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Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

4 Multimedia Learning Principles that will Improve Your Slides | SlideShare Blog - 0 views

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    Excellent post by Olivia Mitchell, 2.3.09, offering tips and links to other excellent presentations on presentations.
anonymous

http://www.baycomm.ca/images/pdf/Article-Why-market-to-women-entrepreneurs.pdf - 0 views

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    Here are five ways to successfully tap into the women's market: 1. Provide good quality information. Producing a newsletter and Web site are excellent ways to demonstrate your expertise and to keep your image in front of clients and prospects. Include plenty of strategies and tips that will help guide women to be more successful in running or growing their businesses. Conducting free seminars or workshops is another good strategy for imparting your knowledge and has the added benefit of serving as a networking forum. 2. Build relationship marketing strategies. Develop and sustain relationships with women and cultivate a sense of community. 3. Host networking events. Historically, women have not had the same opportunities to network as their male counterparts. You can create your own networking events for women clients and prospects. Featuring a guest speaker in your industry can be an excellent addition. Just be sure to build in enough time for networking as well. 4. Sponsor women's business associations or events. If you are looking to target this market and build awareness, consider sponsoring one of the many women's business associations and events. These range from something as specific as mentoring programs (such as the Step Ahead One-on-One Mentoring Program - www.stepaheadonline.com ) to associations for women exporters (such as the Organization of Women in International Trade - www.owit-toronto.ca ). Most hold regular meetings and special functions. Some provide opportunities for sponsors to speak and showcase their expertise. Contributing material to their newsletters, publications and Web sites is another good way to build your identity among members, as these associations often welcome good quality, educational submissions of interest to members. 5. Share core information on a regular basis. Email or mail information that is considered to be "in our mutual interest." News clippings, industry data, notes from indus
Lisa Levinson

Women of Excellence Call for Entries - 0 views

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    NAFE (National Association of Female Executives) has a women of excellence award and interviews with the women on their site. Reminds me of our women of worth. This is the call for entries as well as the link to the previous winners' interviews.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

LeadLearner: The Principal's Summer Excellence Checklist - 0 views

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    very nice list of areas and steps to stay aware of in administering/leading a school to help students and teachers the best they can do, John Wink, principal, May 29, 2015 on his blog. Lists "leveraging collaboration" and scaffolding teachers' PD several times as steps that must be taken.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Seth's Blog: Avoiding "I'll know it when I see it" - 0 views

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    Excellent post on helping clients define what they want: do it on purpose with new clients; demand benchmarks, describe assignment, restate the problem again...
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Women at Work: BLS Spotlight on Statistics - 0 views

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    Excellent infograph of statistics on women at work in 2011, Bureau of Labor Statistics, US Department of Labor. Includes how women spend their time, average annual expenditures, educational attainment, fatal occupational injuries, ratio of women's to men's earnings by occupation, women's earnings and employment by occupation, etc.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

2011_Social_Media_BH.pdf - 0 views

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    Excellent paper by Jan H. Kietzmann, Kristopher Hermkens, Ian McCarthy, and Bruno Silvestre, Science Direct on social media.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

The Brand Gap - 0 views

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    Excellent Slideshare presentation on The Brand Gap
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Slide Tips: Dodging Bullet Points in Powerpoint Presentations - Dave Yewman | SlideShar... - 0 views

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    Excellent series of very short (1.5 minutes or less) how-to videos on using PowerPoint presentations by Dave Yewman, published in July 2008 but still relevant today.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Knowledge, Reciprocity and Billy Ray Harris | All of us are smarter than any of us... - 0 views

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    Blog post by Chris Collison on 2.26.13, that discusses reciprocity in fostering a learning atmosphere and adoption of best practice in an organization. Excerpt: "Reciprocity is an important principle for knowledge management, and one which underpins the idea of Offers and Requests. Offers and Requests was a simple approach, introduced to make it easier for Operations Engineers at BP to ask for help, and to share good practice with their peers. The idea was for each business unit to self-assess their level of operational excellence using a maturity model, and identify their relative strengths and weaknesses. In order to overcome barriers like "tall poppy syndrome", or a reluctance to ask for help ("real men don't ask directions"), a process was put in place whereby every business unit would be asked to offer three areas which they felt proud of, and three areas which they wanted help with. The resulting marketplace for matching offers and requests was successful because: i) The principle of offering a strength at the same time as requesting help was non-threatening and reciprocal - it was implicitly fair. ii) The fact that every business unit was making their offers and requests at the same time meant that it felt like a balanced and safe process."
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

