Tuesday, September 16, 2014

New Printable General Competency Test (GCT) sample Questions with answers (Federal/State Govt. Jobs)

Free and New GCT Practice Test Sample Questions 2014-15

 

 

Please Print, Practice and Pass General Competency Test for Govt. Jobs







GCT test for Govt. Jobs and Free Test samples 1-10




This is my new article on General Competency Test (GCT) sample Questions. This test is used by federal Public Service is for the best-qualified persons to fill the jobs available. Employment tests like the GCT help to satisfy both of these aims by providing a fair, objective and reliable measure of an important qualification. You will find all answers in end.

Each question consists of a sentence or a part of a sentence in which a word or phrase is in underline type. From the five alternatives provided, select the one that has the closest meaning to the word or phrase in bold type

New Printable General Competency Test (GCT) sample Questions with answers (Federal/State Govt. Jobs)

Each question consists of a sentence or a part of a sentence in which a word or phrase is in underline type. From the five alternatives provided, select the one that has the closest meaning to the word or phrase in bold type



Question 1



The contract for the service will expire shortly.



1. change

2. continue

3. end

4.begin

5.extend



Question 2



Much of the work is routine



1.usual

2.redundant

3.easy

4.elementary

5.difficult



Question 3



The staff is a very industrious group of people.



1.cultured

2.polite

3. busy

4. rowdy

5. disciplined



Question 4



A tendency to overwork.



1.refusal

2.reluctance

3.determination

4.leaning

5.policy


New Printable General Competency Test (GCT) sample Questions with answers (Federal/State Govt. Jobs)


Question 5



The activities were subsidized.



1.successful

2.supported

3.appreciated

4.needed

5.required



Question 6

Call to confirm the appointment.



1.delay

2.cancel

3.verify

4.postpone

5.change



New Printable General Competency Test (GCT) sample Questions with answers (Federal/State Govt. Jobs)
Question 7



Pursue the matter.



1.protest

2.question

3.challenge

4.follow-up

5.deny



Question 8

The components are complex.



1.facts

2.parts

3.numbers

4.arguments

5.styles



Question 9



The speaker reiterated the message.



1.excused

2.repeated

3.confused

4.debated

5.argued



Question 10

A resounding success.



1.unmistakable

2.questionable

3.repeating

4.loud

5.deserved



Answer - GCT test for Govt. Jobs and Free Test samples 1-10




1 3

2 1

3 3

4 4

5 2

6 3

7 4

8 2

9 2

10 1

Monday, August 11, 2014

Get your Free Education with Best Universities (MIT, Duke, and Harvard)

Free Education with top Universities



This is my new article on getting university education. In previous articles we saw new info about some free scholarships and other aspect of university education. We all know that how costly the university education is? .If anyone wants to do he needs either lot of money or a student loan. In this article you will find that you can get free if you using MOOC.

Get your Free Education with Best Universities (MIT, Duke, and Harvard)

 

What is MOOC?


MOOC stands for Massive Open Online Courses. Although there has been access to free online courses on the Internet for years, the quality and quantity of courses has changed.

Access to free courses has allowed students to obtain a level of education that many only could dream of in the past. This has changed the face of education. In The New York Times article Instruction for Masses Knocked down Campus Walls, author Tamar Lewin stated, “in the past few months hundreds of thousands of motivated students around the world who lack access to elite universities have been embracing them as a path toward sophisticated skills and high-paying jobs, without paying tuition or collecting a college degree.”



Get your Free Education with Best Universities (MIT, Duke, and Harvard)

Although MOOCs are the latest trend, not everyone agrees that schools should offer them. Joshua Kim Insight Higher Ed article Why Every University Does Not Need a MOOC noted that offering free material may not make sense for the individual university. It may be more important to stand out in other ways.

There may also be some issues for students who lack motivation. Since a MOOC is voluntary and there is no penalty for dropping the program or lagging behind, there may be issues with course completion. Although a student may have received an excellent education, there will not be a corresponding diploma.

For those who desire a free education and have the motivation, the following includes the: Top 10 Sites for Information about MOOCs:

http://saveandmakemoremoney.blogspot.com/

1. Udemy Free Courses –  – Udemy is an example of a site allows anyone to build or take online courses. Udemy’s site exclaims, “Our goal is to disrupt and democratize education by enabling anyone to learn from the world’s experts.” The New York Times reported that Udemy, “recently announced a new Faculty Project, in which award-winning professors from universities like Dartmouth, the University of Virginia and Northwestern offer free online courses. Its co-founder, Gagen Biyani, said the site has more than 100,000 students enrolled in its courses, including several, outside the Faculty Project, that charge fees.”


