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Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Conflict Among Team Members Can Lead to Better Results - 0 views

  • It turns out conflict isn’t always bad. In fact, psychologically it can be extremely positive, especially in a team environment.
  • 1. Inspiring adaptability.
  • 4. Improving productivity.
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  • 3. Championing commitment.
  • 2. Enhancing goal attainment.
  • 5. Embracing constructive change.
  • 6. Creating resolution. 
  • 7. Generating new ideas.
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    article by Sherrie Campbell, Entrepreneur, October 30, 2014 on how to use conflict constructively.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

What's a Good Faith Effort? - 0 views

  • One of the reasons I wanted to post on this topic was that my thinking about the grading process has been fuzzy, and I knew that the effort required to get a post together would help clarify my thinking. Students, on the other hand, see learning as good when it happens easily, without any struggle.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Technology-Enabled Learning Events: What's Now and Next?: Associations Now - 0 views

  • overwhelming majority of associations offer technology-enabled learning like webcasts, virtual conferences, and self-paced tutorials.
  • Association Learning + Technology 2016,
  • five emerging learning formats: massive open online courses (MOOCs), flipped classes, gamified learning, digital badges, and microlearning.
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  • using technology to repeat, reinforce, or sustain learning after participants complete an educational product or service.
  • Nearly a third (31.5 percent) said they do, and 29.4 percent said they plan to do so in the coming year.
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    Tech-Enabled Learning by Whitehorne, Associations Now, January 2016, refers to recent survey on associations using technology to help their members/staff learn
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

MindSet: A Book written by Carol Dweck. Teaching a growth mindset creates motivation an... - 0 views

  •  
    promotional page on Carol Dweck's Mindset with many good links
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

How to Build Good Habits - 0 views

  • Goals should be the big picture items that you wish to someday accomplish. Your quotas on the other hand are the minimum amounts of work that you must get done every single day to make it a reality.
  • Professor Fogg’s entire system on Tiny Habits is built around this principle that it’s better to set micro quotas to get out of the analysis phase and right into the action:
  • An “Ahscrewit!” moment is any specific instance where you throw your arms up in the air and say, “Screw this, it’s not worth the effort!”
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  • “analysis paralysis,” or
  • Identify where exactly ‘getting started’ falls apart for you and try to create shortcuts so that the uncomfortable moment is lessened,
  • For those “what the hell moments,” some startlingly simple advice is to just focus on the total days you’ve done your habit, rather than the fact that you broke the chain.
  • Making too many decisions is a part of this problem: Baumeister’s research on mental energy suggests that acts of self-control and self-regulation deplete mental resources in future activities.
  •  
    by Gregory Ciotti, good tips and research links on building good habits
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Save Our Inboxes! Adopt the Email Charter! - 0 views

  •  
    Email charter.org ten rules to reverse the email spiral into Twitter-like mountains of messages
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Online Communities Depend on Online Volunteers - NTEN - 0 views

  • “online communities” – the thousands of discussion forums allowing like-minded people to find one another, keep in touch, and share information. Most often these online communities are started by one or two highly motivated and unpaid individuals (aided by the amazing availability of free platforms to host such groups), and participation by all subscribers is intentional and voluntary. They operate on the principle of exchange, since if everyone lurks and never posts, no helpful ideas can emerge.
  • I asked them about how they worked with online volunteers and at first they said they didn’t have any.  Naturally, I soon changed their perception. In fact, NTEN depends on the freely donated time and skills of its involved members.
  • Why is it important to recognize this quasi-invisible workforce? Because seeing and valuing the volunteer nature of this service will let you appreciate and strengthen it. Further, it’s possible to apply the principles of volunteer management to make such volunteer participation easier and more productive. For example:
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  • Recruit More Volunteers
  • Give Volunteers the Information and Tools They Need
  • Monitor Work
  • Say Thanks Often and Sincerely
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    article by Susan Ellis on virtual volunteering, 2014. Emphasizes that nonprofits do not recognize that they have virtual volunteers writing blog posts, maintaining websites, and doing many other tasks at a distance.
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