Skip to main content

Home/ Life Skills/ Group items tagged skill

Rss Feed Group items tagged

mathersro dney

The 411 On Life Skills For The Ex-Offender Returning Home | PRLog - 0 views

  •  
    Welcome! This week's show is filled with some basic information about life at home. Coming home after a long prison stay opens one up to a refresher course on some skills that haven't been used in a while. Buying a car, buying a home, the basics of propane safety, and even a refresher course on the rules of food spoilage are the items this week's guest, Michele Sfakianos speaks on. Her new book, The 411 0n Life Skills makes a great gift for someone returning home from incarceration. Michele touches on many of these topics and more during her interview on this week's edition of the show. Check out this interview and all of our archived episodes at http://rodneymathers.podbean.com
John Clement

Highly Skilled Duct Cleaners - 1 views

I have noticed that almost all of us at home got some allergies that cannot be completely healed despite the kind of medicines that we took. I already suspected that it could have been caused by th...

started by John Clement on 18 Sep 12 no follow-up yet
Danny Rhay

Children With Positive Outlooks Are Better Learners - 0 views

  • "In the last 50 years, the U.S. population has seen an increase in their standard of living, such as having more money, owning more homes and cars and living longer. But our sense of meaning, purpose and satisfaction with life have not gone up, they have gone down,"
  • The effects can carry over to adulthood and cause early death, more health problems, less satisfaction with jobs and relationships and higher rates of depression
  • Penn Resiliency Program (PRP)
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • The PRP promotes optimism by teaching students to think more realistically and flexibly about the problems they encounter. PRP also teaches assertiveness, creative brainstorming, decision-making, relaxation and other coping and problem-solving skills.
  • One exercise involved the students' writing down three good things that happened each day for a week. Examples were: "I answered a really hard question in Spanish class," "I helped my mom shop for groceries" or, "The guy I've liked for months asked me out." Next to each positive event, the students answered the following questions: "What does this mean to you?" and "How can you increase the likelihood of having more of this good thing in the future?"
  • The students who took the program reported more enjoyment and engagement in school. The teachers reported those students were more curious about what they were doing, loved learning and showed more creativity. Effects were particularly strong for students in regular, non-honors classes. According to mothers' and teachers' reports, the students in the PPP had more empathy, self-control and desire to cooperate and assert themselves. Teaching children how to foster their own resiliency, purpose in life and positive feelings can bring "new prosperity" to people's lives
  •  
    wonder if this applies to grownups too?
1 - 7 of 7
Showing 20 items per page