2. ITunesU Free Courses –  Apple’s free app “gives students access to all the materials for courses in a single place. Right in the app, they can play video or audio lectures. Read books and view presentations.”





3. Stanford Free Courses  - From Quantum Mechanics to The Future of the Internet, Stanford offers a variety of free courses. Stanford’s – Introduction to Artificial Intelligence was highly successful. According to Pontydysgu.org, “160000 students from 190 countries signed up to Stanford’s Introduction to AI” course, with 23000 reportedly completing.” Check out Stanford’s Engineering Everywhere link.

4. UC Berkeley Free Courses – From General Biology to Human Emotion, Berkley offers a variety of courses. Check out: Berkeley Webcasts and Berkeley RSS Feeds.

5. MIT Free Courses  – Check out MIT’s RSS MOOC feed. Also see: MIT’s Open Courseware.

6. Duke Free Courses  – Duke offers a variety of courses on ITunesU.

7. Harvard Free Courses  – From Computer Science to Shakespeare, students may now get a free Harvard education. “Take a class for professional development, enrichment, and degree credit. Courses run in the fall, spring, or intensive January session. No application is required.”

8.UCLA Free Courses  – Check out free courses such as their writing program that offers over 220 online writing courses each year.

9. Yale Free Courses –  – At Open Yale, the school offers “free and open access to a selection of introductory courses taught by distinguished teachers and scholars at Yale University. The aim of the project is to expand access to educational materials for all who wish to learn.”

10. Carnegie Mellon Free Courses  – Carnegie Mellon boosts “No instructors, no credits, no charge.”

Friday, August 1, 2014

New and Printable TOEFL test Sample Questions for 2014 (Other English Practice Exams)

Free TOEFL test Sample Questions for 2014


This is my new article on Free TOEFL test Sample Practice Questions for 2014. In this part you will see questions related to Listening. These questions can be practice for other English related Practice Exams too.

New and Printable TOEFL test Sample Questions for 2014 (Other English Practice Exams)


Directions: The Listening section measures your ability to understand conversations and lectures in English. In this sample, you will read one conversation and one lecture and answer questions after each conversation or lecture. The questions typically ask about the main idea and supporting details. Some questions ask about a speaker’s purpose or attitude. Answer the questions based on what is stated or implied by the speakers. Most questions are worth one point. If a question is worth more than one point, it will have special directions that indicate how many points you can receive.

• In an actual test, you will be able to take notes while you listen and use your notes to help you answer the questions. Your notes will not be scored.

Answer Key to Listening Section: Q 1-11

CONVERSATION TRANSCRIPT


(Narrator) Listen to a conversation between a student and her basketball coach and then answer the questions.

(Male coach) Hi, Elizabeth.

(Female student) Hey, Coach. I just thought I’d stop by to see what I missed while I was gone. (Male coach) Well, we’ve been working real hard on our plan for the next game . . . I’ve asked Susan to go over it with you before practice this afternoon, so you’ll know what we’re doing.

(Female student) Okay.

SNew and Printable TOEFL test Sample Questions for 2014 (Other English Practice Exams)
(Male coach) By the way, how did your brother’s wedding go?

(Female student) Oh, it was beautiful. And the whole family was there. I saw aunts and uncles and cousins I hadn’t seen in years.

(Male coach) So it was worth the trip.

(Female student) Oh definitely. I’m sorry I had to miss practice, though. I feel bad about that.

(Male coach) Family’s very important.

(Female student) Yep. Okay, I guess I’ll see you this afternoon at practice, then.

(Male coach) Just a minute. There are a couple of other things I need to tell you.

(Female student) Oh, okay.

(Male coach) Uh . . . First, everybody’s getting a new team jacket.

(Female student) Wow. How did that happen?

(Male coach) A woman who played here about 20, 25 years ago came through town a few weeks ago and saw a game, and said she wanted to do something for the team, so . . .

(Female student) So she’s buying us new jackets?

(Male coach) Yep.

(Female student) Wow, that’s really nice of her.

(Male coach) Yes, it is. It’s great that former players still care so much about our school

and our basketball program . . . Anyway you need to fill out an order form. I’ll give it to

you now, and you can bring it back this afternoon. I’ve got the forms from the other

players, so as soon as I get yours we can order. Maybe we’ll have the jackets by the next game.

(Female student) OK.

(Male coach) Great. And the next thing is, you know Mary’s transferring to another college next week, so we’ll need someone to take over her role as captain for the second half of the season. And the other players unanimously picked you to take over as captain when Mary leaves.

(Female student) Wow. I saw everybody this morning, and nobody said a word.

(Male coach) They wanted me to tell you. So, do you accept?

(Female student) Of course! But Susan’s a much better player than I am. I’m really surprised they didn’t pick her.

(Male coach) They think you’re the right one. You’ll have to ask them their thoughts.

