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2008 CCSL TRI-SPORT STATS


CCSL 2008 Basketball Team Stats  

Chaldean Church Sports League

Chaldean Church Sports League announces the opening of the 2009 CCSL Basketball season.  CCSL basketball season will include four divisions. 

  • Middle School Boys ages 10-13
  • High School Boys Ages 14 - 18
  • Middle School Girls ages 10-13 
  • High School Boys Girls 14 - 18

Official game play begins January 25 and runs consecutive weeks every Sunday.  All games will be played on at the Boys and Girls Club of South Oakland County Gymnasiam. 

TO REGISTER CLICK ON THE CCSL Basketball 2009 "Faith on Fire" logo.

All church coordinators, coaches, coaching staff, booster members, parents, and players are asked to review the documents and adopted game rules located to the right prior to contracting with a team.

Any comments or questions can be e-mailed to CCSL@Chaldean.org. Mother of God Church is serving as the hosting administrative church for the league during the 2008-2010 season.

The elected CCSL director for the 2008-2010 term is Dr. Natham Karumi.

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Research Proves that Being Multilingual is Better

Chaldeans who are bilingual or Multilingual have an advantage over the rest of us, and not just in terms of communication skills. The multilingual brain develops more densely, giving it an advantage in various abilities and skills, according to new research.

According to the 2002 U.S. Census, more than 7.5 million children between the ages of 5 and 17 (about 14 %) speak a language other than English at home and the number of bilingual speakers is expected to increase in the coming years.

Most children have the capacity and facility to learn two or more languages. Research suggests there are advantages to being bilingual, such as, linguistic and metalinguistic abilities and cognitive flexibility, such as, concept formation, divergent thinking and general reasoning and verbal abilities.

Researchers from the Department of Imaging Neuroscience and experts from the Fondazione Santa Lucia in Rome researched brain densities of bilingual people. They recruited 25 people who speak one language, 25 who learned a second European language before age 5, and 33 who became bilingual between ages 10 and 15. 

All the participants spoke English as their primary language. Those who had learned a second language later in life had practiced it regularly for at least five years.

The researchers discovered that bilingual brains do better. 

The brain has two types of tissue visible to the naked eye, termed gray and white matter. Gray matter makes up the bulk of nerve cells within the brain. Studies have shown an association with gray matter density (or volume and intellect), especially in areas of language, memory, and attention.

Brain imaging showed that bilingual speakers had denser gray matter compared with monolingual participants.

The difference was especially significant in the brain's left side -- an area known to control language and communication skills. The right hemisphere of bilingual speakers also showed a similar trend.

The researchers say that although language is thought to be mediated by functional changes in the brain, they show that being bilingual structurally changes the brain. Their study shows the effect was strongest in people who had learned a second language before age 5.

In a second test, the researchers studied 22 native Italian speakers who had learned English as a second language between ages 2 and 34.

Those who had learned English at a young age had greater proficiency in reading, writing, talking, and understanding English speech.

As in the first test, increases in gray matter density in the brain's left region were linked to age at which a person became bilingual. The earliest second language learners had the densest gray matter in that part of the brain.

Of course, while it might seem easier to pick up a second language as a child, it's still possible to do so as an adult.

The research suggests that the structure of the human brain is altered by the experience of acquiring a second language.  The full write-up of the research is featured in the October issue of the journal Nature.


Filed in Living & Lifestyle, Career & Education, Community & Culture, Science & Technology :: By Huda Metti on Tuesday, July 08, 2008 :: 1595 Views
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CCSL Documents and Notes

Chaldean Church
Sports League (CCSL)
MISSION

The Chaldean Church Sports League is a diocese wide effort to help inspire the faithful through the spirit of sports and games.  In a safe and competitive sport environment the CCSL helps guide athletes along on their quest to victory through Christ.   The CCSL offers our community a wonderful opportunity for us all to come together and strengthen our mind, body, and soul by way of an energetic and lively sporting event dedicated to our Lord and Savior.
 
The Chaldean Diocese league includes:

  • Sacred Heart Saints
  • Mar Addai Healers
  • Mother of God Guardian Angels
  • St. George Dragon Slayers
  • St. Joseph Protectors
  • St. Thomas Twin Tigers

(The below files require a PDF reader)

 

  1. CCSL Guidelines
  2. CCSL Code of Conduct
  3. CCSL Player Permission Form 
  4. CCSL 08 Summer Season Game Rules

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