ROYAL ROUGE MAGAZINE FESTIVE EDITION

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CONTENTS

2018 NOVEMBER

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GLAMOUR Beauty Tips Summer Make-Up Tips Relationship Real Facts What Your Partner Really Want For X-Mas

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FASHIONISTA Shop At Aderonbi Style Up

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36 RELATIONSHIPS Why Is Chaeting Wrong

LIFE IN MUSIC Reviews

28 BUSINESS GENIUS Mind Your Bizz, Start Your Bizz


Credits

Natasha olckers

Layout Design & Graphic Design Sipho Ngondo

Niniola Apata www.officialniniola.com officialniniola

Beauty & Style

@officialniniola

Head of Digital Content Sipho Ngondo

www.facebook.com/gemmagriffithszim/ www.youtube.com/channel/UCD_0CGAjgZRfTs5uG2r3lGQ www.instagram.com/gemmamusic_/

Sendy Ngwenya

Gemma Griffiths

Selaelo Moshi

Fashion & Style Aderonbi Culture Aderonbi Odukoya Rata Vaslapa Leah Tukwane Charlene Mericia Bell

www.facebook.com/selaelomoshi/

Beauty on flick Carla Van Rensburg

Motion & Still Picture Artist

Unathi Platyi Actor & Model Arabang Motete Ishmini Hiralal

Models

Front Cover Page(Model)

Ishmini Hiralal (Front Cover) Carla Van Rensburg (Beauty Page) Jhervan Govennder Bodean Peters

Beauty On Flick Photographers Willie Van Der Merwe @wille_rmp Gawie Van Der Walt @photostudio78

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UPFRONT & PERSONAL

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UPFRONT & PERSONAL

PetiteDivinitii

Jamaican You-tuber, Pro MUA, and a bikini athlete accelerating to the sharp curve of success itself. She started the journey as a makeup artist January 2014 and YouTuber in December 2013.

By Sipho Ngondo As Social media unlock many doors as a key were you can connect to everyone and have access to mingle, socialize and do business transection trough digital advertising & marketing has helped a lot of business candidates. Petite Divinitti made a record on being one of the top social media icon and

it plays a big role in her career, She said I have over 379K subscribers on my beauty YouTube channel, over 44K on my vlog channel, and over 89K followers on my Instagram page, and I am also one of the leading YouTubers in Jamaica.

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UPFRONT & PERSONAL

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UPFRONT & PERSONAL

2 - What drives you and keep you motivated daily as Fashion guru & Make-up artist? I naturally have a passion for the beauty and fashion industry and as a result I am always creating new looks, trying new products and expressing myself through fashion when I do my look books which I have so much fun creating.

3 - How long have you been in the Entertainment & Fashion industry? I have been in this industry since 2013.

4 - What are the challenges you face daily as a distinguished Female entrepreneur, Fashionista & Make-up artist? Sometimes people overlook my job(s), meaning they don’t consider YouTube or even makeup artistry real jobs. This is also something that pushes me to go even harder just to prove them wrong.

5 - Who has always been your inspiration in this industry and why? I was inspired by quiet a

number of influencers, I was just always intrigued by the freedom they had in creating their content and the amount of fun they seemed to have doing it, and the fact that it’s their job even made it better because not a lot of people have fun doing their jobs, so that’s something that definitely pulled me in.

6 – Kindly Mention Two Fashion & Make-Up Guru’s you would love to work with? Two makeup gurus I would like to work with are Nikkitutorials and Priscillaono.

they’re any? IG and Snapchat @ petite3ssence luxuryfacesbypetite@gmail. com for makeup bookings petitediviinitii@gmail.com for all other bookings and business related things.

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Favorite, Quote, Food and Movies?

Fav quotes currently

7 – What do you do on your spare time besides Fashion & Beauty (Makeup?

“Trust the process”

When I am not doing beauty/ fashion related stuff, I am working out at the gym or editing videos lol.

you’ll be successful” - Eric Thomas

8 –In 3 terms how can you describe yourself?