(Female student) Okay . . . I guess one of the first things I’ll have to do as captain is make sure we get a thank-you card out to the lady who’s buying us the jackets.

(Male coach) Good idea. I have her address here somewhere.

(Female student) And I’ll make sure the whole team signs it.

(Male coach) Good. That’s all the news there is. I think that’s it for now. Oh, let me get you that order form.

Q 1

What are the speakers mainly discussing?

a. How the woman should prepare for the next game

b. The woman’s responsibilities as team captain

c. Things that happened while the woman was away

d. The style of the new team uniforms

Q 2

Who is buying new jackets for the team?

a. The coach

b. The captain of the team

c. A former player

d. A group of basketball fans

Q 3

There are two answers for the next question. Mark two answers.

Why is the woman surprised to learn that she has been chosen as the new team captain?

a. She is not the best player on the team.

b. Her teammates did not tell her about the decision.

c. She does not have many friends on the team.

d. She has missed a lot of practices.

Q 4

Read part of the conversation again. Then answer the question.

(Female student) I’m sorry I had to miss practice, though. I feel bad about that.

(Male coach) Family’s very important.

What does the man mean when he says: “Family’s very important.”

a. He hopes the woman’s family is doing well.

b. He would like to meet the woman’s family.

c. The woman should spend more time with her family.

d. The woman had a good reason for missing practice.

Q 5

Why does the coach say: “Good. That’s all the news there is. I think that’s it for now.”

a. He wants to know if the woman understood his point.

b. He wants the woman to act immediately.

c. He is preparing to change the topic.

d. He is ready to end the conversation.

LECTURE TRANSCRIPT

(Narrator) Listen to part of a lecture in a literature class.

(Male professor) Today I’d like to introduce you to a novel that some critics consider the finest detective novel ever written. It was also the first. We’re talking about The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins. Now, there are other detective stories that preceded The Moonstone historically—Um, notably the work of Poe . . . Edgar Allen Poe’s stories, such as “The Murders in the Rue Morgue” and . . . “The Purloined Letter.” Now these were short stories that featured a detective . . . uh, probably the first to do that. But The Moonstone, which follows them by about twenty years—it was published in 1868—this

is the first full-length detective novel ever written. Now, in The Moonstone—if you read it as . . . uh, come to it as a contemporary reader—what’s interesting is that most of the features you find in almost any detective novel are in fact already present. Uh, its hard at this juncture to read this novel and realize that no one had ever done that before, because it all seems so strikingly familiar. It’s, it’s really a wonderful novel and I recommend it, even just as a fun book to read, if you’ve never read it. Um, so in The Moonstone, as I said, Collins did much to establish the conventions of the detective genre. I’m not gonna go into the plot at length, but, you know, the basic setup is . . . there’s this diamond of great . . . of great value, a country house, the diamond mysteriously disappears in the middle of the night, uh, the local police are brought in, in an attempt to solve the crime, and they mess it up completely, and then the true hero of the book arrives. That’s Sergeant Cuff.

Now, Cuff, this extraordinarily important character . . . well, let me try to give you a sense of who Sergeant Cuff is, by first describing the regular police. And this is the dynamic that you’re going to see throughout the history of the detective novel, where you have the regular cops—who are well-meaning, but officious and bumblingly inept—and they are countered by a figure who’s eccentric, analytical, brilliant, and . . . and able to solve the crime. So, first the regular police get called in to solve the mystery—Um, in this case, detective, uh, Superintendent Seegrave. When Superintendent Seegrave comes in, he orders his minions around, they bumble, and they actually make a mess of the investigation, which you’ll see repeated—um, you’ll see this pattern repeated, particularly in the Sherlock Holmes stories of a few years later where, uh, Inspector Lestrade, this well-meaning idiot, is always countered, uh, by Sherlock Holmes, who’s a genius.

So, now Cuff arrives. Cuff is the man who’s coming to solve the mystery, and again he has a lot of the characteristics that future detectives throughout the history of this genre will have. He’s eccentric. He has a hobby that he’s obsessive about—in this . . . in his case, it’s the love of roses. He’s a fanatic about the breeding of roses; and here think of Nero Wolfe and his orchids, Sherlock Holmes and his violin, a lot of those later classic detective heroes have this kind of outside interest that they . . . they go to as a kind of antidote to the evil and misery they encounter in their daily lives. At one point, Cuff says he likes his roses because they offer solace, uh, an escape, from the world of crime he typically operates in. Now, these detective heroes . . . they have this characteristic of being smart, incredibly smart, but of not appearing to be smart. And most importantly, from a kind of existential point of view, these detectives see things that other people do not see. And that’s why the detective is such an important figure, I think, in our modern imagination. In the case of The Moonstone—I don’t want to say too much here and spoil it for you—but the clue that’s key to . . . the solving of the crime is a smeared bit of paint in a doorway. Of course, the regular police have missed this paint smear or made some sort of unwarranted assumption about it. Cuff sees this smear of paint—this paint, the place where the paint is smeared—and realizes that from this one smear of paint you can actually deduce the whole situation . . . the whole world. And that’s what the hero in a detective novel like this . . . brings to it that the other characters don’t—it’s this ability to, uh, see meaning where others see no meaning and to bring order . . . to where it seems there is no order.

