Dale Carnegie's
How to Win Friends and Influence People.
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in title, tags, annotations or urlDale E. Gary, Personal Page - 0 views
Association for Psychological Science: Public Information - 12 views
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The popularity of the 10% myth probably also stems from misunderstandings of scientific papers by early brain researchers
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YouTube - Promo for Room A108, second season - 57 views
Helping First-Year Students Help Themselves - Commentary - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 1 views
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According to a yearly national survey of more than 200,000 first-year students conducted by researchers at the University of California at Los Angeles, college freshmen are increasingly "overwhelmed," rating their emotional health at the lowest levels in the 25 years the question has been asked. Such is the latest problem dropped at the offices of higher-education administrators and professors nationwide: Young adults raised with a single-minded focus on gaining admission to college now need help translating that focus into ways to thrive on campus and beyond.
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Many young adults weren't taught the basic life skills and coping mechanisms for challenging times.
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The consequences for students who lack those skills have become increasingly clear both on campus and after graduation. At Pitt, where I teach, and at other institutions, student-life administrators have noticed a marked decrease in resiliency, particularly among first-year students. That leads to an increase in everything from roommate disagreements to emotional imbalance and crisis. After graduation, employers complain that a lack of coping mechanisms makes for less proficient workers: According to a 2006 report by the Conference Board, a business-research group, three-quarters of surveyed employers said incoming new graduates were deficient in "soft" skills like communication and decision making.
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