“When you want to succeed as bad as you want to breath , then

Fav foods

Curry goat and white rice or rice and peas or roti / ackee and roast breadfruit/ Dhal bhat with white rice, oxtail and rice and peas, steam fish with okra and crackers on the side.

Goal Orientated Consistent Extremely focused Vibrant Positive energy

Fav movies

9 – Where can people find you on (Social Media and for bookings) if

Poetic Justice, Pursuit to Happiness, Honey, Dream Girls and I could go on lol.

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UPFRONT & PERSONAL

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UPFRONT & PERSONAL

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BEAUTY ON FLICK

Hi

ladies! It’s a sizzling summer and you need to catch some rays and attention and it’s all about that base. The basics of applying your makeup correctly will get those boy’s eyes (hidden behind their shades) following you. Natasha Grifo

SUMMER TIME MAKE UP

TIPS TO STAY STUNNING

THIS

SUMMER

1 Photographers Werner Rechard Model: Chante Casimiro 18

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BEAUTY ON FLICK

HERE

are my quick tips for correct make-up application to suit the shape of your features as well as shaping your lovely eyes for fun summer outings. Find you face shape below and follow the steps of application:

1.

Square shape face: Contour the four corners of your face, (sides of the forehead and sides of the jaw line) by applying one shade darker than your base colour. Highlight the chin and forehead with a shade lighter than your base colour. Round or oval frames shades with soft

curves will compliment your beauty.

2.

Oblang shape face: Contour the forehead and chin, using one shade darker than your base colour. No highlighting. Wrap style glasses work well on this face shape.

3.

Broad nose: Contour the sides of the nose using a shade darker than your base colour. Then highlight the center (bridge to tip) with a shade lighter than your base colour.

4.

Short nose: Shade the sides of the nose with a

shade darker than your base. Highlight the Centre from the bridge to the tip of the nose.

CORRECTIVE MAKE UP FOR EYES

:

1

. Small eyes: Dark shadow is your enemy! Your goal is to make your eyes more open and bigger. Use only frosted colours on the lid. Blend the lid colour on the outer corners. Apply a white pencil on the inside of the rim of the eyes.

2.

Deep eyes: Apply a light bright colour to the lid. Our goal is to bring your eyes forward by accentuating them. Apply shading to the natural crease of the lids.

MODEL: CHANTE CASIMIRO NOVEMBER 2018 | ISSUU.COM/ROYALROUGEMAGAZINE

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Christmas EVE MENU

Pan-seared foie gras, lychee and galangal broth Foie gras poêlé, litchi et bouillon au galangal Roasted scallop, Chablis braised artichoke, black truffle & poultry jus Noix de St Jacques et artichaut braisé au Chablis, truffe noire et jus court de volaille Cherry / Yuzu granité Slowly cooked Guinea fowl, crispy buckwheat and black trumpet, bergamot jus Pintade en cuisson douce, Sarrazin croustillant et champignons sauvage, jus de bergamote Interpretation of black forest / Interprétation d’une forêt noire Mignardises 22

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New Years Eve GALA MENU Palm heart and black truffle Coeur de Palmiste et truffe noire Slowly cooked egg, morel Oeuf de poule à 63ºC, morille et écume au vin jaune Steamed seabass, parsnip and bordelaise sauce Bar vapeur, panais en différentes textures et sauce bordelaise Wagyu beef, creamy celeriac and black garlic from Aomori Boeuf wagyu, céléri crémeux piqué d’ail noir d’Aomori Calamansi granité, « ume » plum syrup Granité calamansi et sirop de noyaux de prune «ume» Guanaja bitter chocolate ring, almond milk espuma and macadamia ice cream Chocolat amer Guanaja, lait d’amande et crème glacée aux noix de macadamia

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GET THE MOST STUNNING LOOK ONLY AT ADERONBI Model: Jhervan Govender MUA: Trendsetterz Gen Mary Meagan Styled By: Charlene Mercia Bell Jacket: Aderonbi Culture & Aderonbi Odukoya