Q 6

What is the lecture mainly about?

a. A comparison of two types of detective novels

b. Ways in which detective novels have changed over time

c. The Moonstone as a model for later detective novels

d. Flaws that can be found in the plot of The Moonstone

Q 7

In what way is The Moonstone different from earlier works featuring a detective?

a. In its unusual ending

b. In its unique characters

c. In its focus on a serious crime

d. In its greater length

Q 8

According to the professor, what do roses in The Moonstone represent?

a. A key clue that leads to the solving of the mystery

b. A relief and comfort to the detective

c. Romance between the main characters

d. Brilliant ideas that occur to the detective



Q 9

Why does the professor mention a smeared bit of paint in a doorway in The Moonstone?

a. To describe a mistake that Sergeant Cuff has made

b. To show how realistically the author describes the crime scene

c. To exemplify a pattern repeated in many other detective stories

d. To illustrate the superior techniques used by the police



Q 10

What can be inferred about the professor when he says this: “Uh, it’s hard at this juncture to read this novel and realize that no one had ever done that before, because it all seems so strikingly familiar.”

a. He is impressed by the novel’s originality.

b. He is concerned that students may find the novel difficult to read.

c. He is bored by the novel’s descriptions of ordinary events.

d. He is eager to write a book about a less familiar subject.



Q 11

What does the professor imply when he says this: “. . . well, let me try to give you

a sense of who Sergeant Cuff is, by first describing the regular police.”

a. Sergeant Cuff is unlike other characters in The Moonstone.

b. The author’s description of Sergeant Cuff is very realistic.

c. Sergeant Cuff learned to solve crimes by observing the regular police.

d. Differences between Sergeant Cuff and Sherlock Holmes are hard to describe.



Answer Key to Listening Section: Q 1-11


1. c

2. c

3. a, b

4. d

5. d

6. c

7. d

8 b

9. c

10. a

11. a

Friday, July 25, 2014

2014-Free and New GMAT Practice Test Sample Questions with answers

Free GMAT test Sample Questions for 2014


This is my new post on GMAT free practice questions. In the last part see how to prepare for GMAT. In this post you will some more practice questions. You can find all answer in end of this article


Free GMAT questions 1-11


014-Free and New GMAT Practice Test Sample Questions with answers
Q1:

A grocer has 400 pounds of coffee in stock, 20 percent of which is decaffeinated. If the

grocer buys another 100 pounds of coffee of which 60 percent is decaffeinated, what

percent, by weight, of the grocer’s stock of coffee is decaffeinated?

A. 28%

B. 30%

C. 32%

D. 34%

E. 40%



Q2:

If the population of a certain country is 120,256,000 and its land area is 2,998,000 square A kilometer, then the population per square kilometer is closest to which of the following?

A. 4

B. 6

C. 20

D. 40

E. 60



Q3:

A certain university will select 1 of 7 candidates eligible to fill a position in the mathematics department and 2 of 10 candidates eligible to fill 2 identical positions in the computer science department. If none of the candidates is eligible for a position in both departments, how many different sets of 3 candidates are there to fill the 3 positions?

A. 42

B. 70

C. 140

D. 165

E. 315


014-Free and New GMAT Practice Test Sample Questions with answers


Q4:

The points R, T, and U lie on a circle that has radius 4. If the length of arc RTU is 4pл/3 what is the length of line segment RU?

A.4/3

C. 8/3

D.3/4

E. 4/6



Q5:

Mary persuaded n friends to donate $500 each to her election campaign, and then each of these n friends persuaded n more people to donate $500 each to Mary’s campaign. If no one donated more than once and if there were no other donations, what was the value of n? (1) The first n people donated

1/16 of the total amount donated.

(2) The total amount donated was $120,000.

A. Statement (1) ALONE is sufficient, but statement (2) alone is not sufficient.

B. Statement (2) ALONE is sufficient, but statement (1) alone is not sufficient.

C. BOTH statements TOGETHER are sufficient, but NEITHER statement ALONE is sufficient.

D. EACH statement ALONE is sufficient.

E. Statements (1) and (2) TOGETHER are NOT sufficient.


014-Free and New GMAT Practice Test Sample Questions with answers

Q 6

Of all the students in a certain dormitory, 1/2are first-year students and the rest are Second-year students. If 4/5of the first-year students have not declared a major and if the Fraction of second-year students who have declared a major is 3 times the fraction of

First-year students who have declared a major, what fraction of all the students in the Dormitory are second-year students who have not declared a major?

