Category: Certificate Programs
50 Simple Driving Techniques that Will Increase Your Gas Mileage
"Hypermiling" is the term for altering your driving habits in order to get the most miles per gallon of gas. Let’s face it, gas prices are outrageous and the economy as a whole is being affected. If you are having trouble making ends meet and want to get the most out of your gas money, follow the 50 hypermiling tips below.
Before You Drive
There are a few things you can do before you start your drive that will aid your hypermiling. Follow the tips below.
- Consider a Stick Shift – So few young adults even know how to drive a stick shift these days. However, a manual car allows you to shift more efficiently for hypermiling.
- Trade in Your Whale – If you are driving a huge, gas-guzzling beast, then you should consider something smaller and more fuel efficient.
- Lighten Your Load – Remove any heavy items from your car, particularly items in your trunk. This excess weight will slow you down and waist more energy.
- Remove Luggage Racks – Anything on your roof will cause wind resistance, including the metal racks.
- Keep Your Tank Half-Full – By keeping your tank full at all times, you are always carrying around extra weight. Sometimes, you can reduce 50-100 pounds by avoiding a full tank.
- Comparison Shop – No, don’t drive around town looking for the best prices. That wastes gas! Instead use an online guide to the cheapest fuel in your area.
- Choose Gas Wisely – The cheapest gas may not be your best option for saving money. Conduct some research to determine what the proper grade is for your vehicle.
- Fuel Up Early – It is believed that when you fuel up your car during the coolest part of the day, this prevents expansion and you will ultimately purchase more gas for your money.
- Plan Your Route – Be smart in your driving by making a plan to avoid high-traffic, congested areas, as well as areas with a large fluctuation in speed limits.
- Don’t Top Off – By overfilling your gas tank, you may cause gas to spill out, thus losing more money.
- Tune Up – Routine tune-ups and oil changes may help to prevent major engine and transmission issues that can affect your gas mileage.
- Change Air Filter – When was the last time you changed out your air filter? This can greatly affect your gas mileage.
- Check the Tires – Proper tire pressure can help you drive more effectively and save gas by preventing undo strain on your engine.
- Save Fuel Receipts – By tracking your fuel consumption, you will learn what techniques works best for getting the most gas mileage.
- Consider a Fuel Economy Monitor – Believe it or not, there are high-tech gadgets available that effectively track your fuel usage. Some people even build their own. Knowledge is power when hypermiling and every little bit helps.
General Driving Tips
These hypermiling tips are useful for any driving situation, regardless of location or weather.
- Leave Early – In order to prevent both speeding and traffic, you should leave for your trip with plenty of time to spare. If you have normal office hours, try to beat morning traffic by an hour and get your international real estate from the car radio rather than at home in the mornings.
- Drive Steady – Try to keep your car at a consistent speed. Unnecessary acceleration and late braking is both dangerous and fuel inefficient.
- Pretend You’re on a Bike – When you are bicycling, you coast down hills and conserve as much energy as you can while going uphill. Accelerate your car as if you are riding a bicycle.
- Avoid 4-Wheel Drive – This function, although handy for getting you out of tough jams, uses a lot of gas. Try to avoid using 4-wheel drive as much as possible.
- Avoid Aggression – Do not drive angry and do not try to keep up with those who are speeding. As a hypermiler, you must adopt a calculating, zen attitude about driving and leave the emotion at home.
- Do Not "Rev" – Never "rev" your engine if you can help it. This just expends unnecessary gas.
- Avoid Drive-Thrus – Avoiding these will improve your waistline and your bottom line. Drive-thrus require a lot of idling from your car. Just park and go into the restaurant if you must have fast food.
- Keep Your Hands and Feet Still – The more you weave in and out of traffic or move your foot back and forth between the accelerator and brake, the more gas you waste.
- Use Only the Right Foot – You should have learned this in Driver’s Ed, but some people use both feet to pedal. This can cause you to hit the brake and accelerator at the same time, wasting gas.
- Drive Barefoot – While you are technically not supposed to do this, some hypermilers feel it helps them to finely tune their car’s braking and accelerating.
- Ride the Wind – If you can find a good tailwind to plan your trip around, let the wind work to your advantage. Do not, however, tailgate a larger vehicle (also known as "drafting").
- Keep it Under 40 – Whenever, possible, that is. Driving over 40 miles per hour pits your car against gas-guzzling wind resistance.
- Turn of the A/C – While this isn’t practical in some areas, turning off the air conditioner can save gas. If it is hot outside, try turning it off for only a few minutes at a time.
- Avoid Rocky Roads – If you find yourself on a rocky road, you may be wasting gas. Seek out the smoothest surface possible to drive on.
- Use Overdrive – If you have an automatic vehicle, that is.
- Mind Your Fuel Cap – Many people lose gas from evaporation because their fuel caps are loose or missing.
City Driving
- Keep Moving – While this isn’t always advisable or safe, you should try to keep your car in constant motion while driving around the city. Avoid areas where you know there are lot of stop signs and traffic lights.
