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ibrahim tanrikulu

TED, Riveting talks by remarkable people, free to the world. - 0 views

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    Yesterday, I discovered this app which we can watch and learn from remarkable people in the world. A new way to learn something. You can use the app by downloading it to your smart phones.
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    I am actually great fan of the TED talks but never heard of the application before, thanks for sharing this, the talks are really influential I believe.
E.Yasin Çiftçi

The hidden influence of social networks - A TED Talk - 2 views

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    In this TED talk delivered by Nicholas Christakis, you can see how important the role of networks in our lives is. You will also be introduced to some visualization of network analyses which are gaining a crucial role in examining the connections among people or neurons.
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
Hatice Çilsalar

Design of Learning environment by Sugata Mitra \"Build a School in the Cloud\" - 0 views

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    He is criticizing the current schooling system and suggesting a learning environment which is already testing by him under "Hole in the wall" project. Let's check his design... Onstage at TED2013, Sugata Mitra makes his bold TED Prize wish: Help me design the School in the Cloud, a learning lab in India, where children can explore and learn from each other -- using resources and mentoring from the cloud.
haticekiz

How the brain learns to see (TED TALK) - 0 views

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    The talk is about a research conducted by Indian Pawan Shinha. The research has been conducted on a group of 200 children. They were blind as a result of cataract. He pioneered the project which consists of treatment and post observation. He defined learning seeing step by step. He uttered that after treatment, the patient cannot differentiate the shapes; even the shadow is an object for them. The video has real data which is very interesting in my opinion.
Ezgi Hazal KÖK

Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi: Flow Theory (Video on TED.com) - 2 views

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    For both the ones who encounter "Flow Theory" for the first time and the ones who have encountered before and had a notion about the theory, this video will be very helpful to see what Flow Theory says, and what are the moments that you experience flow.
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    "You know that what you need to do is possible to do, even though difficult, and sense of time disappears. You forget yourself. You feel part of something larger." I really liked this quote of him. :)
Hatice Çilsalar

TED talk-Teching design for change - 0 views

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    As a candidate curriculumist, I really like the video how can design a design based learning curriculum. Last seven or six minutes gives a specific example.
Pınar Mercan Küçükakın

Sir Ken Robinson: Bring on the learning revolution! - 0 views

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    I want to introduce Sir Ken Rabinson who is a British author, speaker, and international advisor on education in the arts to government, non-profits, education, and arts bodies. He was Director of The Arts in Schools Project (1985-89), Professor of Arts Education at the University of Warwick (1989-2001), and was knighted in 2003 for services to education. Here are interesting TED talks from Prof. Rabinson: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r9LelXa3U_I http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iG9CE55wbtY
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    I like watching his inspirational talks , I check the TED talks website for his new videos, he is such a creative person to me. His ideas are both very simply and impressively presented and the way he uses sense of humour is very successful.
Evrim Baran

TEDx METU Ankara | Independently organized TED events - TEDxMETUAnkara.com - 1 views

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    An event you shouldn't miss. TEDx is now at METU!!!
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    Hocam, they increased the participants number to 190. If anyone has not registered, I suggest to register because we have more chance to be audience.
Selçuk Kılınç

Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi: Flow, the secret to happiness - 0 views

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    Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi's Ted Talk about how the flow term is appeared. Beyond, how he started to deal with psychology and the only aim of him to find an answer to "What makes a life worth living?" He searched an answer at different area and find the best answer at psychology. Although he know nothing about Carl Jung, even he doesn't know the name of him (I am surprised to that); after participating at one of his conference; he affected and started to deal with psychology. Finally, after this studies, he appeared the term, 'flow'.
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    I also add the most famous painting of Dali, persistence of memory. Because flow term remind me that painting. I think we are at our surreal world at the flow instance and also the time term is completely lost. http://www.dalipaintings.com/images/paintings/the-persistence-of-memory.jpg
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    I like this painting of Dali! Although it can be commented in various ways, we can comment it from the point of view of flow theory like; in the flow moment you don't realize time flies until that moment ends. Thus, I agree with you that it really fits into distortion of sense of time.
leventmetu

Ken Robinson diyor ki; "Okullar yaratıcılığı öldürüyor." - 10 views

The problem comes with the understanding of formal education which feels it should not leave any spare time for any activity students wish to do..

