Herald & Lantern 14 September '83
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FOR STARTERS — Mrs: Elinor Waugh and Don Troth are in charge of reconditioning batteries for the loc^l market for A.F.P. Battery Reconditioning Inc., Vineland.
Osteopathic Medicine Week Set
National Osteopathic Medicine Week will be observed Sept. 10-24, with special significance for South Jersey. The area’s battle for its own medical school ended in 1977 when the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey instituted the New Jersey School of Osteopathic Medicine as its sixth and newest schpol. A new $9 million campus is nearing completion in Camden.
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STONE HARBOR - When business educators return to their classrooms this fall, they will take steps to make certain that their students emerge to become “managers of change — not victims of change” if they follow the advice of local resident Larry L. Luing. President of The Berkeley Schools and immediate past chairman of the Policies Commission on Business and Economic Education, Luing delivered the 1983 Annual Business Education Distinguished Lecture sponsored by the Department of Business Education and Office Administration of Rider College. This summer’s was the 17th such program. For his topic Luing chose "What Next for Business Education?” ONE OF THE changes projected by the veteran educator is the volume of paper work now handled. “The average office worker now handles approximately 40 pages of paper each day,” he reported. “By 1990 that number will have increased to more than 100 pages. The amount of available information doubles every 10 years, and over 75 percent of today's information will be replaced by 1990. "Another indication of the magnitude of the information explosion is a pro-
jection that the estimated 2'£ million electronic work stations in offices in 1982 will increase to47'^ million by 1990, ' a seven fold increase in eight years, he pointed out. Luing notes that the 700 percent increase in electronic work stations can never be achieved "unless we provide the personnel and the expertise to staff them.” NOTING THE prospect of virtually every grade school student’s having access to a microcomputer, every home having a personal computer and every executive having a computer terminal among his management tools, the speaker continued, "We have the challenge of elevating keyboarding to a universal skill” and urged educators to begin a campaign to teach keyboarding to all students in their schools, relating it to the overall curricula. He went on to urge those present to start budgeting for new eauipment that will be needed in the information age and to discard course outlines that are more than a year old; to include decision-making activities in courses to endow students with promotability; to promote business as a career field’ to provide a challenge for gifted students and bring them into the classes; to eliminate unnecessary duplication
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and make programs supportive of one another, including at the post-high school level doing everything possible to insure maximum transferability of credits; to promote business teaching as a career in consideration of the fact that despite teacher layoffs in other areas, there is a shortage of qualified business teachers; to capitalize on opportunities in continuing education. Luing stressed the need for business educators to get their viewpoints to the decision makers in business and government, as well as in education.
"Although it’s vital to publish statements in the business education journals, it is just as important to reach those others who impact upon our field,” he insisted.
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