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Roland Gesthuizen

http://freeology.com/wp-content/files/tardylog.pdf - 66 views

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    "If you are tardy you must sign this form or you will be marked absent. If you have a note, please attach it to this clipboard."
bpedegani

quader_p.pdf - 5 views

shared by bpedegani on 26 Jan 17 - No Cached
  • Quaderni
  • I
    • bpedegani
       
      Cosa sono i quaderni?
  • è
    • bpedegani
       
      Leggere questo capitolo introduttivo
  • ...19 more annotations...
  • ridotto l'umanità in tale stato di follia, che presto proromperà frenetica a sconvolgere e a distruggere tutto
  • Io non opero nulla.
    • bpedegani
       
      ricorda qualche altro testo letto quest'anno?
  • u
  • Che giova all'uomo non contentarsi di ripeter sempre le stesse operazioni? Già, quelle che sono fondamentali e indispensabili alla vita, deve pur compierle e ripeterle anch'egli quotidianamente, come i bruti, se non vuol morire. Tutte le altre, mutate e rimutate di continuo smaniosamente, è assai difficile non gli si scoprano, presto o tardi, illusioni o vanità, frutto come sono di quel tal superfluo, di cui non si vede su la terra né il fine né la ragione. E chi ha detto al mio amico Simone Pau, che il bruto non sa? Sa quello che gli è necessario e non s'impaccia d'altro, perché il bruto non ha in sé alcun superfluo. L'uomo che l'ha, appunto perché l'ha, si pone il tormento di certi problemi, destinati su la terra a rimanere insolubili. Ed ecco in che consiste la sua superiorità! Forse quel tormento è segno e prova (speriamo, non anche caparra!) di un'altra vita oltre la terrena; ma, stando così le cose su la terra, mi par proprio d'aver ragione quando dico ch'essa è fatta più pe' bruti che per gli uomini.
    • bpedegani
       
      quale idea emerge del lavoro "artisico"'?
  • l'impassibilità
  • Ma che cosa poi farà l'uomo quando tutte le macchinette gireranno da sé, questo, caro signore, resta ancora da vedere
  • Ma che cosa poi farà l'uomo quando tutte le macchinette gireranno da sé, questo, caro signore, resta ancora da vedere
  • Simone Pau,
  • Conosco anch'io il congegno esterno, vorrei dir meccanico della vita che fragorosamente e vertiginosamente ci affaccenda senza requie
  • Scusa, e come so io del monte, dell'albero, del mare? Il monte è monte, perché io dico: Quello è un monte. Il che significa: io sono il monte. Che siamo noi? Siamo quello di cui a volta a volta ci accorgiamo. Io sono il monte, io l'albero, io il mare. Io sono anche la stella, che ignora se stessa! Restai sbalordito. Ma per poco. Ho anch'io - inestirpabilmente radicata nel più profondo del mio essere - la stessa malattia dell'amico mio.
  • V
    • bpedegani
       
      rapporto uomo-natura
  • V
    • bpedegani
       
      uomo con violino
  • monco
    • bpedegani
       
      Leggere
  • come un monco vergognoso può mostrare il suo moncherino.
  • Ti dico una vera bestia, un pachiderma, che si ruguma quieto quieto il suo lungo nastro di carta traforata. “Fa tutto da sé - dice il proto al mio amico. - Tu non hai che a darle da mangiare di tanto in tanto i suoi pani di piombo, e starla a guardare.”
  • Nestoroff...
  • Un violino, nelle mani d'un uomo, accompagnare un rotolo di carta traforata introdotto nella pancia di quell'altra macchina l
  • Impassibile.
  • II
Lauren Rosen

Texting With Teachers Keeps Students in Class -- THE Journal - 2 views

  • While much of the deluge was back-and-forth banter on tardiness, homework, or grade anxiety, Campbell also began using the constant communiqués as a means to engage students in learning. He began texting a daily journal topic every morning and encouraged students to think about it before they came to class. So far, it's been largely effective, perhaps as a result of the psychology that makes cell phones so addictive for teens in the first place.
  • "Everyone has a compulsion to read that text message when it bleeps, bings, chimes, or vibrates. No exceptions," Campbell has written of the program. "Sooner or later you have to open that text and read it. It's like captive-audience advertising, but for the good guys in education, rather than marketing."
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    Nice article on reaching the less advantages and using technology to meet their needs. Teachers can engage students before they enter the classroom.
Roland Gesthuizen