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Sneakers

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SHOPPING

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SHOPPING

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BUSINESS GENIUS

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BUSINESS GENIUS

R650 BACKPACKS

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BUSINESS GENIUS

A

purposeful logic for strategy was proposed by Mitroff.11 He offers the idea that strategy, or as he refers to it, policy, can be formulated in terms of the

MIND YOUR BIZZ! 30

formal logic of argument. As such, a policy position or line of strategic direction is a claim, supported by warrants based on evidence, and surviving against rebuttal. This idea also carries weight as a contributor to strategic thinking because it requires precise specifi cation of the elements and considerations in formulating a strategic position, incorporating explicit rejection of alternatives. This logical basis does not solve the problem of formulating strategy; it simply assists by providing a framework for thinking. More recently, a further framework for the logic of strategy is proposed in terms of harmony and confrontation in commercial competition.12 This idea is based on the observation that much of corporate behaviour involves peaceful co-existence among market-oriented fi rms. While a fi rm’s vital interests are not placed under threat

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from the behaviour of rivals, a harmonious pattern of market-based interaction persists. If, however, interests are threatened, the pattern of competitive interaction shifts radically to a mode which is confrontational. This idea is developed further in Chapter

2. The literature on business strategy is enormous. Its growth has been motivated by curiosity among senior executives about how to guide their businesses to succeed. But despite the quantum of scholarly effort and writing, I believe most executives are disappointed by the result. Principles are rare and the logical structure of advice is abstract. The literature on strategic management refers to many rather abstract aspects of the management


BUSINESS GENIUS

Classic perspectives

Although the connection between business and strategy is relatively recent, our heritage in strategic thinking has a very long history. It is over 2500 years since Sun Tzu13 wrote his military treatise. At about the same time Kautilya14 was providing comprehensive advice to King Chandragupta on

Clausewitz.17 This group of scholars of strategy is neither exclusive nor comprehensive in their insights; no doubt others also have had considerable infl uence in their times.18 It is clear, however, that Sun Tzu, Kautilya, Alexander, Machiavelli and von Clausewitz are historical fi gures with enduring reputations and this is the basis for their selection to contribute to Principles of Strategy.19 A background sketch for each author is offered below.

COMPETITIVE MIND

Sun Tzu

the Indian subcontinent. This included a guide for prevailing in competition with enemies. Alexander the Great15 undertook his great enterprise in empire building between 334 and 323 BC, leaving a history rich in evidence of strategic thinking. A little more recently those with responsibility for the protection of state sovereignty have been advised on strategy by Machiavelli16 and von

identity of the author of work attributed to Sun Tzu, but few dispute the power and wisdom of the insight handed on from around 500 BC. Sun Tzu’s thinking evolved from his observation and participation in struggles among warring states. He dwelt on the sources of success in such rivalry. This thinking has been distilled into a rather abstract, even poetic form, which expresses principles which are both

Some raise doubts about the

profoundly powerful and plainly practical. Sun Tzu recognised war as a recurrent conscious act and not a passing and painful aberration in human affairs. This rationality is the basis of the detached analysis which forms the essence of his theory. Most importantly, Sun Tzu is aware that armed struggle is always costly and should not be undertaken recklessly. Because of the inevitable cost and mutual disadvantage arising from application of direct force, he sees it as a last resort. Far better, he argues, to attack the

plans and ideas of a rival and even better still to undermine an opponent’s morale. Attack a rival’s intentions rather than his army or cities. The objective is elimination of the will to resist, not annihilation of the enemy.

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FASHIONISTA

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Q&A

With Tiisetso Maredi By Sipho Ngondo Tell us more about yourself (Summery about your background, age & etc.)? My name is Tiisetso Favour Maredi born and raised in Limpopo GA Mphahlele Mamalo, I am a 21 year old individual raised by a single unemployed parent (mother). I attended Maretlwaneng primary school then Sedimothole secondary and went to further my studies at Nonwane Christian academy, yet I never obtained matric, that’s when I decided to leave school and focus on something that I myself can do. 2 - What drives you and keep you motivated daily as a Stylist? One thing that drives me about being a stylist is that I love clothes mostly formal wear, I am more motivated in formal wear as compared to other styles. My daily motivation is people, the way they dress and I see how creative they get with the color combinations and the way they are placed, so I get more motivated. I want the world to know about me and my work and I want help those who lack a sense of style where possible, especially when comes to dressing for occasions such as weddings.