A. 1/15

B.1/5

C. 4/15

D. 1/3

E. 2/5



Q 7:

If p is the product of the integers from 1 to 30, inclusive, what is the greatest integer k for which 3k is a factor of p?

A. 10

B. 12

C. 14

D. 16

E. 18



Q 8

Each of the 30 boxes in a certain shipment weighs either 10 pounds or 20 pounds, and average (arithmetic mean) weight of the boxes in the shipment is 18 pounds. If the average weight of the boxes in the shipment is to be reduced to 14 pounds by removing some of the 20-pound boxes, how many 20-pound boxes must be removed?

A. 4

B. 6

C. 10

D. 20

E. 24



Q 9

Tom, Jane, and Sue each purchased a new house. The average (arithmetic mean) price of the three houses was $120,000. What was the median price of the three houses?

(1) The price of Tom’s house was $110,000.

(2) The price of Jane’s house was $120,000.

A. Statement (1) ALONE is sufficient, but statement (2) alone is not sufficient.

B. Statement (2) ALONE is sufficient, but statement (1) alone is not sufficient.

C. BOTH statements TOGETHER are sufficient, but NEITHER statement ALONE is sufficient.

D. EACH statement ALONE is sufficient.

E. Statements (1) and (2) TOGETHER are NOT sufficient.



Q 10

Four staff members at a certain company worked on a project. The amounts of time that the four staff members worked on the project were in the ratio 2 to 3 to 5 to 6. If one of the four staff members worked on the project for 30 hours, which of the following CANNOT be the total number of hours that the four staff members worked on the project?

A. 80

B. 96

C. 160

D. 192

E. 240



Q 11

If the units digit of the three-digit positive integer k is nonzero, what is the tens digit of k?

(1) The tens digit of k + 9 is 3.

(2) (2) The tens digit of k + 4 is 2.



A. Statement (1) ALONE is sufficient, but statement (2) alone is not sufficient.

B. Statement (2) ALONE is sufficient, but statement (1) alone is not sufficient.

C. BOTH statements TOGETHER are sufficient, but NEITHER statement ALONE is

sufficient.

D. EACH statement ALONE is sufficient.

E. Statements (1) and (2) TOGETHER are NOT sufficient.



Answers




1 A

2 D

3 E

4 D

5 D

6 B

7 C

8 D

9 B

10 D

11 A

Friday, July 18, 2014

New and Free SAT exam test Sample Questions with answers

Free SAT test Sample Questions 2014-15




This is my new article for doing well in SAT exam. You can prepare for this exam by testing some free test questions. Make sure you first print the answers. In this part of article you will see questions from 1-10. All answers for this test in end



New and Free SAT test Sample Questions with answers
You can also use this test to improve your English grammar.

Select the answer choice that identifies the noun in the sentence.

New and Free SAT test Sample Questions 1-10


Q 1

It will take all of your energy and will to be able to walk again.

A. Take

B. All

C. Your

D. Energy



Q 2

The works of many great poets have been placed on reserve.



A. Many

B. Great

C. Placed

D. Reserve

New and Free SAT test Sample Questions with answers



Q 3

The Brooklyn Bridge was opened in 1883.



A. Bridge

B. Was

C. Opened

D. In



Q 4

Sparta and Athens were enemies during the Peloponnesian War.



A. And

B. Were

C. During

D. War

New and Free SAT test Sample Questions with answers

Q 5

Sharks and lampreys are not true fish because their skeletons are made of cartilage rather than bone.



A. True

B. Because

C. Their

D. Bone



Q 6

Joe, have you met your new boss?



A. Have

B. Met

C. Your

D. Boss



Q 7

Sue's parents tried living in the north, but they could not adapt to the cold.



A. North

B. But

C. Not

D. Adapt



Q 8

Mastering basic mathematics is an important goal for younger students.



A. Mastering

B. Important

C. Younger

D. Students



Q 9

To seize a foreign embassy and its inhabitants is flagrant disregard for diplomatic neutrality.



A. Seize

B. Its

C. Flagrant

D. Neutrality



Q 10

The Trojans' rash decision to accept the wooden horse led to their destruction.



A. Their

B. Led

C. Accept

D. Destruction



New and Free SAT test Sample Questions 1-10 Answers and Explanations




1. D: Energy is a noun, as is will here. Take (A) is a verb. All (B) is an adverb modifying take. Your (C) is an adjective modifying energy and will.



