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The self-assessment is now available. The feedback has been enhanced (this will be an on-going process) and the tool has been tested, thanks to the Admissions Director, Rob W. Coffman, and Admissions Counselors Andrea Williard and Keith Eopechino at Penn State Harrisburg. I acknowledge with appreciation the feedback and input from Robin Gill at DuBois, the student advisers at the World Campus, the Schreyer Institute, Laura Brown in the Division of Undergraduate Studies, and the many institutions I tapped for valid content. Thanks to all of you.
Remember the dreaded volunteer call from your classes in school? The fearful point during the period when the teacher asks, "Who wants to come up to the front to demonstrate?" Remember the awkward silence, the shifting in the chairs, the sidelong glances that seem to say, "no WAY am I going up there—why don't YOU go?"
It's common even in the digital age, if not more common thanks to our ability to lose ourselves within personal tech and cover our identities better than ever before. Technology is something of a security blanket for those unwilling or unable to, as the saying goes, put themselves out there.
But it's not just about how things have changed; it's also about what hasn't changed in our educational approaches. William Johnson delves into the real reasons why we're still afraid to risk the public scrutiny of standing up in front of our classroom peers in this article he wrote appearing on gothamschools.org.
posted by Ian Jukes Mar 31, 2012
I've been a fan of Czikszentmihaly for a number of years. I've experienced stated of flow while writing and working on my Internet project. Following his ideas I found that using music helped me induce this state of hyper concentration. Honestly, I associate Czikszentmihaly work with finding your passions in life. Could we help our students find their passsions? Chances go up when you understand this research. (A good TED Video is an important part of this post.
By Jackie Gerstien: When I first heard about Czikszentmihalyi’s “Flow” concept and research, I became quite intrigued with this research. Its face validity immediately resonated with me. I always...
"Every year I teach an introductory course on cognitive psychology to about 350 students. Every year I ask my students how they study and I find that they are much like students at Purdue, Washington University in St. Louis, UCLA, and Kent State--universities at which surveys have been conducted on student study strategies.
Like students at those schools, my students tend to take notes in class, color the readings with a highlighter, and later reread the notes and the highlighted bits of the text.
This Table show the results of a study by Jeff Karpicke and his colleagues (2009) on the study strategies of students at Washington University in St. Louis. (For other studies leading to similar conclusions see Hartwig & Dunlosky, 2012; Kornell & Bjork, 2007)..."
Via Jenny Pesina
Although most students adjust very quickly, studying online is different in some ways from studying in class. In particular, it requires discipline to keep ‘on schedule’ when there are no daily set lectures or classes to attend.
Via Ana Cristina Pratas
n all the bustle to create a harmonious relationship between today's teachers and the digital learning environment, we forgot all about some tips for the most important ones of all—the students! Well, thankfully Heather Wolpert-Gawron remembered when she wrote this great article for Edutopia which offers some good learning tips for our digital kids.
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How to Harness Your Attention in The Age of Distraction
The Xconomy team posed this question to their network [read: an older audience], reaching out to the people they knew “it would resonate well with.” And while we’ll include some of the answers they received, we decided to reach out to our own network and ask the question ourselves, curious as to whether a younger audience — whether they be fresh out of college, going for their MBA, or newly into their thirties, still trying to figure things out — would have something different to say.
Via Nik Peachey
Here are the three extremely powerful techniques to beat procrastination, used by most successful people. GM: pretty well explained. Could get used in classes as example on How-To better learn...
Via Gust MEES
In the following article from Daily Good, Leo Babauta, author and creator of the blog Zenhabits, states the following:
"Unfortunately, I was educated in a school system that believed the world in which it existed would remain essentially the same, with minor changes in fashion. We had no idea what the world had in store for us. And here's the thing: we still don't."
Ergonomic use of Laptop or Computer devices for recreation or work at home, office or school can bring you great benefits, including your children or kids, i...
Via Gust MEES, Giselle Pempedjian
Here you'll find practical applications of the On Course Principles. Each strategy has the purpose of empowering students to become active, responsible learners. The majority of these ideas appeared originally in the On Course Newsletter. Additional strategies are described in the Instructor's manual for the On Course text. New ideas are added here often, so come back often. The most recent strategies are identified with the date.
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