Dealing with students who come late to class - Google Docs - 137 views

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    "Classroom management is a whole process. Being a teacher, you have to keep an eye on a number of factors to make your class organized, disciplined and managed. You have to deal with noisy students, disruptive students and late students."
Roland Gesthuizen

not being late « advancedetiquette - 13 views

  • Once you recognize this as a bad habit, only then will you be on the road to recovery.
  • Monitor your progress at the end of each day in writing and make written notes of any adjustments you need to improve. Just thinking about it doesn’t cut it, because your thoughts are too easily forgotten.
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    "On the surface, people who are constantly late don't seem to care about themselves or others, no matter how many times they are scolded and joked about. It just goes in one ear and out the other. So what can be done?"
Roland Gesthuizen

Always Late? Learn to Be On Time and to Stop Making Excuses for Being Late - 1 views

  • the first step is to make promptness a conscious priority. "Look at the costs of being late and the payoffs of being on time,"
  • Once you feel motivated to make a change, Morgenstern says the next step is to figure out why you're always late. The reason can usually be classified as either technical or psychological.
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    "For some people, being on time seems nearly impossible -- no matter how important the event. They're always running out the door in a frenzy, arriving everywhere at least 10 minutes late. If this sounds like you, have you ever wished you could break the pattern?"
Roland Gesthuizen

Why are some teachers always late? « one year - 58 views

  • there are too many negatives to chronic lateness for most people to do it deliberately
  • the latemonger is actually in need of help and is not receiving it. Psychologist Dr. Linda Sapadin, author of ‘Master Your Fears’, agrees. The consequences of being chronically late run deeper than many people realize.
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    "Why can some people never seem to be on time? You probably know such people, perhaps only too well.  Indeed, I shouldn't rule out the possibility that if you're reading this that you are one of those people.  As I indicated, everybody is late now and then, but I'm talking about those people who habitually show up after a meeting has started, or after the hour that was designated for the meeting to begin."
Roland Gesthuizen

Why Are Some People Always Late? (And Other Human Puzzles) | Psychology Today - 30 views

  • Try turning the question around:  How do other people usually get where they need to go on time?  What steps do they take to avoid being late?  First, they check the clock every so often, particularly when they know there's a deadline approaching.  They estimate how much time they'll need to get wherever they're going and thus what time they'll need to leave where they are.  They pause to figure out how long it will take to finish what they're currently doing and get ready for whatever is coming next.  And then they adjust their behavior accordingly
  • I suspect that those who chronically show up late don't do these things.  Perhaps they have a tendency to lose themselves in whatever they're currently doing and don't discover what time it is until it's too late.
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    "why some people never seem to be on time.  Surely you know such people, perhaps quite well.  Indeed, if you can overcome a rising bubble of defensiveness, you may admit that you are one of those people.  Everyone is late now and then, of course, but I'm talking about folks who habitually show up after an event has started.."
Javier E

A New Measure for Classroom Quality - NYTimes.com - 84 views

  • Test scores are an inadequate proxy for quality because too many factors outside of the teachers’ control can influence student performance from year to year — or even from classroom to classroom during the same year.
  • there’s a far more direct approach: measuring the amount of time a teacher spends delivering relevant instruction — in other words, how much teaching a teacher actually gets done in a school day.
  • Thirty years ago two studies measured the amount of time teachers spent presenting instruction that matched the prescribed curriculum, at a level students could understand based on previous instruction. The studies found that some teachers were able to deliver as much as 14 more weeks a year of relevant instruction than their less efficient peers.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • There was no secret to their success: the efficient teachers hewed closely to the curriculum, maintained strict discipline and minimized non-instructional activities, like conducting unessential classroom business when they should have been focused on the curriculum.
  • A focus on relevant instructional time also implies several further reforms: Lengthening the school day, week and year; adopting a near-zero-tolerance policy for disruptive behavior, which classroom cameras would help police; increasing efforts to reduce tardiness and absenteeism; and providing as much supplementary and remedial tutoring (the most effective instructional model known) as possible.
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