More from John – IELTS Results competition winners in May 2013

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IELTS Results competition winners in May 2013

In May we had as many as 15 winners in our monthly IELTS results competition. These hard-working people managed to get some seriously good scores – have a look:

Academic Module – 1st placeBand 8 in IELTS

  • Jestin George John from India, Overall Band 8.5 (with Band 9 in Listening and Reading)
  • Aung Zin Phyo Thein from Myanmar, Overall Band 8.5 (with Band 9 in Reading)

Academic Module – 2nd place

  • Victory Okata from Nigeria, Overall Band 8
  • Shoira Yakubova from Uzbekistan, Overall Band 8
  • Nandini Gupta Dasgupta from India, Overall Band 8
  • Sabiha Amin from Pakistan, Overall Band 8
  • Junjie Zhou from China, Overall Band 8
  • Saleh Alyafei from Qatar, Overall Band 8
  • Vineeth Kumar Cherakkara from India, Overall Band 8

Academic Module – 3rd place

  • Arpita Patel from India, Overall Band 7.5
  • Babar Khan from Pakistan, Overall Band 7.5

General Training Module – 1st place

  • Ajay Arora from India, Overall Band 8
  • Devanshi Shah from India, Overall Band 8
  • Daniel Enslin Swart from South Africa, Overall Band 8

General Training Module – 2nd place

  • Anna Hermane from Latvia, Overall Band 7

On behalf of the whole team at IELTS-Blog.com I would like to congratulate this truly international group of high achievers. Such scores are something to celebrate! To mark this special occasion we are sending your certificates of achievement to your emails, and your IELTS results will be displayed in theIELTS-Blog hall of fame.

As always, we would love to learn what helped these lovely people in their exam preparation. Some of them, I know, are our students – Junjie Zhou prepared by“Target Band 7″, and Daniel Swart and Anna Hermane used “Ace the IELTS” book. As for the others… we hope to find out soon!

Dear winners – for the sake of every test taker out there, please share your stories. Tell us how you prepared and studied, and what helped you achieve success in IELTS. Anything you can share will be posted on IELTS-Blog without delay, so everyone can learn from you and get a better score in their own exam this month.

P.S. IELTS results competition runs every month, and everyone is welcome to participate. Learn how to enroll here.

Related posts:

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  3. IELTS Results competition winners in April 2013 Today we’re happy to report that in April 12 people…
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More from John – Chinese Navy Ship Assists in Preparation for Multinational Exercise

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Chinese Navy Ship Assists in Preparation for Multinational Exercise

Chinese Navy Ship Assists in Preparation for Multinational Exercise

An amphibious transport ship of the People’s Republic of China’s People’s Liberation Army Navy KUNLUN SHAN has arrived in Brunei’s Muara Commercial port.

The transport ship will be used to transport equipment and personnel required for the ASEAN Defence Minister Meeting Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief and Military Medicine Exercise (ADMM HADR & MM Ex.) which is scheduled to start from 17 until 20 June 2013.

Meanwhile heavy military vehicles will be mobilized to the exercise site in Temburong as of today. The convoy will start their journey as early as 4.00 am, travelling through Muara-Tutong highway, Jerudong Road, Mulaut-Limau Manis Road and Kuala Lurah Road.

According to the Brunei Ministry of Defence this is an inaugural multi-national field exercise.

Press Release, June 5, 2013; Image: Brunei MoD

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More from John – Royal Netherlands Navy Ready for Hurricane Season

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Royal Netherlands Navy Ready for Hurricane Season

Royal Netherlands Navy Ready for Hurricane Season

The Royal Netherlands Navy is on standby again to provide emergency assistance in the event of hurricanes, according to Dutch Defense Ministry.

The Atlantic hurricane season, which began on 1st June, is the period when hurricanes usually form in the Atlantic Ocean. There have been several storms over the past years that have not been fully tropical, being categorized as subtropical depressions and subtropical storms.

One of the Navy’s main tasks in the Caribbean is providing support to the authorities in the event of a hurricane or other emergency situations.

The emergency aid detachment starts assessing the situation immediately after a hurricane so as to be able to provide necessary aid as soon as possible.

If necessary, the emergency aid detachment will be augmented by the ships HNLMS Pelikaan and the guard ship HNLMS Holland.

Naval Today Staff, June 5, 2013; Image: Defensie

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More from John – Royal Marines seek new mountain kings as they expand demanding course

.Royal Marines seek new mountain kings as they expand demanding course

News

Royal Marines seek new mountain kings as they expand demanding course
5 June 2013

The Royal Marines’ are opening the elite world of specialist mountain leaders to the most junior Royal Marines for the first time.

The leaders – who are not just experts in Arctic warfare and mountaineering, but also covert surveillance and reconnaissance – have traditionally been drawn from corporals and above, but the branch is now available to all marine-level ranks.

Commandos scale an icy cliff in Norway during Arctic training. Picture: Sgt Ben Briggs

THE Royal Marines’ mountain leaders are opening their elite branch to the most junior Royal Marines for the first time.

And in doing so they want to show that the world of mountain leaders goes far beyond climbing, mountain training, clambering out of holes in the ice or building makeshift snow shelters.

For joining the branch also opens up the world of reconnaissance and information gathering in the Brigade Patrol Troop, the small, specialist team which goes in ahead of the main Royal Marines force.

Typically the mountain leader branch, which traces its roots back to the Cliff Assault Unit in World War 2, has been the domain of corporals and above.

