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Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

10 Management Skills Everyone Should Learn To Be More Productive - 0 views

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    good article in LifeHack on ten things to do to be more productive
Lisa Levinson

Kick Off Your Daily Journaling Habit With This Simple Template - 0 views

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    Patrick Allan from Lifehacker proposes this simple journal template to reflect each day. In the Challenge course with Jane Hart, we are using this at the end of our day as a daily reflection, and then will report via our discussion group about our learning, and respond to others. It is a nice ritual to practice. Part of the exercise at the end of the week is to discuss how we will continue the practice after the 15 weeks are over.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

4 Ways to Overcome Barriers to Change and Make New Habits Stick - 0 views

  • The route to successful change is in the habits we create, it’s achieved by consistent small changes which add up to desired results.“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence then, is not an act, but a habit.”Aristotle
  • 1. Lack of planning
  • 2. Trying too much too soon
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • 3. Focusing on the wrong thing
  • 4. Lack of Self Belief
  • “If you think you can do a thing or think you can’t do a thing, you’re right.”
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    article by Ciara Conlon, Lifehack.org, on increasing one's productivity, making change happen in your life
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

How to Write an Executive Summary to Get Your Ideas Heard - 0 views

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    good example of executive summary at Lifehack
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Notifications Are Evil - 0 views

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    blog post by Clay Johnson, Information Diet author, Lifehacker, Excerpt: "First, let's define notification. In the context of our discussion, a notification is something that comes from a service that the service deems worthy of your attention: The scarlet box at the top of every Google page notifying you of things happening in Google+. The messages you get from Twitter telling you that you have a new message. The email icon that shows up in your system tray telling you that you have a new email. Facebook letting you know what you're missing out on Facebook. Your sister's latest move in Words with Friends." Besides being disrespectful to your attention, notifications like this do something else that's much more nefarious: they train you to be a passive consumer of information rather than an active one. If we don't control the notifications we're receiving, we're forced to react to them: from Google's big red box, to Living Social's notification for a deal on backwaxing." Besides being disrespectful to your attention, notifications like this do something else that's much more nefarious: they train you to be a passive consumer of information rather than an active one. If we don't control the notifications we're receiving, we're forced to react to them: from Google's big red box, to Living Social's notification for a deal on backwaxing."
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Start Every Day as a Producer, Not a Consumer - 0 views

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    blog by Clay Johnson on Lifehacker, 2.23.12, on starting every day as a producer of information, not as a consumer. Excerpt: "The production of information is critical to a healthy information diet. It's the thing that makes it so that your information consumption has purpose. I cannot think of more important advice to give anyone: start your day with a producer mindset, not a consumer mindset. If you begin your day checking the news, checking your email, and checking your notifications, you've launched yourself into a day of grazing a mindless consumption. Starting your day as a producer means that your information consumption has meaning: the rest of the day means consuming information that is relevant to what it is that you're producing. Waking up as a producer frames the rest of your habits. You're not mindlessly grazing on everyone's facebook's statuses. You're out getting what it is you need to get in order to produce. Waking up as a producer is procrastination insurance. But there's something else that being a producer does: it gives you more clarity about what it is that you think."
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Why Technology Is So Addictive, and How You Can Avoid Tech Burnout - 0 views

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    Blog by Adam Dachis on Lifehacker on living with technology, 8.31.10. Outlines the problem and provides answers. We're surrounded by gadgets that demand our attention, constantly fragmenting our ability to properly focus on the task at hand. Living with technology doesn't mean we have to live with an addiction, however. Here's how to beat tech burnout. Back when we were tethered to desktop computers, this wasn't such a problem. First of all, technology had yet to proliferate in society at the enormous level it has nowadays, but more importantly we didn't have little computers (read: smartphones) that we could stick in our pockets. Previously we might check out email at a few convenient intervals during the day. Now these tiny little multitaskers are requesting our attention wherever we go. We have many more opportunities to interact with information and so we run into two more dilemmas: filtering an information overload and using our technology appropriately. The Solutions So what do we do about it? Overcoming a tech addiction and avoiding burnout requires work. There aren't any magic tricks that'll pave the road to freedom, but here are some ideas to get you started. Out of Sight, Out of Mind Stop Multitasking Never Apologize Get Organized
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Why There Aren't More Women in Tech, and Why It Matters, in One Graphic - 0 views

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    beautiful infograph on disparities in technical fields between women and men--men are hired almost twice as often as women, Melanie Pinola, lifehacker
Lisa Levinson

Keep a "Today I Learned" Log of All the Useful Stuff You Learn  - 0 views

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    from Lifehacker by Thorin Klosowski from 2/10/16 Quick overview of taking 5 minutes/day to journal about what you learned during the day. Love the LAF suggestion in the comments: what was Learned; Accomplished; Favorite moment of the day
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

10 Habits Successful People Give Up to Increase Their Productivity - 0 views

  • 2. They don’t do without first learning.Learning is what we do best. The greatest thing about learning is the benefit that we receive in all aspects of our lives. Successful people strive to continue learning new things and expanding on things that they already know.If we stop learning, then the only thing we can do is settle with what we already know; if we settle for that, then there is no way to expand our minds. Expansion is essential on the path to success. Since our minds require learning for expansion, we must never stop seeking new knowledge.Imagine what would have happened if Bill Gates stopped learning and growing. The internet would be much more primitive than it is today. But because he followed his dreams and continued growing, he founded one of the biggest companies in the world and it is still flourishing and growing today.
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    article by at LifeHack on what to stop doing in order to get the right things done
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

This Graphic Explains 20 Cognitive Biases That Affect Your Decision-Making - 0 views

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    great infograph on our outlooks/decision making are biased
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

10 Best Sites That Offer Free Images for Blogs - 0 views

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    Pixabay is the first one!
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

How Seinfeld's Productivity Secret Fixed My Procrastination Problem - 0 views

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    a blog post by Adam Dachis on Seinfeld's Don't Break the Chain way to get certain things done every day
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Top 10 Ways to Trick Yourself Into Getting Rid of Clutter Once and For All - 0 views

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    good article on reducing clutter
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