests and choices.

It has become obvious that a full lockdown only postpones the spread of the pandemic, and at the same time harms the economy. Yet, ignoring the pandemic and pursuing the concept wrongly dubbed "herd immunity" – aside from the dangerous risking of the lives of people (who are not a herd) - it has become evident that immunity isn’t guaranteed after contracting the disease. 

However, Qatar has opted for carefully considered partial and interim lockdowns while stressing precautionary measures and maximum readiness to isolate and treat those infected after the assessment of cases, in addition to the State's intervention in supporting the economic facilities affected by the pandemic. The correctness of our resilient choice, which sacrifices neither people's health nor the economy, became clear.

Our health system has proven its reliability in dealing with the pandemic, so our country, by the grace of Allah, has remained as one of the world’s least affected countries. The results of our health policies and persistent investment in developing the health system and medical staff, including prevention, daycare centers and hospitals have been evident.

It must be underlined that the pandemic is still raging at its height in different parts of the world, and we are still facing it in Qatar, and it is necessary not to be complacent in order to avoid a second wave of pandemic, and to comply with the instructions, especially social distancing, wearing masks and adhering to home quarantine when necessary. And as I previously said we would not hesitate to take strict preventative measures in the event of a new pandemic outbreak.

Realizing the importance of international cooperation in addressing the pandemic, we have supported the efforts of the international community and provided necessary assistance to more than seventy countries and international organizations. We will continue to support international efforts to accelerate the development of a necessary vaccine and make it affordable in a fair way to the neediest countries.

There are lessons learned from this pandemic regarding the significance of the public health sector and the importance of synergy between the role of the State, community and the individual in disease prevention, and how the economy and the educational process continue despite everything, as well as the importance of social solidarity, and appreciation of the role of workers in vital areas who extend services to quarantined people in their homes, such as the provision of food, health services, security, police, transportation, etc.

Brothers and sisters,

On the global level, the pandemic has inflicted heavy damage on most of the economic activities, as well as the movement of funds and people. As a result, forecasts regarding growth on the global level this year envision an economic recession that may reach 5%.

It is normal that an economic deflation results in a decline in energy prices. 

Accordingly, oil and gas exporting countries were hit by a double crisis due to a drop in prices on the one hand, and the impacts inflicted by the pandemic on the local economic activity on the other hand.

The State has taken two-tier swift measures: first, to support the private sector and maintain the integrity of the financial and banking markets and the Qatari riyal. Second, to maintain the general State’s budget. In this regard, we have directed to provide 75 billion Qatari riyals in support to the private sector affected by the measures taken by the State to limit the pandemic outbreak, as well as removing all obstacles facing this sector to maintain its business continuity and enhancing the ability of small and medium enterprises to face these ramifications. 

A set of facilities and exemptions from customs duties on food and medicine, and on electricity fees and other services fees have also been approved. 

As a result of these procedures, we were able to maintain the integrity of the monetary, banking, and fiscal position. So, the official reserves continued to grow in the current year and the diverse range of sources and deposits of the financial sector has expanded. The Qatari riyal also proved its strength and potential against external crises as it preserved its value and exchange freedom. 

The State has also taken urgent and necessary measures to mitigate the negative effects of low oil and gas prices on the general budget. The preliminary results showed that the budget deficit during the first half of this year reached about 1.5 billion riyals only, although deficit projections were much higher. This was achieved due to the rationalization of government spending associated with raising the efficiency of the public sector. Despite cuts, the budget continues to concentrate spending on health, education, and major infrastructure projects. 

Out of our keenness to avoid the negative economic effects resulting from the market fluctuations in the oil prices, we have directed that the drafting of the general State’s budget be based on the price of oil at $ 40 per barrel, which is lower than the expected price. 

The energy sector in the State was able to overcome the repercussions of this pandemic with minimal detriments. Production and export operations haven’t been affected, and Qatar Petroleum has continued to fulfill its obligations towards all contracting parties. Also the workflow proceeds unhindered in the main energy projects, namely, the liquefied gas production expansion project, in addition to projects overseas. 

Brothers and sisters,

Our efforts for achieving Qatar’s national vision goals continue, especially in the field of realizing food security, encouraging investment by issuing a series 

of legislations stimulating investment and enhancing business environment, particularly the law organizing public-private partnership.

