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Community Extension Services & Development
University of Cebu-Banilad College of Nursing!

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GO UC!



Cheering is the uttering or making of sounds encouraging, stimulating or exciting to action, indicating approval or acclaiming or welcoming persons, announcements of events and the like.

The word cheer meant originally face, countenance, expression, and came through Old French into Middle English in the 13th century from Low Latin cara, head; this is generally referred to the Greek καρα;. Cara is used by the 6th-century poet Flavius Cresconius Corippus, Postquam venere verendam Caesilris ante caram (In Laud em Justini Minoris).

Cheer was at first qualified with epithets, both of joy and gladness and of sorrow; compare She thanked Dyomede for ale ... his gode chere (Chaucer, Troylus) with If they sing ... tis with so dull a cheere (Shakespeare, Sonnets, xcvii.). An early transference in meaning was to hospitality or entertainment, and hence to food and drink, good cheer. The sense of a shout of encouragement or applause is a late use. Defoe (Captain Singleton) speaks of it as a sailor's word, and the meaning does not appear in Johnson.

Of the different words or rather sounds that are used in cheering, "hurrah", though now generally looked on as the typical British form of cheer, is found in various forms in German, Scandinavian, Russian (ura), French (houra).

It is probably onomatopoeic in origin; some connect it with such words as hurry, whirl ; the meaning would then be haste, to encourage speed or onset in battle. The English hurrah was preceded by huzza, stated to be a sailors word, and generally connected with heeze, to hoist, probably being one of the cries that sailors use when hauling or hoisting.

The German hoch, seen in full in Hoch lebe der Kaiser, &c., the French vive, Italian and Spanish viva, evviva, are cries rather of acclamation than encouragement. The Japanese shout banzai became familiar during the Russo-Japanese War.

In UC, we simply cheer "Go UC! Top the Board!"

PRAYER FOR THOSE WHO WILL BE TAKING THE NURSING BOARD EXAM



O Great St. Joseph of Cupertino
who while on earth
did obtain from God
the grace to be asked
at your examination
only the questions you knew,
obtain for me a like favour
in the examinations
for which I am now preparing.

In return, I promise
to make you known
and cause you to be invoked.

Through Christ our Lord.
St. Joseph of Cupertino,
Pray for us.

Amen.


Saint Joseph of Cupertino (or Giuseppe da Copertino, born Guiseppe Mara Desa) (June 17, 1603 - September 18, 1663) was an Italian saint. He was said to have been remarkably unclever, but prone to miraculous levitation and intense ecstasies that left him gaping. He was canonized in 1767.

Because of his many 'flights', St. Joseph is the patron saint of pilots and of those traveling by air. He is also the patron of those undergoing examinatikons of any kind. This powerful prayer is very effective in examination. It has to be said before appearing in the examination.

DEAR STO NINO, WE PRAY ...

WHAT TO BRING ON THE EXAMINATION DAY

  • Notice of Admission
  • Application Stub
  • PRC Official Receipt
  • Two or more pencils (No. 2)
  • Ballpens with BLACK INK ONLY
  • One (1) piece Metered-Stamp Window Envelope
  • One (1) piece Long Brown Envelope
  • One (1) piece Long Transparent (non -colored) Plastic Envelope (to keep above items)

GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS TO THE EXAMINEES



  • Report to the Test Center before 6:30am on the first day of examination to verify your room and seat number.
  • Late examinees will not be admitted.
  • Attend to your personal needs before the start of examination in every subject. No examinee will be allowed to go out of the examination room while the examination is in progress.
  • Always put your answer sheet on top of the armchair while taking the examination.
  • Stop answering the test questions at the end of the time alloted for the subject. Arrange your test papers as follows:
  1. Notice of Admission;
  2. Answer Sheet; and
  3. Test Questionnaire

  • Do not leave the room until
  1. your answer sheet and test question set are received by the room watchers,
  2. you have signed, indicated the time and set (A or B) on the Examinees Record of Attendance, and
  3. the lower portion of your Notice of Admission (Certification on the Receipt of Test Papers) is signed by the Room Watchers and returned to you.

