Growth through Education

Homepage  | Add to Favorites

 

Search
Recommended Products
Related Links


 

 

Featured Articles

Life insurance, the universe and everything
You may have noticed that life insurance is coming back into fashion. It’s true that it may not be the financial term on everybody’s lips, but sales of life insurance have been going up, according to the Association of British Insurers. Whilst we...



College Savings Reward Plans - Making Them Work for You
You are probably well aware that college costs are soaring and that the need for parents to build college savings has never been greater. You may also be aware of various loyalty reward programs (such as Upromise and BabyMint) that pledge to help...

Educational Toys - Let Children Learn While They Are Having Fun
In today’s fast pace modern world, few parents manage to spend enough quality time with their children resulting in deprivation of some vital stimulation. This caused a lot of children to strive with learning problems at school. Most of these...


Know Your Brain.
Brain is not a computer. Actually, the brain begins working long before it is finished. At birth a baby's brain contains 100 billion neurons,roughly as many nerve cells are there are stars in the Milky Way. That's why if we look more into it,...

 
Google
Scotland - Relocate To This Beautiful Country

My wife is an expert on Scotland. She writes about it for a living. Although born in the south east of England, she is a Robertson through and through and has returned to her roots, bringing me along with her. I'm very grateful!

And, I'm not the only willing settler in this great country. The Scotsman newspaper recently reported that immigrants 'accounted for 68 per cent of population growth in Scotland between 1991 and 2001'. At the time of the 2001 census, 168,142 people living in Scotland had been born abroad. This figure, of course, does not include people like me who were born in another part of the UK.

Of those born abroad, Americans, Pakistanis and even Spaniards comprise a significant proportion of recent immigrants, many of them highly skilled. 37 per cent of those moving here hold a higher level qualification and the number falling into the 'high earner' bracket is almost twice the UK average, says the report.

"Can you explain this?" I asked my wife.

"Easy," she said, "it's just a great place to live!"

And here are her 8 reasons why it is such a great place:

1 There is elbow room. With less than 6 million people, and an area of 30,420 sq. miles, there is room to breathe. Its population is about one tenth of the population of England and Wales, yet the mainland comprises over half the area of Great Britain.

2 House prices are considerably lower than in many other parts of the UK. In Edinburgh, the average is £170,342; in Glasgow it is £120,361; and in the Highlands it is £111,693. In Greater London, the average is £293,363.

3 Scotland's economy has fluctuated over the years as structural changes have taken place. Heavy industry, agriculture and fishing have given way to trade, financial services provision, tourism and high-tech research. The internet has opened up vast swathes of the country to computer literate workers who can beaver away at all sorts of IT work as easilyfrom the comfort of a Highland


croft as they could from a stuffy city office.

4 The driving is easier, if not necessarily cheaper! Apart from the major city centres (and even they aren't in the same league as London for congestion), driving is almost a pleasure because of the fewer number of vehicles on the road. Travel south on the M6 until you get to Preston, and then compare!

5 The education system is far superior to England's. We know, first hand. Our sons have thrived here in Scotland, from juniorschool right through to university.

6 The environment is clean. The scenery is magnificent. The wildlife is plentiful and not endangered. Take a tour by Loch Lomond and the Trossachs, visit Wester Ross or the Outer Isles, the Grampians or the Borders and tell me these things aren't true!

7 And along with the healthy environment there is a full range of recreational activities - Munro-bagging, walking, sailing, fishing, stalking, to name just a few. And none of the usual sports are neglected. Even the tiniest of Highland villages contributes players to the local soccer team.

8 But, most importantly, the people are wonderful. They are, by and large, friendly and civilised and cultured and welcoming of 'incomers', no matter what the occasional bad press says. I have only one complaint: how on earth can nybody understand a Glasgow east end accent?


About the Author

Charlie Taylor lives in Glasgow with wife Nicola, a freelance writer. Her main published work is 'Live and Work In Scotland', published by Vacation Works Publications, Oxford. http://freespace.virgin.net/nicola.taylor/living.htm Her next book,'Buying a House In Scotland will be available in 2006. They also own and rent out a luxury flat in Glasgow city centre, available for short breaks. http://freespace.virgin.net/nicola.taylor/accommodation.htm

 


Visit these sites in the Information Organizers Network
Nonprofit News | Best Small Businesses to Start | News on Health Grants | Children Grants | News on Community Building Grants | Fundraising for Youth Programs | Home Business Ideas | Foundations Giving Grants | Repair Your Credit | Dogs Beds | Beautiful Gratitude Screensavers | Education Grant Donors | Unusual Baby Names | Business Home Income Online Opportunity | Web Hosting Reseller Business | Govt Grants News | Express Affiliate Sites | Government Grants for Individuals | Minority Grants | Government Grants | Directories of Non Profit Resources | Cool and Unique Baby Names | Small Business Idea | Federal Grant Money | Government Funding | Grant | Arts Grants News | Sitemap | Privacy Policy
Edited by:Michael Saunders

©2011 Information Organizers, LLC