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Hatice Çilsalar

20 hours for learning - 7 views

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    The tedtalk related to how to learn things especially practical things is very enjoyful. In this video it is emphasized that everyone can learn whatever they want in twenty hours. But there are some requirements for this type of learning that are: deconstruct your skill, learn enough to self-correct or self-edit, remove practise barries, and prastice at least 20 hours. the only barrier to have any skill is only emotional.
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    This is an absolutely amazing and inspiring video. After watching video, I strongly believed that barriers we have to overcome have emotional bases instead intellectual ones. Maybe if I follow 4 steps properly and focus on ı can even play guitar. In fact, it seems to me devotion and removing practise barriers are the keys to success and manageable, then why not give a try.
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    I liked the song in the video very much and the graphics showing the relationship between the time and skill or how we are good and the practice. However, I am not sure that 20 hour is applicable to everything to be learned. In the four steps, we can relate self-correction part to self-coaching as mentioned in the readings.
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    The four steps mentioned in the video have really good implications for the learners. Self correction and removing the barriers are especially important to learn anything new. However,I agree with Burcu, 20 hours of practice is not enough to acquire some kind of skills. Can anybody learn a foreign language in 20 hours? Kaufman reminded the fact that early stage of skill improvement is very fast but being an expert takes long time and effort. It is a very common phenomenon we come across in language classes. After students become intermediate or upper intermediate, they have difficulties to improve in English to be advanced learners. Expertise requires patience, motivation and continuous hard work. Students need to be patient and practice more but under the stress of proficiency exam they feel hopeless. Maybe, teachers should inform them about the stages of skill acquisition so that learners will know that what they experience is just a part of the skill acquisition process.
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    2o hours to learn something sounds interesting. But, I don't think 20 hours would be enough to learn some practical things. Learning English can be a good example of that. Despite the many ads claiming to teach English in a short time, I have not come across any method to teach English in a short time.
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    It was really fun to watch.What drew my attention was the quote `The major barrier to skill acquisition isn`t intellectual...it`s emotional yet the quote reminded me of another quoate :)from the readings of this week `the journey to truly superior performance is neither for the faint of heart nor for the impatient.`Although both shares the view that once should be open, courageous,eager to learn, they differ in the sense that genuine expertise comes with struggle, sacrifice and there aren`t shortcuts as in learning how to play the guitar with `four chords`.Instead, one has to invest time wisely for a bit of a period of time to apply it as an expert.Take for example,art lessons.One cannot learn and paint in 20hrs if he/she is not very talented.
Emel Güneş

Dream Course - 15 views

Selçuk I think this is a wonderful idea:) Dream is everything and helps student to set their own goals and expectations from lesson even from life :)

inspiration

mskaraca

A question worths thinking - 1 views

I think the following question will help us to find our passion Who is the happiest person/people in the world and WHY Can you answer ?

Motivation

started by mskaraca on 08 Nov 14 no follow-up yet
SEDA MUSAOĞLU

fire dancing and flow arts - 2 views

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    This video is about fire dancing and the people who are telling their intrinsic motivation for it. I found it quiet interesting because it includes most elements of flow theory. First of all, they have clear goals in every step. Also, they enjoy what they are doing and they get constant feedback. They have awareness and to be succesful they should not be distracted. The sense of time becomes distorted for them. I remember watching a fire dancing show in Barcelona and I was really surprised seeing people playing with fire so creatively. They were so immersed that they did not care anything happening around them. Now, it becomes more meaningful for me :) they were in a state of flow.
Özlem Duran Ataalp

irregular verb list rap song :) - 5 views

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gNaDvAYC0Jw On the given link above, you can find a rap song to teach the irregular verb list in English :) It can be used as a tool to help the student memorize the...

motivation

started by Özlem Duran Ataalp on 09 Nov 14 no follow-up yet
E.Yasin Çiftçi

TMB Panyee FC short film - 6 views

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    I found this short movie quite interesting to share with you. It has a lot of elements related to challenges, motivation and being a community. Enjoy it!
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    Thanks.. Seeing opportunity where a visible problem lies is a good habit.
Mine Önal

Angela Lee Duckworth: The key to success? Grit | TED Talk | TED.com - 2 views

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    Which one is more important in success do you think: perseverance and passion or intelligence?
Mine Önal

Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi: Flow, the secret to happiness | TED Talk | TED.com - 3 views

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    Video of Csikszentmihalyi on Flow, the secret of hapiness
elanuryilmaz

Eight Tips for Fostering Flow in the Classroom - 2 views

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    It's every teacher's dream to have students who engage deeply with their lessons, want to learn for learning's sake, and perform at the top of their potential. In other words, teachers want their kids to find "flow," that feeling of complete immersion in an activity, where we're so engaged that our worries, sense of time, and self-consciousness seem to disappear.
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    I liked this article because it adds more flow elements like making kids laugh, positive realationships, and relevancy of the task and choice
vahidetekeakay

Welcome to Flow in Games - 1 views

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    2300 years ago, Aristotle concluded that, more than anything else, men and women seek happiness..." - Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi (1990) In the last 30 years, as a form of entertainment, video games have evolved from confined arcade activities into a mature media.Video games have deeply infiltrated our daily life and our society. As if toys expanded every child's imagination, modern videogames take advantage of a player's active involvement to open more possibilities than any other existing mediums. [Wright 2006] More and more people grow up playing video games, treating them not only as an art form but also as serious media.
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    Good application of flow theory to games
haticekiz

BGuILE - 1 views

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    When I was reading Blumenfeld and Rogat's article, the part about authenticity, I encountered the term "BGuILE" and checked it out. If you are interested in, it is a tool and it is not active now, last update is 2002. It says BGuILE, learning environments bring scientific inquiry into middle school science and high school biology classrooms. The environments consist of computer-based scenarios and associated classroom activities in which students conduct authentic scientific investigations.
Murat Kol

The Power of Positivity | Brain Games - YouTube - 0 views

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    What happens when somebody is encouraged by positive reinforcement and discouraged by negative one?
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    So behaviorism theory still works?
satiburhanli

Making a mistake can be rewarding, study finds: MRI study shows failure is a rewarding ... - 1 views

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    The human brain learns two ways - either through avoidance learning, which trains the brain to avoid committing a mistake, or through reward-based learning, a reinforcing process that occurs when someone gets the right answer. Scientists have found that making a mistake can feel rewarding, though, if the brain is given the opportunity to learn from its mistakes and assess its options.
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    "Scientists have long understood that the brain has two ways of learning. One is avoidance learning, which is a punishing, negative experience that trains the brain to avoid repeating mistakes. The other is reward-based learning, a positive, reinforcing experience in which the brain feels rewarded for reaching the right answer." The "avoidance learning" is which I have learned from my father thanks to his raising children technique. He always wanted that we, as his children, should be faultless. And that understanding (of course he is not a pedagog :)) affected me negatively in my subsequent years. In fact, the second one, reward-based learning, is essential if someone wants to apply discussion and peer learning in his/her classroom as students who avoid making mistakes will avoid having communication with others, generating assertive questions, defend his/her arguments, asking help even if s/he struck at a ridiculous point, etc. Making mistakes is a part of learning. We need to emphasize this in our classrooms.
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