Self-examination is the key to noodle-making and other accomplishments.
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Self-examination is the key to noodle-making and other accomplishments.
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This is a great tool for developing storyboards based around scripts. Great for helping to visualise a text / script. We understand that one of the greatest challenges for schools and the wider public is access to material that they can use and adapt in their own productions. The Free Media Library provides an extensive resource to fill this gap. We encourage you and your students to upload your own creative work. Help us to build this resource for the Generator community. Follow up with the Educators Lounge Join ACMI's educator community online at http://educatorslounge.acmi.net.au. Via Nik Peachey, Smaragda Papadopoulou
Alfredo Corell's curator insight,
December 27, 2012 8:47 AM
Share your creative work with the Generator community. Upload to the Video Gallery and Free Media Library.
Karen Faulkner's curator insight,
March 25, 6:26 AM
What a fantastic tool for uper primary students to bring to life scripts Delete the scoop?
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".....During the 1970s, Chris Argyris, a business theorist at Harvard Business School (and now, at 89, a professor emeritus) began to research what happens to organizations and people, like Mr. Chang, when they find obstacles in their paths.
Professor Argyris called the most common response single loop learning — an insular mental process in which we consider possible external or technical reasons for obstacles.
LESS common but vastly more effective is the cognitive approach that Professor Argyris called double-loop learning. In this mode we — like Mr. Chang — question every aspect of our approach, including our methodology, biases and deeply held assumptions. This more psychologically nuanced self-examination requires that we honestly challenge our beliefs and summon the courage to act on that information, which may lead to fresh ways of thinking about our lives and our goals.
In interviews we did with high achievers for a book, we expected to hear that talent, persistence, dedication and luck played crucial roles in their success. Surprisingly, however, self-awareness played an equally strong role.
The successful people we spoke with — in business, entertainment, sports and the arts — all had similar responses when faced with obstacles: they subjected themselves to fairly merciless self-examination that prompted reinvention of their goals and the methods by which they endeavored to acheive them...."