2. D: Reserve is the only noun of the choices. Many (A) and great (B) are adjectives modifying the noun poets. Placed (C) is a verb.



3. A: Bridge is a proper noun here. Was (B) is the auxiliary verb for the past perfect tense of the verb opened (C). In (D) is a preposition.



4. D: War is a proper noun here. And (A) is a conjunction. Were (B) is a verb. During (C) is a preposition.



5. D: Bone is a noun. True (A) is an adjective modifying the noun fish. Because (B) is a conjunction. Their (C) is a plural possessive third-person pronoun modifying the noun skeletons.



6. D: Boss is a noun. Have (A) is the auxiliary verb for the present perfect tense of the verb met (B). Your (C) is a possessive second-person pronoun modifying the noun boss.



7. A: North is a noun here. But (B) is a conjunction. Not (C) is an adverb modifying the verb adapt (D).



8. D: Students is a plural noun. NOTE: Mastering (A) is a gerund, i.e. a verb form functioning as a noun. But since (D) is already a noun, it is the better choice. Important (B) is an adjective modifying the noun goal. Younger (C) is an adjective modifying the noun students.



9. D: Neutrality is a noun. Seize (A) is a verb. Its (B) is a possessive pronoun modifying the noun inhabitants. Flagrant (C) is an adjective modifying the noun disregard.



10. D: Destruction is a noun. Their (A) is a plural possessive pronoun modifying destruction. Led (B) and accept (C) are verbs.

Friday, July 11, 2014

How to get Cheap Ticket to See 1000 Islands, Niagara, Wonderland and Many More

Cheap Ticket to See 1000 Islands, Niagara, Wonderland in 2014


This is my new article on getting cheap tickets to see nice waterparks and many places in Canada and US.
 

In this article I have found very nice website which provide us a lot of saving on different attractions places in Ontario, Canada.


How to get Cheap Ticket to See 1000 Islands, Niagara, Wonderland and Many More

Attractions Ontario is committed to providing you with fun-filled ideas for your next vacation as well as money saving coupons to Ontario's top attractions to make your trip more affordable. These are free coupons for you to use!



Listed below are member attractions currently offering coupon discounts at their venues. Just click on the desired attraction – this will bring you to the attraction listing where you can view and print the free coupons. Don’t forget to check this page at the beginning of each month for new coupons!



This year almost all the coupons in our Passport are available here for download and printing. Please

visit our member attractions!


How to get Cheap Ticket to See 1000 Islands, Niagara, Wonderland and Many More


E-COUPONS ARE ONLY VALID IF BOTH FRONT AND BACK SIDES ARE PRESENTED AT FRONT GATE (The front of the coupon is ABOVE the perforated line, the back of the coupon is BELOW the perforated line).

Get coupon here 

Attraction Title                                                              Expiry Date



1000 Islands & Seaway Cruises - Brockville Save 25% 2015/04/30

1000 Islands Cruises Rockport $2 Off Regular Priced Cruise 2015/04/30

African Lion Safari $2 Off Admission 2014/10/13


How to get Cheap Ticket to See 1000 Islands, Niagara, Wonderland and Many More
Art Gallery of Ontario 20% Off Adult Admission 2014/09/28

Bata Shoe Museum 2 For 1 Admission 2015/04/30

Bingemans Big Splash $5 Off Day Pass 2014/09/03

Bird Kingdom $3 Off All Regular Admission 2015/04/30

Bruce County Museum & Cultural Centre Buy one regular Adult and receive one Child for FREE 2015/04/30

Cambridge Butterfly Conservatory Save Up to $8! 2015/01/31

Canada's Wonderland $6 Off Regular Admission 2014/11/01

Canadian Museum of Civilization $5 Off of Family Admission & IMAX Package 2014/09/01

Canadian Museum of Nature $2 Off Regular Admission 2014/09/01

Casa Loma 20% Off Admission 2015/04/30

Centreville Amusement Park $2 Off - Save up to $12* On Family Fun 2014/09/08

CN Tower 15% Off General Admission Ticket 2014/10/31

Discovery Harbour $2 Off Admission 2014/09/14

Eco Adventure Tour At Scenic Caves Nature Adventures $10 Off Eco Adventure Tour 2015/04/30

Elmvale Jungle Zoo $2 Off Regular Adult Admission 2014/09/30

Fallsview Indoor Waterpark $10 Off General Admission for up to 6 People 2015/04/30

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Fort William Historical Park Buy 1, Get 1 Free! 2015/09/16

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Horseshoe Resort $5 Off Adventure Park Pass 2015/04/30

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Island Queen Cruise $10 Off 2014/10/10

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LEGOLAND® Discovery Centre Toronto $3 Off Up to 4 People 2015/04/30