FASHIONISTA 3 - How long have you been in this Industry? I have been in the industry for a year and half now of which it was the best time of my life because I was doing what I am good at. 4 - What are the challenges you face daily as a distinguished Male stylist? Most of the challenges that I come across would be orders in short notice, at some point a person will book you for a wedding in a week’s time and yet I still have a lot of work to do in that short period , another challenge is last minutes cancelation, that one it always breaks me because I spend a lot of time in doing this things and at the last minute a person cancel saying they are not balancing with cash or so on.

stylist? Before a stylist and all other things I am a man of God at the Discovery of Identity under the leadership of Ofentse Nkadimeng, if it’s not work then I am busy with God, I spend most of the time with the lord, and some of the time I spend with my budding for some outing and having a holy fun as youth. 8 –In 3 terms how can you describe yourself? Purpose driven Life changer Obedient 9 – Where can people find you on (Social Media and for bookings) if they’re any? 0840964697 calls and whatsapp marediglobal@gmail.com Facebook page is Maredi Global Boutique

5 - Who has always been your inspiration in this industry 10 – Favorite, Quote, Food and why? and Movies? My number one inspiration in the industry is Rendani masiya the founder and CEO of eloquent stylist design, he is a mentor to me and my inspiration.

Favorite qoute How you made it is how you maintain it Food Pap and wors Movie Black panther

6 – Kindly Mention Two stylist you would love to work with?

11 – One best place/Country that you’d love to visit?

David Tlale and Rendani masiya

The best place I would love to visit is Italy

7 – What do you do on your spare time besides being a

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RELATIONSHIPS

IF

you’re like most people in a committed relationship, you’re spending this week shoulder-checking shoppers at the mall to find your sweetheart that present that will light up their eyes on Christmas morning. Or you’re desperately scouring Amazon to find something suitable -and something that will arrive before Christmas day.

WHAT YOUR PARTNER REALLY WANT FOR X-MAS

Debra MacleodMarriage Author & Conflict Specialist.

• Well, put down your credit card and stop panicking. Because I can tell you, right now, what your partner really wants from you. And it won’t cost you a dime. • Your partner really, really wants you to put down your damn phone. • Your partner really, really wants you to stop obsessively checking your text messages. To stop bringing your phone to the supper table and setting it beside your glass like it’s part of the table setting or some kind of honored guest. • Your partner wants you to stop checking your Facebook feed at the movie theatre. To stop getting that glazed-over look in your eye, the one you get when you’re in the middle of an actual face-to-face conversation, but you feel that itch to check your phone..

MODEL Carla Van Rensburg 36

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RELATIONSHIPS

LIST OF ALL

MODEL CHANTE CASIMIRO Your partner really, really wants you to stop ignoring them or half-listening as you check your emails for the gazillionth time that day. Your partner wants you to stop texting your “friend” while you’re lying in the privacy of your bed. Your partner wants to stop feeling that swell of resentment and irritation when they feel second-place to that stupid gadget you covet like it’s some kind of digital god. Your partner wants the gift of your attention, respect and basic manners. That’s what your partner really wants for Christmas. And if you have kids, they want the same thing. They are sick and tired of saying, “Did you hear what I said, Dad?” or “Mom, you’re not listening!” Studies have shown that the typical person checks their smartphone every six and a half minutes. That’s about 150 times a day. Studies have also shown that 70 per cent of

people surveyed said that their partner’s smartphone habits were hurting their relationship. There is a direct correlation between phone-related conflicts and relationship satisfaction -- as the former goes up, the latter goes down. But you don’t need studies to tell you that, do you? You already know it. Because you’ve probably had these

kinds of arguments in your relationship. So reclaim your relationships. Your real relationships, the ones you have with your partner and your kids. They miss you. Give them what they really want this year -- you. Visit DebraMacleod.com for more info.