A Surge in Learning the Language of the Internet - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    An article view by Jenna Wortham at the New York Times of different online learning sites for mastering computer codes and programming, March 27, 2012. Mentions Codecademy, Girls Develop It, Treehouse, General Assembly, etc. Excerpt: "Peter Harsha, director of government affairs at the association, said the figure had been steadily climbing for the last three years, after a six-year decline in the aftermath of the dot-com bust. Mr. Harsha said that interest in computer science was cyclical but that the current excitement seemed to be more than a blip and was not limited to people who wanted to be engineers. "To be successful in the modern world, regardless of your occupation, requires a fluency in computers," he said. "It is more than knowing how to use Word or Excel but how to use a computer to solve problems." "
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

8 Things That Can Make You Smarter | Next Avenue - 0 views

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    Blog by Annie Murphy Paul, June 20, 2013, PBS Next Avenue on 8 things that can make you smarter. "4. Attention You've probably heard about the "marshmallow test," a famous experiment conducted by psychologist Walter Mischel in the late 1960s. He found that children who could resist eating a marshmallow in return for the promise of two marshmallows later on did better in school and in their careers. Well, there's a new marshmallow test that we face every day: the ability to resist the urge to check email, respond to a text or see what's happening on Facebook or Twitter. We've all heard that because "digital natives" grew up multitasking they excel at it, but in fact, we now know there are information-processing bottlenecks in everybody's brain that prevent us from paying attention to two things at the same time. Focused attention is an important internal situation that we must cultivate in order to fully express our intelligence." Another excerpt: "A common example: The ready availability of technology has convinced many people that they don't need to learn facts anymore, because they can always "just Google it." In fact, research from cognitive science shows that the so-called "21st-century skills" that we're always hearing about - critical thinking, problem-solving, collaboration, creativity - can't emerge in a vacuum. They must develop in the context of a rich base of knowledge that is stored on the original hard drive, one's own brain. For tech to make us smarter, we need to know when to put it away.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Search Tips & Tricks - Inside Search - Google - 0 views

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    Google All Tips and Tricks page for Google Search--excellent list of shortcuts to Google Search
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Meg Jay: Why 30 is not the new 20 | Video on TED.com - 0 views

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    Excellent video on why 20s are critical adult forming period--brain is fully formed for adulthood; "Plan and not quite enough time to do great things"--Leonard Bernstein Musical chair relationships and fear of not being able to sit down at age 30 with partner for life can cause bad decision making Post millennial crisis is not having the career that you want, or family that you want Story of Emma--at age 25--"having an identity crisis". Thought she might want to work in art or entertainment. Lived with boyfriend who displayed temper more than ambition. Head in lap, and sobbed for hour. In case of emergency, please call. who will be there for me? Told her three things that all 20 somethings need to hear: 1. Get identity capital--investment in who you might want to be next. Identity capital begets identity capital. Discounting exploration is not supposed to count when it is procrastination. 2. New piece of capital or person to date comes from weak ties--half of 20 somethings are underemployed, and half of them are not--reaching out to weak ties is how you connect; 3. You can't pick your family but you can pick your friends. You can pick your family and the time is now. The best time to work on your marriage is before you are married. Consciously choosing what you want. Found an old roommate's cousin who helped her get a job; married and has plenty of emergency contacts. One good conversation, one good Ted Talk can have an enormous impact. "Thirty is not the new 20, claim your adulthood, get your identity capital, reach out to weak ties to make your family.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Getting the Mix Right Again: An Updated and Theoretical Rationale for Interaction | And... - 0 views

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    excellent article by Terry Anderson, Athabasca University--Canada's Open University, October 2003, IRRODL, on creating optimum learning conditions online. Makes me want to see an update.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Put Failure in Its Place - Whitney Johnson - Harvard Business Review - 0 views

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    Excellent post on how to treat failure as an opportunity to learn, persevere, and try again
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

#40BetterHours: The Art of Single Tasking | Beth's Blog - 0 views

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    Excellent post by Kanter includes a ten minute video by Manoush Zomorodi on using our time more effectively.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

What are the 2017 trends that will positively shape health? (Responses needed) - 0 views

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    Excellent identification of trends in part because at least three of them are items we have written about
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

A Rap on Race - Brain Pickings - 0 views

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    excellent five part series from Rap on Race in 1970 between James Baldwin and Margaret Mead, captured by Maria Popova, highly appropriate for our current time.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

15 Effective Twitter Tools You Haven't Heard About... Yet - 0 views

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    excellent list of twitter tools for making more effective use of twitter
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