The GED is the General Education Development credential, the adult learner's alternative to a high school diploma. But many people don't understand the difficulty and value of the GED test, the testing requirements or even the process of taking it.
The first GED tests were developed in 1942 to help military war veterans finish their basic education and high school study program. Today, the GED credential is a worthwhile goal for the 40 million US adults who never graduated from high school. A GED enables adults to complete an educational milestone, to progress at work or ... read more
Article Title:
Article Body:
Author Bio:
Some other recently published higher education articles
Demand for MBA's Increasing by Shay Rosen While the economy has wavered in a steady climb over recent years, the business world remains as strong as ever and appears to be seemingly immune to the ebb and flow that has marked ...
The Value of a Good Massage by Shay Rosen Long ago, trying to find an insurance company that would pay for chiropractic treatment was a losing endeavor. Chiropractic practitioners were once considered to have more in common with holistic healers than licensed ...
Why Productivity? by Morgan F Bryan We choose productivity as the basis for success because it offers the greatest opportunity for a better work environment and ...
Allen Bradley FlexLogix PLC range by Subhash Kandpal The Allen Bradley ControlLogix PLC,Allen Bradley CompactLogix PLC and Allen Bradley FlexLogix PLC systems have been developed by Allen Bradley part of the Rockwell group of companies based in the ...
Publisher Guidelines
You may reprint this article electronically in your newsletter or on your website, free of charge.
If you reprint this article from our site, then you must keep everything intact. This includes the articles title, author name, articles body, authors bio / resource box, the links contained within the article, all copyright notices and the link pointing back to our site. All links within the article must also be made active / hyperlinks.