- Pay Attention to Light Changes – You may wish to slow down for a red light ahead of time so that by the time you reach the car behind you, the light turns green and you don’t have to stop completely. Do not do this if it holds anyone up behind you, of course.
- Reduce Idle Time – If you must leave your car idling for several seconds or more, you can put your car in neutral and turn off the engine. This can be a bit dangerous in certain situations, however.
Highway Driving
- Find a Slow Buddy – Amazingly, driving below or at the speed limit can sometimes get you run over on the highway. Find someone else who is driving as slow as you and get behind his or her car (at a safe distance, of course).
- Do Not Speed – Not only will this save you money on citations, you will get more miles per gallon at 55 miles per hour than you will at 70 miles per hour.
- Keep Your Windows Up – This reduces wind resistance and makes your car more aerodynamic.
- Turn Off Your Lights – Granted, you should only do this when it is safe, but it can save gas on the highway.
- Close the Sunroof – Yes, the weather might be beautiful, but high gas prices are not. Keep the sunroof closed at high speeds.
- Set Cruise Control – Although this function can actually waste gas on hills, it is very useful for those of us with a naturally lead foot. If you can’t keep yourself under a certain speed and you are on a somewhat flat road, set the cruise control.
Parking
Yes, even the way you park can affect your gas mileage. Below are few easy tips to follow.
- Park Backwards – In other words, you should park so that you can drive away in the forward position, thus eliminating the need to use the reverse gear.
- Park in the Shade – Parking in the shade keeps the inside of the car cooler and makes it easier to keep the air conditioning off. In older vehicles, parking in the shade will also reduce gas evaporation.
- Time Your Departure – Do not start up your engine again until you have the opportunity to pull out and drive. Otherwise, you will idle.
- Park Far Away – How much gas are you wasting at the mall or grocery store while driving around, searching for the closest spot? Just park the car and walk it — you know you could use the exercise anyway.
- Adjust While Parked – Don’t wait until you start your engine to put on your seatbelt and adjust the seat and mirrors. This wastes unneeded gas.
Bad Weather
Driving conditions change during bad weather and so must your hypermiling techniques.
- Avoid Driving in the Snow – Snowy roads are not only dangerous, they cause heavy resistance and will affect your fuel economy.
- Use Snow Tires Wisely – If bad weather calls for snow tires and you have to travel, be safe and use them. However, be sure to remove them promptly when the weather clears.
- Remove Ice from Car – Ice is heavy and can accumulate on your car quickly. Knock off any icicles in order to prevent more drag.
- Don’t Warm Up – Most cars today can start and drive in cold weather immediately. Therefore, you should just bundle up and leave rather than idling in the driveway until the car is warm.
- Postpone Cold Trips – When your engine and tires are cold, they lose fuel efficiency. If you can help it, avoid trips in the cold.
Degrees for the DIA
– Pushpa Sathish, Staff Writer
If you belong to the Drug Information Association (DIA) and are interested in broadening your educational horizons, Drexel University Online has just made it easier for you to achieve your goal. The college, one of America’s best according to U.S. News & World Report, 2007, is offering DIA members graduate and undergraduate degrees and certificate programs in the fields of nursing, clinical research and public health.
Drexel is accredited by the Middle States Association for Colleges and Secondary Schools and its curricula hold the most prestigious accreditations from their respective accrediting bodies such as AACSB (Business), NLN and CCNE (Nursing), and ALA (Information Science).
Nursing Degree Hopes
– Pushpa Sathish, Staff Writer
A partnership between the University of the West Indies (UWI) and Ryerson University of Toronto, Canada will enable aspiring nurses in the Caribbean islands to earn their degree in 40 months through a distance education program. The course will feature high-quality, web-enhanced study material and will initially be taken up by 67 nurses from Jamaica, Belize, and St. Lucia.
Dr. Raymond Chang, a Jamaican businessman based in Toronto, Canada, the idea behind the project, will sponsor the cost incurred during the first three years, an approximate expense of Can$750,000. The new course, which has been designed by The Chang School, a continuing education facility at the Ryerson University, was announced and launched recently at the Mona Campus, UWI.
Virtual High School, Tangible Benefits
– Pushpa Sathish, Staff Writer
Catch them young, seems to be the motto of the Virtual High School, an incentive that offers high school students all over the world access to online courses. And the subjects taught are not just your run-of-the-mill science, history, mathematics and the like; they include offbeat topics such as “Learning to invest in the stock market,” “The Holocaust,” and “CNN gods: Power of modern media.”
Instructors in the Virtual High School pool are put through the NIM (NetCourse Instructional Methodologies) program before they are allowed access to their students. They have to chart out the entire syllabus before the course starts, which gives students a rough idea of the direction the lessons will take.
Schools that have teachers signed up as virtual instructors are offered a discounted rate for their students who wish to enroll in the courses offered. It’s a wonderful opportunity for children all over the world, says last year’s site coordinator Thomas Forbes, and hopes that the scheme will be used to help students recover credits from failed programs, a sort of summer school.