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RELATIONSHIPS

REALFACTS WHY IS CHEATING WRONG?

Since cheating is obviously wrong, arguments against it (it provides an unfair advantage, it hinders learning) need only be mentioned in passing. But the argument of unfair advantage absurdly takes education to be essentially a race of all against all; moreover, it ignores that many cases of unfair (dis)advantages are widely accepted. That cheating can hamper learning does not mean that punishing cheating will necessarily favor learning, so that this argument does not obviously justify sanctioning cheaters.

Keywords: academic dishonesty, academic integrity, academic misconduct, education, ethics,homework, plagiarism

ASKING

WHY

CHEATING is wrong may seem a silly question or a gratuitous provocation. Indeed, since “just about everyone agrees that cheating is bad and that we need to take steps to prevent it” (Kohn, 2007), no question seems warranted and no argument seems needed. Talk about cheating is then a matter of outrage: “students STOLE a password and then they used it to CHEAT” (Lingen, 2006), “plagiarism is WRONG no matter what the extent” (Parmley, 2000). A. J. Ayer would have said that a claim that cheating is wrong is just writing ‘cheating’ followed by some special exclamation mark — Lingen and Parmley prefer capitals. If asked why cheating is wrong, they may reply by using a larger font or boldface. Yet, 38

typography is not a scientific method conducive to the truth: cheating is not wrong because it is capitalized.

A

common view is that cheating is forbidden and cheaters break a rule. For instance, the focus of Burkill and Abbey (2004) on “regulations” and on “penalties” for “ignoring academic conventions” indicates that to them the main reasons for students to avoid cheating are obedience to rules and avoidance of penalties. However, Alfie Kohn (2007) draws attention to those “cases where what is regarded as cheating actually consists of a failure to abide by restrictions that may be arbitrary and difficult to defend”. Breaking a rule is

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illegitimate only if the rule is legitimate. Either the rule has a rational justification and this rather than breaking a rule makes cheating wrong, or the rule is arbitrary and there is no reason to endorse it. In other words, cheating should be forbidden because it is wrong, not wrong because it is forbidden. Obviously, the wrongness of cheating should be an ethical not a bureaucratic question. As Drake (1941) pointed out, cheating can be frustrating to the instructors, who may “interpret such behaviour as a direct affront to themselves.” When Johnston (1991) found out that students had cheated she felt betrayed: “how could they do this to me?”.


RELATIONSHIPS While this may explain better than genuine arguments why teachers dislike cheating it does not show that cheating is wrong. It is interesting to note that this is generally not offered as an argument in articles looking at cheating in a ‘cold’ objective way but can be found in more personal papers, such as that of Johnston. This seems to acknowledge that this is both a

It is a wide-spread error in issues of cheating to assume that cheating is obviously wrong (Bouville, 2007b; 2008b; 2008c). In particular, if one does not know why cheating is wrong one cannot set policies that would solve the problem. In this section, I will focus on the relationship between cheating and grades: cheaters receive undeservedly high grades and

real reaction of the ‘victims’ of cheaters and not perceived as a valid argument against cheating. The research on cheating is empirical and focuses on quantification and correlations; yet finding out how many and which students cheat is of importance only if cheating itself is important. And cheating is important only if it is wrong. Since everything else depends on it, the question of the wrongness of cheating is the most important question. It is the object of this article.

thus an unfair advantage over other students. 1.1 Grades as setting how good a student is A fairly common view is that grades are the same as the value of the student. (I will use ‘value’ and ‘worth’ as shorthand for knowledge, talent, competence, etc.) For instance when their children get poor grades, parents start worrying. They may also demand that their child get better grades (e.g. threatening or promising). This may mean that the grade is an infallible evaluation of how good a student is, so that if grades are low it can only be