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Oh Canada Eh? Dinner Show Kids Free or $16 Off Per Couple 2015/04/30

Ontario Science Centre 20% Off Regular Admission 2015/03/31

OWL Rafting on the Ottawa River $15 Off Per Person 2014/09/08

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River Run Rafting Save $20 Per Person 2014/09/30

Safari Niagara Save Up to $18 Off! 2014/10/13

Sainte-Marie among the Hurons $2 Off Admission 2014/10/12

Santa's Village $5 Off Admission 2014/09/07

Scenic Caves Nature Adventures $2 Off Admission 2014/10/31

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Segway Ontario 20% Off Any Tour 2015/05/31

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The Second City $10 Tickets or 20% Off 2014/12/30

Toronto Harbour Tours Buy 1, Get 1 Free 2015/04/30

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Wild Water Kingdom $6 Off Regular Admission 2014/08/29

Wild Waterworks $2 Off All Day Pass 2014/09/01

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Friday, July 4, 2014

New tips to Secure More Scholarship Money for your study

Free Tips to get more Scholarship Money for your study


I understand this is not the time for getting admission in college. This article will help you prepare you for next years. Try these techniques you will sure to get your Scholarship Money for your study.

It’s not uncommon to start planning for financial aid in your junior year of high school. Don’t be intimidated or scared-off by a private school -- with need and merit based aid you can actually pay less for a private school than a public one. Do not be afraid to ask questions of your parents, teachers, counselors, or principals. You can also call the college you want to attend. The only stupid question is the one you don’t ask.


New tips to Secure More Scholarship Money for your study in 2014-15
The average annual cost to attend a four-year public college is $8,244, says College Board. For out-of-state students, that number more than doubles ($20,770) – and for private schools, it triples ($28,500). And that’s just tuition. Those numbers don’t include housing, living expenses, or textbooks.

Here are some tips and tricks you can use to help fund your college experience.

1. Use free Scholarship websites


These are free scholarship search sites where a student can find financial aid opportunities. There are scholarship search services that do the work for you, but you have to pay for those. Check out the free sites like www.freescholarship.com and www.fastweb.com.

Check out the free sites

Scholarships.com

CollegeBoard.org

College-Scholarships.com

College Answer

QuestBridge

Scholarship America

FastWeb.com

www.freescholarship.com



2. Use FAFSA - Free Application for Federal Student Aid


This is the student aid form that most colleges and universities use to determine a student’s need-based aid, which can take the form of grants or loans. It takes about 30 minutes to fill this out on-line.



FAFSA - Free Application for Federal Student Aid



3. Check locally and offline


Online searches are a great tool, but your odds of winning nationally competitive scholarships might be lower than less-advertised local ones. Check with local businesses and community-oriented organizations in your area: Rotary clubs, YMCA, Kiwanis, and even churches. High-school and library bulletin boards and well-connected guidance counselors might also be able to clue you in.


New tips to Secure More Scholarship Money for your study in 2014-15

Be persistent


While there’s a mind-boggling amount of free money out there, don’t expect it to fall into your lap. Do the legwork and keep checking every semester. Some scholarships aren’t available to freshmen or undecided majors, and new opportunities pop up all the time.



Tap your network.


Chances are your friends are in the same boat as you. Talk to them about sharing scholarship resources. In a few minutes you could easily double, triple, or quadruple your list of scholarships. Also, sharing is caring and some good karma is never a bad thing when you’re trying to win some cash. The trick: Trade with friends that have some similar interests and abilities. This way the scholarships you swap will be a little more qualified.

Athletics and Activities Grants


Are you a gifted hockey player or trumpet player? While you may not earn the coveted full-ride to a Division I school, there may be money at your chosen school that fits your given talent: athletics, music, art or theatre.

Religious Scholarships


New tips to Secure More Scholarship Money for your study in 2014-15

Many colleges and universities are affiliated with different churches. Check your church and your prospective colleges for opportunities for faith-based aid.

University Scholarships


Contact the universities you want to attend because each school will have unique scholarship opportunities, deadlines and applications. There are many opportunities, but the cliché holds true -- the early bird gets the worm. These scholarships aren’t strictly based on academics. Some are for students who exhibit leadership or involvement in the community or other high school activities.

Specialty Scholarships


Many big box retailers like Wal-Mart and Lowe’s offer undergraduate scholarships, and your parent’s employer may offer scholarship money to employee’s children.

And there are scholarships based on race, gender, academic interest and even geographic location, so there may be a scholarship that fits your special circumstances. Millions of dollars go unclaimed because students do not realize they are uniquely eligible for certain scholarships.

Target scholarships with simple applications.