HOW TO ACCOMPLISH EXAMINEE IDENTIFICATION SHEET

HANDLING OF EXAMINEE IDENTIFICATION SHEETS AND ANSWER SHEETS

  • Check if the Serial Number of Examinee Identification Sheet/Answer Sheets are the same for all the sheets. If there is any discrepancy, return the set to your Room Watchers for replacement. The Serial Number is NOT the examination number. It has nothing to do with your examination.
  • Check if there are defects or unnecessary marks on your Examinee Identification Sheet/Answer Sheets.
  • Check if the number of Answer Sheets corresponds to the number of examination subjects.
  • Do not fold or mutilate, take extra care and keep clean your Examinee Identification Sheet/Answer Sheets.
  • Before detaching an answer sheet, check if the brown envelope is yours and the set inside belongs to you.

HANDLING OF TEST QUESTION SETS


  • Indicate your seat number at the right top corner of page 1
  • Check if the number of pages of Test Question Set is complete and no misprint. If there is any problem, return the set to your Room Watchers for replacement.
  • Mark A or B on the answer sheet to indicate the set of Test Question assigned to you.
  • You can use your Test Question Set as your Scratch .
  • Keep the Test Question Set stapled until the end of examination.

PROHIBITED ACTS AND PENALTIES DURING EXAMINATION



  • Accepting or receiving anything, including food from any person while the examination is in progress.
  • Giving money, food, or any favor and other consideration to the Room Watchers and other examination personnel.
  • Loitering, talking, or discussing your answers inside the room or along the corridor while the examination is in progress.
  • Putting any of the following markings on your answer sheets: name, seat number, unnecessary words or phrases, strokes, dots or any other marks not called for in the test questions.
  • Placing of name in the space provided for the subject of the examination shall be, aside from the cancellation of the examination papers, suspension from taking the examination for one (1) year;
  • Multiple markings shall be cancellation of the examiness examination and suspension from taking the examination for two (2) years.
  • Taking out the examination room test questions used or pages thereof, copying, and/or divulging or making known the nature or content of any examination question or answer to any individual or entity.
  • Copying or referring to any solution, answer or work of another examinee or allowing anyone to copy or refer to your work, helping or asking help from any person or communication with anyone by means of words, signs, gestures, codes and other similar acts which enable you to exchange, impart or acquire relevant information.
  • Bringing inside the examination rooms the following: books, notes, review materials and other printed materials containing principles or excerpts thereof, coded data/information/ formula which are relevant to or connected with the examination subject, PROGRAMMABLE CALCULATORS, CELLULAR PHONES, beeper, portable personal computers or other similar gadgets/devices. The act shall be considered cheating and/or act of dishonesty and shall be a ground for the cancellation of your examinations (PRC Resolution No. 463 dated November 27, 1996).
  • Maintain discipline at all times, any misconduct or irregularity on your part or any violation of the examination rules and regulations and instructions will be sufficient cause for the cancellation of your examination papers and your debarment from taking any future licensure examination.
  • Do not bring bags of any kind in the examination room. Keep allowed items and valuables inside your plastic envelope. PRC will not be answerable for lost items.

JULY



July is the seventh month of the year in the Julian and Gregorian Calendars and one of seven months with the length of 31 days. It is, on average, the warmest month in most of the Northern hemisphere (where it is the second month of summer) and the coldest month in much of the Southern hemisphere (where it is the second month of winter). The second half of the year commences in July. In the Southern hemisphere, July is the seasonal equivalent of January in the Northern hemisphere. The birthstone for July is a ruby.

Previously, it was called Quintilis in Latin, since it was the fifth month in the ancient Roman calendar, which traditionally set March as the beginning of the year before it was changed to January at the time of the decemvirs about 450 BC. The name was then changed by Augustus to honor Julius Caesar who was born in July. In the ancient Roman calendar the ides of July fell on the 15th day of the month.

July starts on the same day of the week as April every year, and January in leap years. In a common year no other month ends on the same day as July, while in a leap year July ends on the same day of the week as January.