A mountain leader abseils down a rocky face on Dartmoor. Picture: LA(Phot) Emz Nolan, CTCRM

But the Corps is now expanding the branch to all marine-level ranks as it introduces the Mountain Leader 3 course (the most experienced are Mountain Leader 1s).

The new course sees them taught how to carry out surveillance and vertical assaults, spending two weeks in Glencoe for practical mountain training, and take part in two exercises where they practise close target reconnaissance and guiding attack troops to their objectives.

“We are the only organisation in the UK that teaches military mountaineering and military climbing,” explains Maj Ads Rutherford, in charge of mountain leader instruction at the Commando Training Centre in Lympstone, Devon.

“Military mountaineering is different because everything we do is orientated to having an effect on the ground in terms of combat operations.

Two mountain leaders are silhouetted against the Dartmoor sky during training. Picture: LA(Phot) Emz Nolan, CTCRM

“We teach guys to work in cold weather conditions which range from +3˚ to -30˚ C – as well as desert and jungle. We teach them to own the environment in which they operate so they can exploit the unique capability they have to UK defence.”

What’s perhaps less well known outside the Corps, however, is that mountain leaders are also taught specialist communication skills and how to be reconnaissance operators – skills vital in the patrol troop.

The troop – part of the Surveillance and Reconnaissance Squadron, based at Stonehouse in Plymouth – has seen action in every major Royal Marines operation from the first Gulf war to Afghanistan.

Royal Marines of the Surveillance and Reconnaissance Squadron leap over the Galloway countryside during this spring’s Joint Warrior exercisePicture: PO(Phot) Sean Clee, RNPOTYx3

They’re taught how to parachute – demonstrated recently over south-west Scotland during the Joint Warrior exercise; how to drive a multitude of vehicles; how to provide first aid; and how to escape or evade capture.

“We can see everything, hear everything and get an understanding of exactly what is going on in our area,” explains C/Sgt Lee Waters, who runs the Mountain Leader 3 course at Lympstone.

“It’s become a very important part of the training for mountain leaders. It’s no longer just about the climbing and tactics. Now we concentrate massively on the end product and making sure from the marine level right up to the Mountain Leader 1s all have a thorough understanding of how important their role is and how important the way time-sensitive information is treated.”

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More from John – USS Ronald Reagan Hosts Change of Command Ceremony

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USS Ronald Reagan Hosts Change of Command Ceremony

 USS Ronald Reagan Hosts Change of Command Ceremony

Vice Adm. Kenneth E. Floyd relieved Vice Adm. Gerald R. Beaman as commander, U.S. 3rd Fleet during a change of command and retirement ceremony held on the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Ronald Reagan (CVN 76) at Naval Air Station North Island, June 3.

 During the ceremony, Beaman, retired from active duty after 35 years honorable naval service. He had assumed command of U.S. 3rd Fleet in April 2011, and certified 5 Carrier Strike Groups, 3 Amphibious Readiness Groups and 109 independent deployers that had conducted operations and humanitarian missions during deployments to the 4th, 5th and 7th Fleet Areas of Responsibility.

Beaman also served as commander of the Combined Task Force (CCTF) during the world’s largest maritime exercise, Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) 2012, leading twenty-two nations, 40 ships, six submarines, more than 200 aircraft and 25,000 personnel all operating in and around the Hawaiian islands.

Beaman reflected on his career while thanking his mentors, peers and the men and women of the U.S. Navy.

 ”They are the finest group of leaders and warriors that I have served with,” said Beaman. “…I continue to be humbled by the professionalism in which they command Third Fleet Sailors.”

Adm. James A. Winnefeld Jr., Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, served as the guest speaker.

 ”Walking in the footsteps of Adm. ‘Bull’ Halsey, who founded Third Fleet back in 1943, [Beaman] applied the same collegial but high standard of leadership to the vital role that this team plays in both training and operating our forces in the vast Pacific theater,” said Winnefeld.

Adm. Cecil D. Haney, commander, U.S. Pacific Fleet, officiated the ceremony and presented Beaman with the Distinguished Service Medal recognizing him for his exceptional meritorious service to the government of the United States.

 ”He has ensured our forces are ready to meet the demand of this uncertain world we live in,” said Haney.

Floyd, whose most recent assignment was as Assistant Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Warfare Systems, relieved Beaman and assumed command of U.S. Third Fleet.

 ”We are here to hold out the hand of friendship and cooperation to our international partners, friends and allies as we build partnerships at sea,” said Floyd. “Our emphasis will continue to be providing realistic, relevant training to naval forces preparing to head West, while leading naval forces operating in the Eastern Pacific and being the voice for the fleet as we develop the Navy for the future.”

Throughout Floyd’s career, he has served in several aviation squadrons as a naval flight officer. He participated in Operation Desert Storm while serving as a department head with the Starfighters of VF-33. Floyd subsequently served at sea as the executive officer of USS Constellation (CV 64) and deputy commander of Carrier Air Wing 7 where he participated in Operation Enduring Freedom, later serving as the air wing’s commander. Ashore, Floyd served at Naval Space Command as aide to the commander and later as flag lieutenant of Commander, Carrier Group 8. He has served flag tours as director, Aviation and Aircraft Carrier Plans and Requirements (OPNAV N880) and deputy director, Air Warfare Division (OPNAV N88B) prior to assuming command of Strike Force Training Pacific in February 2009.

Third Fleet leads naval forces in the Eastern Pacific from the West Coast of North America to the international date line and provides the realistic, relevant training necessary for an effective global Navy.

Press Release, June 4, 2013; Image: Navy

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