canannn

What we learn before we're born - 4 views

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    I found his video highly interesting in that it begins with a thrilling question "when does learning start?" , it talks about the research that shows how much we learn in the womb -- from the lilt of our native language to our soon-to-be-favorite foods.
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    Years ago a seminar that I attended called "brain-based learning" discussed about similar topic. It was the first time that I had learned about "when learning starts". And this video reminds me of the seminar and it is like adventures of a fetus very open to learning. It is really interesting that a fetus can understand each and every language besides its native one. And as you mentioned this video shows how much we learn in womb, which means learning starts with a fetus in womb and goes till the end of life.
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    Yes, it really is interesting and hard to understand for me as well. There are various factors involved in our learning process for sure, but frankly I did not imagine the time before birth. "brain-based learning" sounds like an efficient keyword to achieve new knowledge on this topic.
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    It is really interesting to see that fetuses behave like the photocopies of their mothers. They can nearly comrehend everthing during their life in their mothers' belly. I think this video implies many ideas for the improvement of future generations and of course warnings and precautions for the pregnant women.
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    Language acquisition process of babies is a real miracle.They are born with certain tendencies towards their mother language which is an indicator that they strart language learning before birth as mentioned in the video recording. Moreover, they acquire their native language in an incredible speed without any special training. Thus, this video reminded me a major debate in understanding language acquisition: Is language an innate or learned abilitiy?
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    I agree that such research can be influential in discussing precautions or alternative perspectives for pregnant women and also for all involved in the study of learning. About the language acquisition, the very interesting question you raised has a long history of debate as you already mentioned. Maybe additional research in the future will help to put more light on the issue.
Pınar Mercan Küçükakın

Brain-Based Learning - 1 views

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    While giving super brilliant girl's example who has a problem in visiual process,she highlights awareness of students' deficiency signals and their acting outs. This explains why teachers should know about neuroscience and work with neuroscientists.
filizbezci

Colin Camerer:neuroscience, game theory, monkeys - 1 views

http://www.ted.com/talks/colin_camerer_neuroscience_game_theory_monkeys.html

started by filizbezci on 10 Dec 13 no follow-up yet
Burcu Korkusuz

Building A School in the Cloud - 0 views

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    This is a TED talk by Sugata Mitra, the Professor of Educational Technology at the School of Education, Communication and Language Sciences at Newcastle University, England. He mentions about his "Hole in the Wall" experiment and SOLE (self-organized learning environment). He defines learning as the product of educational self-organization. There are many interesting implications for the future of learning. So what are your opinions about future of learning?
Yelda Sarıkaya-Erdem

Allan Collins - 1 views

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    Allan Collins is a retired professor of Education and Social Policy at Northwestern University and best known in psychology for his work on semantic memory and plausible reasoning, in artificial intelligence for his work on reasoning and intelligent tutoring systems, and in education for his work on situated learning, inquiry teaching, epistemic forms and games, design research, and cognitive apprenticeship. His famous work with the co-author Richard Halverson is "Rethinking Education in the Age of Technology: The Digital Revolution and Schooling in America" that was published in 2009. I have put the link to download the article presenting a summary of the contents of the book written by Collins and Halverson.
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    Yelda, I am really happy to meet such a study and really curious about reading this paper. As you know, I am interested in technology in education. Therefore, it will be my basic reading. Thanks for your sharing.
Evrim Baran

▶ The Science of Babies - YouTube - 3 views

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    For those interested in the science of babies.
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    Hocam I cannot believe the results of the study. It is really amazing. The babies are smarter that adults and knows statistics. The saying of lean mean machine to adult brain is interesting. Now I am looking for the study is about babies and statistics, I really wonder this one. Thanks for your sharing. And I found another video of Dr. Alison Gopnik about baby thinking as a scientists..:) http://www.ted.com/talks/alison_gopnik_what_do_babies_think.html
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    This video made me question the role of education in children's life again.I think formal education is the biggest barrier for children who have natural abilities to learn. The education system is limiting children's potential and killing their imagination and curiostiy which make them excellent learners indeed. Do you think the school provides them proper opportunities to explore and to learn? I don't think students can learn in our "boring" classes where they are grouped on their ages rather than their abilities.
Ceren Ocak

Questions no one knows the answers by TED-Ed - 3 views

shared by Ceren Ocak on 14 Nov 13 - No Cached
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    :D Benim de hayatımda ki her şey dönüp dolaşıp motivationa ve curiositye bağlanıyor sanırım :) Harika bir video, Beyin bedava :)
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