Learn, Not Just in English
– By Pushpa Sathish, Staff Writer
The side-effects of cultural mixes and conglomerations – languages that merge to generate new dialects, like Spanglish (Spanish and English). Then there’s that blend of Portuguese and Spanish called Portunol, widely spoken in Uruguay. So how do you earn a degree in Spanish, as it is spoken in the United States, and not in the way it is in Spain?
Through FUNIBER, of course! An acronym for Fundacion Universitaria Iberoamericana, this non-profit, international alliance offers advanced distance education degrees in Spanish, Italian and Portuguese through member institutions in various countries. Comprising 50 universities in Spain, Portugal, Italy and Latin America, the alliance just set foot in the United States with an office in New York. While no formal agreements have been reached with schools in the US, as many as 170 people in the country have already signed up for degrees taught through FUNIBER. Inside Higher Ed reports:
The member institutions include the Universidad de León in Spain, the Universidad de Santiago de Chile and the Universidad de The members, most of which are public and only a handful of which are for-profit, are well-recognized in their respective countries. The two institutions in Puerto Rico, “the bridge” for FUNIBER between the United States and the Spanish-speaking world, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Puerto Rico and the Universidad de Puerto Rico, are both accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education.
Useful Courses From RadioShack
– By Pushpa Sathish, Staff Writer
You don’t have to pursue a degree to learn online, all you need to do is be a consumer. RadioShack and Powered Inc. are teaming up to offer consumer electronics education programs on RadioShack’s website. The courses, which are absolutely free, include topics such as choosing the right computer, satellite radio, home theater system, setting up and configuring HDTV systems and cropping photographs. The courses will have staggered start and end dates in October and November. Biz Journals reports:
“Customers give credit to RadioShack for its knowledgeable sales associates who help them understand new technologies and select the best solutions for their individual needs,” said Cara Kinzey, RadioShack’s senior vice president-information technologies. “We’re now bringing that distinctive world-class customer service to online shoppers as well.”
Follow this link to access the initial offerings from RadioShack.
Be careful! Online education can also leave you with a fake diploma
Though online education has grown by leaps and bounds, and promises to be every thing to every body, take it with a pinch of salt. When you have your eyes set on an online diploma, make sure you do your homework well. First and foremost find out if the university offering the course is accredited. Not just any accreditation will do. There are a lot of these self styled accreditations that are doing the rounds. Should fall prey to such a scam, not only will you loose precious dollars and time but also a diploma that has no market value.
Next make sure that the university actually exists. The commonsense approach to this is to attempt to call or contact them through various different channels. This is an excellent way to also judge if all the channels of communications actually work.
There are universities that make a lot of false claims about what they have and can achieve. If you find a claim too far fetched, it might actually be bogus.
Recognition of Online Courses
Quality Matters, which works for the improvement and quality assurance of online courses, has certified three online courses offered by the Allegany College of Maryland. The Quality Matters Inter-Institutional Quality Assurance in Online Learning FIPSE grant project has stamped its approval on the “Introduction to Speech”, “Calculus III” and “Differential Equations” courses taught online at the college.
The courses were reviewed according to a rubric of 40 national quality standards including course design, navigation, learning objectives, assessment and measurement, resources and materials, learner interaction, course technology and learner support. Times News reports:
The Quality Matters project was awarded to MarylandOnline, a statewide consortium of 19 Maryland community colleges and senior institutions, by the U.S. Department of Education Fund For The Improvement of Postsecondary Education, or FIPSE, in 2003.
Encouraging Budding Journalists
Aspiring journalists from the Central Asian countries of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan are being offered the chance to sign up for a free online course in journalism offered by Transitions Online (TOL) in conjunction with the BBC and the Guardian Foundation. TOL is a news service and media non-governmental organization (NGO) for post-Communist countries.
The training, which is endorsed by the U.S.-based National Endowment for Democracy (NED), will introduce raw press entrants to the exacting standards of high-quality journalism. Twenty exceptional performers will be offered the chance to work for TOL from their respective countries, besides being awarded completion certificates from BBC/Guardian/TOL and being eligible to take advanced courses.
While the course dates are yet to be finalized, it is expected to commence sometime in October. The last date for the receipt of applications is August 30. Follow this link for further registration details.
Polish Your English Online
Looking to hone those English language skills and also pick up a few pointers on the history and civics of the United States? Then rush to register at the EnglishNet College before September 8. The institution, along with its parent company CyberNet College Corp. is also granting scholarships of up to $225,000 for students of its special English language online courses.
The course comprises two segments each lasting a duration of three months. The first part commences September 15 and continues till December 15, while the second begins January 15 and runs till April 15. Topics covered in each three month span will include English 101, 102 and 103, and civics and history.
Quite a useful offering for immigrants struggling to grasp the finer aspects of the English language and also looking to gain US citizenship some day in the future. Follow this link for more registration details.