1 CHEATING AND GRADES

because the student does not work enough. Another possibility is that grades actually define how good a student is, i.e. there is no concept of the worth of the student independent of grades. Since these views are seldom made explicit, what people actually believe is fuzzy. However, it is enough for us to see that many equate grades and how good the student is. The main issue with this view is that if grade and value are the same then cheaters are good students, since they get good grades. When teachers give a bad course grade to a student they deem good, it must mean that their impression was mistaken since the grade proved that the student was not in actuality so good. This is the only possible conclusion if one takes grades to define how good students are (and this is naturally not a conclusion one can endorse). Plainly, if anything is to be said against cheating, one must recognize that grades are but a proxy for how good students are, an approximation of what they know, what they can do. It is thus possible for grades and worth to be different; every teacher has given grades that did not seem to correspond to what the students ‘were worth’ — some students are not good at taking tests, a student may have made a silly and costly mistake, etc. (also see Bouville, 2007a). Cheating is another source of discrepancy.

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1.2 Cheating and the future success of the students One should note that, since it is of the nature of grades to describe student performance, a grade that is a poor description is a poor quality grade. Such a grade is like a map of a city that does not actually represent the streets of this city; but if no one ever were to use this map, the problem would be a purely abstract one (and in particular it would not justify to blame and fire who drew the faulty map). Inaccurate grades matter only if someone somehow acts upon them. Otherwise I could just as well assign −π as a grade, this would make no difference. Naturally grades are concretely used: grades are a proxy for what students know and can do, which is in turn used as a proxy for what students may be able to do in the future. In other words, grades are used as predictors of future success: high school grades are used for admission to universities; un40

dergraduate grades for graduate school, law school grades to infer how good a lawyer the student will be, etc. In admissions, one looks at grades only in order to guess how well students may do in the future: how well they did in the past is not interesting per se — the past is important only inasmuch as it pertains to the future (if there were no correlation between grades in year n and academic success in year n+1 then the use of grades would plummet.) Therefore, any time grades do not correspond to how well students can be expected to perform a poor decision will be made. Such decisions can be called unfair since they may advantage less deserving students. 2 LIMITS OF THE ARGUMENT OF UNFAIR ADVANTAGE 2.1 The difficulty to use grades Admission to universities is based on how students fare in high school, admission to graduate school

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on how good students are as undergraduates, etc. This means that one always uses someone else’s criteria, even though they are not obviously relevant. High school is about learning (one may fare well with little talent if one has enough memory and is willing to spend time filling it) whereas higher education requires more understanding. In fact high school sometimes even penalizes the more gifted students, who may have difficulty following a fastidious (and to them useless) procedure or justifying something blatantly obvious, which high school teachers require from them for full credit (this is especially common in math). Likewise graduate students are supposed to invent new things, not just learn from others. Being able to digest what others found is handy but not sufficient to do good research — so one may be an excellent undergraduate but a poor PhD student.


Using undergraduate results (beyond proof of adequate knowledge and understanding) to guess how good a PhD student will be means trying to infer apples from oranges. Why then would the quality of the oranges make any difference? The inference is flawed even in the absence of cheating. There is another reason why a grade is of little help to estimate the future success of students. Hall et al. (1995) found that a deep approach to learning correlated negatively with SAT scores; students who merely learned by rote and who minimized their involvement or tried to get good grades without caring about what they learnt obtained higher scores than students who sought a deeper understanding of what they were taught. In other words, students who had good work habits and a sound mindset that would help them succeed in the long run received lower SAT scores — students most likely to succeed are treated as least desirable.

2.2 Discipulus discipulo lupus

There can be an unfair advantage only in those cases of direct competition between students. Entrance exams and other ‘high stake’ tests are an example. Homework is not. The argument of unfair advantage is thus limited in its scope. It will nevertheless be invoked in cases where it does not apply. How teachers see cheating is an interesting clue of how they see education. Taking cheating to be essentially a matter of

unfair advantage means that education is one big race of all against all — discipulus discipulo lupus. For instance, the goal of homework is not the assignment of grades but rather to have students learn a lesson by putting it to practice; the main reason for grading homework is that some students may need such a carrot. Treating cheating on homework as essentially a matter of a student getting an unfair advantage means losing sight of what one is trying to accomplish. Not only is the focus generally on grades rather than on learning, grades rather than learning are seen as the issue in cases where grades are irrelevant.

is involved yet a grade is clearly a bad estimate of how good a student is, i.e. an unfair (dis)advantage. It is then unclear, if teachers are not bothered by such incongruities, why similar discrepancies would be problematic when due to cheating. Picture a student who has an essay proofread by his parents or a personal tutor; the student did all the writing but received help that contributed to improving his work (e.g. that section is unclear, this book should be of help). He will get a better grade than a student of equal intelligence and talent who cannot receive or afford any such help. This is an unfair advantage but one would not call it cheating (whatever one thinks of the unfairness of the situation, the favored student did nothing wrong).

