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Katy Lu

Achieving Without Goals : zenhabits - 1 views

shared by Katy Lu on 02 Sep 13 - No Cached
    • Katy Lu
       
      Enjoy what you do is the most easiest way to find happiness. So enjoy what you do, NOW!
  • Isn’t having no goals a goal?
  • Love what you do. This seems obvious, but so often people do things that they’re not excited about. I try to find things that I love doing, and if there’s some mundane task I have to do for some reason, I either eliminate it or find a way to enjoy the hell out of it.
    • Juan Saldana
       
      i couldn't agree with this more, how many mindless drones do we know that hate their jobs and let it snowball the rest of their lives? The fields I work in pay well and I get new toys to play with all the time! I tell my mids to do something they love, it might not pay a 6-7 figure salary but you will be happy, live longer, and enjoy your life that much more..
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  • Love what you do. This seems obvious, but so often people do things that they’re not excited about. I try to find things that I love doing, and if there’s some mundane task I have to do for some reason, I either eliminate it or find a way to enjoy the hell out of it.
    • Adam Hovde
       
      One of the best posts I have ever seen. I try and live by these guidelines. I was not always a teacher. I started out as a programmer and hated the job. I went back to school and fell in love with working other students and decided to make a career change into the education field. I have now been a teacher for the past 12 years and still love getting up each day and working with the students. I tell my students all the time. Find something you love doing and then find a way to make it your career.
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    I have to agree with you wholeheartedly Katy. Teaching can be a tough job with all the paperwork and extra jobs that seem to be never ending. I think that is why so many new teachers just don't make it. Until you are in that classroom dealing with the kids day in and day out you really don't realize what a hard job it is. And its not just the kids that disrupt the class that makes it tough. It is the kids who inspire you or bring you to tears because of the hard work they do even if they have a terrible life at home. I love teaching not because I necessarily love math, but because I like the idea that I make an impact on many students lives every year. Even if it is just one child that I can get motivated and inspire them to be great, I have done my job.
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    one I applaud teachers for the work that they do, I know fully well that this is not something I could do. I remember being in K12 and teachers having to deal with the hecklers in the back of the class that didn't want to be there and chose to ruin the experience for every one. This is why I have chosen to take my aquired skills and put them to better use. Simply put teachers need all the help that they can get and I believe that incorporation of technology is the answer. Work smarter not harder...
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    Yes Katy, doing what you love to do makes you job easier and enjoyable. I enjoy orienting first time online students on how online courses work and makes my time worthwhile when I see them taking another online course after another every semester. That means to me that I guided them correctly and makes me enjoy my job even more.
Juan Saldana

Can the Current Model of Higher Education Survive MOOCs and Online Learning? (EDUCAUSE ... - 2 views

  • Not all U.S. colleges and universities will disappear as a result of new technologies, but clearly some will.
  • Technology-enhanced learning has the potential to transform education and to raise the level of education globally.
  • The first threat to American higher education is that MOOCs and online courses will raise the level of competition too high for some institutions to survive.
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    We begin day two on the topic of Survival. Ten years ago online education was almost non-existent, today it encompasses a good portion of the course offerings at UTB, will the current model of instruction still exist in another 10 years? What does this mean for us as instructional designers?
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    I love this article! thanks so much, Juan. It is helpful on multiple levels. It's no easy thing for a large university to scope out a plan for integrating online education. It's a brand new world and it feels very high risk. As we learn about best practices and our budgets get trimmed, the temptation is to do enough to check the box, but that model causes more trouble in the long run. Lucas's article is a thoughtful, articulate review of lessons learned that can be applied straight away. Thank you!
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    Schools as a business are running out of funding, yet tuition keeps getting more expensive (funny right?). I don't know if the current platform for education will be replaced with MOOCs, but it will definitely be replaced, it's natural evolution. Jennifer you are working with Virtual High Schools, soon we will see this in the lower grades. The strange kids we knew who and were jealous of because they were "Home Schooled" will be the norm! However we are not only talking about the "survival" of the institutions, we are talking about the titles that come with these degrees. 50 years High School was a family achievement, today High School doesn't qualify you to stand on the side of the highway with a sign... How long before these titles like M.Ed are no longer worth the paper they are printed on?
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    I believe the University of Miami Online High School has already offered a MOOC about college/ACT prep. I'm bummed because I was hoping to be the first high school to offer a MOOC. I really just love the idea of using technology to give kids opportunities that they would not have otherwise had. But there are practical considerations that trump my idealistic ideas about it. It's always about the money. I think one of the biggest problems we face in our society today is the concentration of wealth at the top. Higher and higher salaries at the top necessitate lower salaries (greater tuition, etc.) elsewhere. We also have huge infrastructure/insurance costs. It's a complex, complicated problem that makes me weary!
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    The beauty of a MOOC is that you can literally run it from your parents basement! Look at how Khans Academy started and what it has grown into. Any one of us could essentially develop an online course, videos and all and run it from our home. Although I was just introduced to MOOCs in last semesters 6329, I see them becoming more and more integrated into future curriculum. It would not surprise me if at one point the 6332/6358 course required the development of a fully functional MOOC. Remember I said it first!
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    People might worried that "massive open online course" may replace the traditional education someday. My answer is NO. They are actually different in nature. MOOC can be taken as an enrichment tool to enhance your urge in knowledge, but can't be officially certified by the Educational Department. MOOC is a good source to learn different topics and meet instructors from vary institutions. That makes learning exciting and help to lighten up life.
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    Some see MOOCs up-ending the whole model of higher education, allowing students to complete full courses of study in a non-traditional format, particularly with international students, which have made up a large part of the student body in early MOOC courses. Others see MOOCs playing a much smaller role, with the MOOC system of "badges" or certificates for course completion integrated into programs higher education institutions already offer.
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