Article: Not only are your meals prepared here, but your family and guests gather here as well. Sufficient and adequate lighting is a must for performing all your culinary needs, helping your kids with their homework, and reading the paper.  Sketch a plan of your kitchen that focuses on activity areas and then decide what kind of light each area will need: general, task, accent, or decorative. Use higher watt bulbs in task areas. A glass or plastic pendant will provide ample "up-lighting" to cover the entire dinette area with light. Kitchens less than 100 square feet require a two lamp fluorescent, up to 250 square feet will require supplemental lighting. Down lights mounted 18" off the edge of the cabinets, and spaced 3' to 4' on centers is an excellent way to create additional general lighting. Fluorescent under cabinet fixtures are also a cost efficient lighting source. In open areas over sinks use recessed downlights mounted directly over the sink. Mounting mini-pendants 18" to 24" above the work surface is an ideal way to light up a breakfast bar or counter dinettes, a pendant on a dimmer, hanging 24" to 30" above the table, is ideal for task lighting. Size the fixture to roughly 12" less than the diameter of the table. Use under cabinet lighting in cabinets, valences, and toe spaces and create drama while also supplying additional light to navigate around your kitchen in the evening. The ambient light provided by fluorescent fixtures will fill in your kitchen's shadows, reduce contrast, and light vertical surfaces to give the space a brighter feel.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Realize that the kitchen is often the busiest part of the house. Go with decorative fluorescent fixtures centered over a workspace. Use under cabinet lighting to help prevent shadows on the counters, while adding critical light to the workspace. Illuminate your special home objects, architectural detail, or food presentation areas with track or recessed lighting. Choose fluorescent lights to provide that missing ambient lighting.
Article: To get into a good undergraduate psychology program, you'll need an impressive GPA in high school. Take any psychology classes offered at your school to get a feel for what clinical psychology is all about.  Ask the instructor of any psychology classes at your school about the differences in clinical social work, counseling psychology, psychiatry, and clinical psychology, so you can begin deciding which branch of the mental health profession is the right fit for you. If your high school has a psychology club, this will also help with college applications as well as continuing to familiarize you with the discipline. While you can still get into many colleges with a lower GPA, you’re likely to have more prestigious options, which in turn will help with graduate school programs. Most programs offer general psychology degrees without any kind of specialty until you get to graduate school. Ace your psychology courses and maintain your high GPA.  As an undergraduate psychology student, you can expect to study introductory courses, as well as courses heavy of statistical data and research methods. From there, you will additionally choose from upper-division courses that give you overviews of social, developmental, abnormal, and comparative psychology, which will help you in choosing a specific focus for graduate school.  If your university offers any type of honors courses track in the psychology department, consider taking those as they’ll help distinguish your graduate school applications. Your school may offer either a BA or a BS in psychology for undergraduates. Neither is more advantageous than the other when it comes to graduate school. The important thing is simply to do well. Check with your advising office or the psychology department to find out what opportunities are available for you. Since clinical psychology graduate programs are competitive, get as much experience under your belt as you can. This can go on your resume, and programs for clinical psychologists usually require that a resume be submitted with your application.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Finish your high school courses with at least a 3.0 GPA. Enroll in an undergraduate psychology program at an accredited university of your choice. Participate in research projects, internships, and teaching assistant programs as much as possible. Join psychology clubs and stay active with them.
Article: You'll find this in your list of all apps, labeled "Translate." You'll find this in the upper-left corner.  Note that not all languages that Google Translate supports are available for offline use. It looks like a down arrow pointing at a horizontal line. You'll be shown the size of the offline translation files before the download starts. Your device will need to have an internet connection in order to download language files for later use offline. The language will be moved to the "Downloaded languages" section, and you'll see a progress circle.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Open the Google Translate app. Tap the ☰ button. Tap Offline translation. Scroll down to find the language you want to download. Tap the "Download" button next to a language. Tap Download to confirm. Monitor the download.