2.3 Unfair advantage without cheating

If grades are used to 1 The reason why grades trump one’s intuition of the value of students is probably that they are objective and thus superior to the subjective opinion of a teacher. But if grades claim that good students are bad, of what exactly are they an objective measure? Grading based on the number of points the student’s name would get in Scrabble is objective as well; it is also completely silly (also see Bouville, 2007a). Saying that the objectivity of grades is their main quality means that what they actually measure is of secondary importance. “What grades offer is spurious precision” (Kohn, 1994). This, again, undermines the meaning of grades as measure of the value of the students.

It is common for teachers to knowingly give a student a grade that is evidently inadequate: for instance they commonly give a good student a bad grade, fully aware that the student deserves better... but the grade that came out of the exam is the grade that came out of the exam. And they do not mind doing so. When a grade is a poor assessment of the value of the student, it is the grade that wins (for instance, it is this faulty assessment that will be part of transcripts, not the actual worth of the student).1 If one does not see a major problem with grades being decorrelated from how good students are then the fact that the grades of cheaters do not reflect their actual value should not be a problem either. In other words, there are cases in which no cheating

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WOMEN ON FLICK

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WOMEN ON FLICK

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Things About Pabatso Masenyetse I’m Pabatso Masenyetse, second born of two girls originally born in Lesotho and currently staying in Johannesburg. I did a Certificate in Information Communications Technology in Lesotho and furthered my studies in Cape Town at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology whereby I studied a Diploma in Business management and BTech in Project Management. There after worked for a few companies before relocating to Johannesburg.

2.

What drives me and keeps me motivated is to inspire other women about their body size and skin colour. And to give them light, confidence

and hope of who they are, their background and that they should be proud in their natural hair. And again, I’m a mother to a daughter whom I’m grooming and making her understand that no matter your size and skin colour and upbringing she must have confidence in who she is.

3.

Ever since I was as young as 10, I’ve been modelling in competitions like Miss St. James (which was my primary school) Miss Lesotho and for clothing designers.

4.

It’s hard to balance work and other commitments as I am a single parent therefore at times, I must prioritise some gigs or jobs and take care of my daughter. And as a female I still face some discrimination when it comes to getting gigs or work. My inspiration is Naomi Campbell because I used to get laughed at as a child because I have thin legs and I used to be taller than my age mates and I got to realise that she has the same legs and height as me and that made me gain more confidence to be in the modelling industry.

5.

6.

I would love to work with Connie Ferguson (she’s both an actress

and a model), Hulisani Ravele, Charlize Theron and Thandie Newton.

7.

In my spare time I do catering for small to medium functions/groups, I’m a director of a cleaning company that focuses on upholstery, carpets and window cleaning and destress by reading or going to the gym at least four times a week if I get the chance.

8. 9.

I’m spontaneous, determined and gorgeous.

People can find me on Instagram as

pabatsomasenyetse, Facebook as Pabatso Masenyetse, Twitter as Pabatso91869797 and pabatso@ artcastinentertainment.co.za

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.Favourite quote “Live life to the fullest, and focus on the positive” Matt Cameron Favourite food – spaghetti and mince, traditional food like mogodu, and lamb curry. Favourite movie – Planet of the apes, what women want, snakes in the plane and Mad Max2 the Road Warrior.

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LIFE IN MUSIC

TRAXSOURCE https://www.traxsource.com/artist/140875/dj-lamor

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LIFE IN MUSIC

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GET ENTERTAINED

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