You are here >Home arrow Community arrow mtonikitambo
Sun 21 Mar 2010
mtonikitambo's Profile

mtonikitambo said:
Nawakilisha

- 272 days ago

mtonikitambo
11820
OFFLINE
2 years ago
3 days ago
9 months ago
8

About Me

big dad
africa
Iraq
Male
more than 40
Not Looking
No
No

 

ukinizingua nakupa za chembe

My People

sex

Profile Visitors

The last 10 profile visitors
 
PhotoNameTime
   kid  Date: 21-3-10 Time:14:42 
   MwanaAppolo  Date: 21-3-10 Time:12:19 
   dell  Date: 11-3-10 Time:14:02 
   llahlam  Date: 04-3-10 Time:17:40 
   Carmelo  Date: 04-3-10 Time:15:09 
   saracutie  Date: 02-3-10 Time:22:52 
   Lawalawa  Date: 28-2-10 Time:17:05 
   Nisipitwe  Date: 28-2-10 Time:16:46 
   tania  Date: 26-2-10 Time:19:14 
   buguruni  Date: 26-2-10 Time:18:37 
 
There are no playlists loaded.

My Guestbook


Name Entry
kid
Created On: 21/03/2010 14:45:35

Sija kifua wa nini man, less kali tu.. niaje kona zako mwana..

MwanaAppolo
Created On: 21/03/2010 12:21:45

yeah.. niko sana ki TZ 2010 hii man.mambo inabana kinyama arifu.Pamoko sana

dell
Created On: 11/03/2010 14:05:34

mambo vipi dogo?vipi stockholm?

llahlam
Created On: 04/03/2010 17:41:44

Wow vipi wewe za kupoteya vipi naona umejiachiya full handas full pamba sawa wewe shuwari.
Chao

Carmelo
Created On: 04/03/2010 15:10:22

hahaha si unajua taa zilikuwa nyingi kaka... huku hollywood mataa kilakona broo.. vipi lkn shwarizzz??

Lawalawa
Created On: 28/02/2010 17:07:10

Asante sana. Ubarikiwe m2 wangu. Kuwa salama huko ulipo.

llahlam
Created On: 21/02/2010 12:43:22

Hi my friend, wats up mis u too long time no see hope you doin ok Tcare.
Chao.

Yassern
Created On: 30/01/2010 14:01:24

sema kamanda !OVER..
mambo niaje wangu?
huku afrighanstan kwema kabisa,sijui huko Big Dad..! OVER!! peace,luv,respect,unity..pamoja!


dell
Created On: 29/01/2010 12:45:32

mambo vipi mtoni k?

kid
Created On: 28/01/2010 14:11:58

hahahahahaaa Duh kufua ni jambo la kawaida kaka... kwa kifupi bado cjafulia mwana...

Icpokua nimeanika tu... zikauke jasho tehtehteh..

Nisipitwe
Created On: 21/01/2010 19:43:56

hiiii ....ah wapi sipitwigi ati 2010 nimeipokea kwa saaana vipi hujambo lakini

savio
Created On: 15/01/2010 19:51:02

duh kaka si unajua tena uchumi wa siku hizi wa kuchungulia ndio maana ila poa wangu happy new year

sifa
Created On: 15/01/2010 06:25:11

naona wewe ndugu yangu ndio umeloweka kabisaaaa. humu ndani siku watu hawapo ndio maana watu tunachuna. mzima lakini wewe. haya happy new year 3

8figure
Created On: 14/01/2010 09:35:06

sijafulia wala sijawekwa ndani sema nimeona mmepotea na mimi nikaamua kupotea pia ila nipo na tunalisongesha kama kawa !! Hapi nyu yia tu.

Farasin
Created On: 13/01/2010 22:41:23

Get A Summary Scorecard From NPR Reporters
text sizeAAAApril 30, 2009
In his first 100 days as president, Barack Obama has proposed a more expansive federal role in education from cradle to college.

A short list of his numerous education proposals includes: uniform standards for preschool programs; rigorous tests and academic standards for public schools; merit pay for classroom teachers; a longer school day and school year; and a national strategy to address the high school dropout crisis.

In numerous speeches, the president has called these proposals "the pillars" of his plan to improve education in America.

"The relative decline of American education is untenable for our economy; it's unsustainable for our democracy; it's unacceptable for our children. And we can't afford to let it continue," Obama said in a speech last month.

Obama's education proposals would make any local school board member dizzy, says Jeanne Allen, who heads the Center for Education Reform and is an advocate of charter schools and vouchers. Besides, she says, Obama's agenda is nothing more than a wish list.

"Despite all the great rhetoric about fixing America's schools coming out from the Obama administration in the first 100 days, it is not translating into more quality choices for children," Allen says.

School reform has taken a back seat to fixing an economy still on life support. Critics say the $100 billion in stimulus funds that Obama requested for education come with few strings attached and no incentives for reform.

But the extra money has bought Obama a lot of good will, especially in states facing teacher layoffs and deep budget cuts in education.

In the long term, Obama has vowed to break free from what he calls "the old, tired Washington debate over education — Democrats versus Republicans, federal versus local control, more money versus more reform."

"There's been partisanship and petty bickering, but little recognition that we need to move beyond the worn fights of the 20th century if we're going to succeed in the 21st century," Obama said in March.

This kind of talk, for now, has earned Obama support from conservatives and liberals alike. Republican leaders in Congress, for example, lauded Obama's choice for education secretary, Arne Duncan. Even teachers' unions have agreed to consider what was once unthinkable: linking teacher pay to students' performance, one of Obama's campaign promises.

"I reject a system that rewards failure and protects a person from its consequences — the stakes are too high. We can afford nothing but the best when it comes to our children's teachers and the schools where they teach," Obama said.

Andy Rotherham, a top adviser to the Obama campaign, disagrees with critics who say the president is proposing a bigger federal role in education. He says Obama just wants a more effective role.

"This president clearly did not come to Washington to be an observer," Rotherham says. "He has a big agenda and he has a lot of things he wants to get done. The things he's talking about doing, though, generally do play to the federal government's strength."

Still, most of Obama's education agenda in the first 100 days has been talk, with a couple of exceptions: He has increased funding for Pell Grants for college students and has begun overhauling the federal student loan program.

The president argues that bypassing banks entirely and having the U.S. Education Department issue federal loans directly to college students would save about $48 billion over the next 10 years. The proposal has divided college officials, and banks are gearing up to oppose it.

The loan question is likely to become the first big fight over education policy that the president will face beyond his first 100 days in office.

Related NPR Stories

<< Start < Prev [1] 2 3 4 5 6 ... 15 Next > End >>

My Photos


Only Registered Members Allowed to view the 6 items in this Gallery!

Youtube Videos

My Friends

  mdabwa
  my rachel
  g_thedon
  Tito
  steaad
  odbida
  woozgan
  LuckyLuca
 
We have 24 guests online and 1 member online
wabogojo
Bongo5 Chat Zone 2.0
Total of members in the chatroom:
total 25746 registered
female 6301 female
male 19332 male
month 78 new this month
New: kibaskeli