These laws and procedures are beginning to bear fruits, as from the outset of this year the number of established factories and the volume of investments and the number of employees therein have increased considerably.

There has also been a notable increase in establishing foreign companies and the volume of foreign investment.

In the field of environment protection, we have started to develop a national network for air quality monitoring at various locations in the State, formulating aprogram for marine environment monitoring, and programs to respond to emergencies resulting from oil spills, hazardous and radioactive materials.

And by the grace of Allah Almighty, and in light of our long-term vision of the future of our country and planning for it, we have been able to overcome developmental obstacles and challenges we came through in the last few years. As a result, Qatar has maintained its credit rating as per studies conducted by the international rating agencies in 2020. These agencies have unanimously affirmed a high credit rating for the State of Qatar with a stable economic outlook.

This indicates confidence in the strength of Qatar’s economy and its ability to absorb major economic crises, including the current pandemic crisis, and its resilience, and even its development in spite of the blockade.

However, this should not lead us to slackness and complacency. There are still great challenges ahead of us in achieving the goals of our long-term vision. 

To accomplish that, it is inevitable to accelerate minimizing dependency on the volatile revenues of oil and gas due to their price fluctuations and decline in price ceiling over time, as revealed by the recent crisis. This can only be achieved through enhancing economic diversification and proceeding towards increasing the productivity and efficacy of labor in the public sector and encouraging private sector investment.

The State should exert its utmost effort to diversify its income sources through investment in its sovereign fund for future generations, etc. But diversification of income sources also depends on the community, and the economic and service sectors, where the community members work, by resorting to saving, private initiatives, investment and relocating from consumer mentality to the mindset of productive community. The way must be cleared for that end.

As for the government sector, it is necessary to emphasize that development programs and projects must be implemented with utmost precision and efficiency. 

I reiterate that jobs in various sectors of the State are not just an entitlement, but rather a duty and a responsibility. Therefore, wages and promotion must be linked to excellence and productivity and to apply that, without exception, on all employees in the State. And just as no private sector investor tolerates that individuals be paid without work and real return, we should not expect otherwise from the State.

Brothers and sisters members of the Advisory Council, Our Arab ummah lost this year two of the greatest men in the Gulf, namely, His Majesty Sultan Qaboos, the builder of modern Oman, who maintained a mutual relation of fraternity and cordiality with Qatar, and His Highness Sheikh Sabah, who acted with all his strength to reconcile between Arab countries and to heal the rift in the Gulf, and whose positions with us we will never forget. We hope that the GCC countries will inspire from the moderation and wisdom of the two late leaders the right exhortations and examples for the future of their inter￾relations.

As for our foreign policy, and despite the continued unjust blockade for more than three years, Qatar's international status is being strengthened by the intensification of our activity on issues of concern to the international community, such as climate change, combating poverty, fighting terrorism, etc., and because of adopting, at the same time, wise, responsible and principled policies, and contributing to resolving many conflicts peacefully through dialogue.

Concerning our region, we reaffirm our steadfast position regarding the just Palestinian cause and the legitimate rights of our Palestinian brothers, including the establishment of their independent state on the basis of 1967 borders, with East Jerusalem as its capital, and a just solution to the refugees issue, under international legitimacy resolutions.

Brothers and sisters,

Preparations for the Advisory Council elections are about to reach their culmination, and the elections will be held in October next year. These elections will take place, God willing, in accordance with the constitution on which a referendum was held in 2003 and was promulgated in 2004. Thus, we are taking an important stride to strengthen the traditions of the Qatari Shura and developing the legislative process through a wider participation of citizens.

We have our well-established system which is rooted in and intertwined with the structure of our community. It is not a multiparty system, but rather an amirate system based on well-established traditions of fair and rational governance which is connected with the people through the pledge of allegiance, loyal relations, mutual trust and direct communication between the system and community.

Elections are not a criterion of national identity. This identity has crystallized over time and best manifested in the form of solidarity and cohesion of our community with its forbearing moral values and love for its country, as revealed in challenging the blockade.

In conclusion, I wish you a fruitful legislative term, as you have always done.

May Allah grant you success, and may Allah peace, mercy, and blessings be upon you.

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