There are countless scholarships that require nothing more than an easy sign-up. While these typically have slightly smaller payouts, the benefits can quickly rack up with little time investment. The trick: These are usually very popular and attract many applicants. Use the law of averages and apply to as many as you can. Counting on just one could really limit your chances.

Dedicate at least 30 minutes a day to researching and applying.


It’s key to make time for discovering new opportunities and to actually apply to them. The trick: Don’t not burn yourself out. Just devote a small chunk of time each day and before you know it, money will be coming your way!

Reuse your work


Apply for a few scholarships, and you’ll start to see a pattern. Many want the same information, and essay scholarships may touch on the same themes (especially “tell us who you are and why you want our money”).

While plagiarism is a no-no in college, you can’t plagiarize yourself. Save time by keeping documents you can copy and paste from, and use your Web browser’s autocomplete feature so you don’t have to type in your contact info a billion times. Just make sure to double-check everything.

 

Check non-academic scholarships


As we already mentioned, there are literally billions of dollars in scholarships out there every year. As we covered in 25 Bizarre Scholarships, many don’t require great grades, test scores, or any kind of performance at all – there are scholarships based on everything from your height to a passion for the science behind wine.

Some of them have such weirdly specific criteria that you might win just by being the only person crazy enough to apply. For instance, there’s a scholarship for Catholics named Zolp. (Name changes won’t work.) So don’t sell yourself short when searching.



At last if you can’t get enough aid

Consider starting at a community college, which charges significantly less than a four-year university and lets you finish core courses before transferring to the school you really want. Just make sure your credits will carry over – ask the transfer schools for an articulation agreement.

You could also try applying to some of the cheapest schools in the country, or the tuition-free schools named in this BusinessWeek article. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s new comparison shopping tool might also help.



Some of these scholarships are worth only $500 – not enough to pay for even one class. But every bit counts, especially if the alternative is a high-interest student loan that will take years to pay off. Apply for everything you might qualify for, and there’s no telling how much you might end up with…



Surname scholarships


What’s in a name? Money. Like the Zolp scholarship, the Scarpinato Scholarship gives you a full ride – but this one doesn’t require a conversion to Catholicism. The name can come from birth or marriage, and it’s valid at Texas A&M University. The name Gatling will grant you $9,000 to $18,000 at North Carolina State. Van Valkenburg and variants can net you $1,000 good anywhere, and several names can put you in the good graces of Harvard, including Baxendale, Hudson, and Bright.

 

Little people, tall people, and Klingon scholarships.


 You don’t need to be tall or a sci-fi geek for these: You need to be really short, really tall, or love language. Little People of America gives out annual scholarships of up to $1,000 to those under 4-foot-10 or members of their families. If none apply, the award may also go to anyone with a disability or someone with financial need; the Billy Barty Foundation has a similar scholarship. Tall Clubs International has a similar scholarship for women over 5-foot-10 and men over 6-2. Meanwhile, the Klingon Language Institute not only exists, but it gives out $500 a year to language students who don’t even need “familiarity with Klingon or other constructed languages.” More Trekkie scholarships are out there too. You can even win a $5,000 scholarship for writing about elves - or drawing them.

Tasty scholarships


 Getting the $5,000 American Association of Candy Technologists scholarship is like taking candy from a baby – or maybe a robot. You need a “demonstrated interest in confectionery technology” along with a decent GPA and at least sophomore status. And beef is not just for dinner, it’s also for class: The National Beef Ambassador Program awards up to $2,500 if you can give great speeches about the merits of cows – a debate with the winners of the $5,000 Vegetarian Resource Group scholarship is not required. Budding wine connoisseur? Junior-level science majors with no gripes about grapes can go after the American Society for Enology and Viticulture scholarship. Heck, you can even win $25,000 for making a peanut butter sandwich – jelly optional.

 

Religious scholarships.


Take a vow of poverty and, ironically enough, you could win the Monastic Scholarship at Naropa University. Studying American Buddhism at that school could also get you a $2,500 Frederick P. Lenz scholarship. Pagans aren’t left out either: The Carolina Spirit Quest scholarship is worth $500 for such students who live in North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, or Washington, D.C. Hindu students studying business can win up to $10,000 with the Rattan L. Khosa scholarship at the University of Chicago.

•Doing-weird-things scholarships. That’s an awfully broad category, but where else are we going to mention $25,000 scholarships for people who dance for a living or $5,000 scholarships for people who wear Duct tape to prom? What about scholarships for people who compete in national marbles contests? There are $7,500 scholarships for students who drink milk while playing sports, and the Gertrude J. Steppen scholarship for students who don’t drink and don’t play sports. There’s a scholarship for chaste North Carolina girls who live on campus without a car and have no other financial aid. And one that Stacy mentioned in the above video, a $2,000 scholarship for those with a talent for duck-calling.

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