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riss leung

John Cleese on Creativity - YouTube - 0 views

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    Creativity is not an ability that you have or do not have. It is absolutely unrelated to IQ.  Creativity can not happen in closed mode- the mode we generally are in at work when we feel stressed and a bit manic. Open mode is relaxed and less purposeful and allows more creativity. Things you need to be creative: 1. Space- a quiet space where you will be undisturbed 2: Time- create your space for a specific period of time (pomodoro technique) Must allow a good chunk of time. About 1.5hrs is good. 3: Time- Play with a problem for a while before you try and resolve it. Better ideas can come later- don't always take the easy options that come early on. Give your mind as long as possible to come up with something original. 4: Confidence- Take risks- saying things silly, illogical and wrong. Nothing is wrong when you are being creative. Any dribble may lead to the breakthrough! 5. Humour- Gets us from closed mode to open mode quicker than anything else. Humour is an essential part of spontaneity and play. The only other rule is that you keep your mind gently around the topic at hand. Resting against the subject in a friendly but persistent way. You may not get the winning thought immediately- it may come tomorrow in the shower. Creativity is easier when you have more people to play with. If there is 1 person around who makes you feel defensive then you will loose your confidence and therefore your creativity. Be positive and build on what has been said.
monika hardy

Smart Money: How schools are saving big bucks - 0 views

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    In these challenging economic times, just about everyone is looking for ways to cut back-even schools. From using virtualization technology to accepting
monika hardy

A Journey In Social Media: Passion: The Secret Ingredient? - 0 views

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    We spend a lot of time as a team debating why certain people are getting proficient at social media (or 2.0 behaviors, or whatever you want to call them), and others -- well -- just aren't. We've studied it from...
monika hardy

Beyond space and time: Fractals, hyperspace and more - New Scientist - 0 views

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    It's easy to understand how three or even four dimensions work, but how about ten? Or one and a half? Or none? Prepare your mind for boggling
monika hardy

Shtetl-Optimized » Blog Archive » The secant had it coming - 0 views

  • maa.org?
  • You know when you’ve taught math properly to a student, because the student feels more powerful and confident than before (just like a successful student of carpentry or basketball). That feeling of power is what inspired me and, I imagine, many others to pursue mathematics or science as a vocation. My belief is that the vast majority of math professors and math teachers don’t see how to “empower” their students in this way, and indeed it is a very hard thing to do. So we settle for either a “cultural understanding” of mathematics or a demonstration of some rote skills.
  • n art portrayed as a cold heartless bureaucracy.
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  • What Lockhardt and I advocate teaching is not “New Math”, not “Back-to-Basics Math”, but something much more radical than either: math.
  • I concluded that brains come in different types Stop doing research, and just teach. It may be a crime to the research community, but it will be an endless boon to people who actually want to learn.
  • The only analogy that seemed to work is that mathematicians are like the tool and die makers of the world: everyone needs what we produce, almost no one is interested in what we do, and even fewer understand just how hard it is.
  • Perhaps we should simply accept that math is going to be like literature or art. A small percent will have the desire and interest to pursue it in highschool and we should just try to avoid turning off the rest enough they might return in their own time
  • We don’t have the resources (name your resource) to even approach the periphery of what Lockhart envisions. It will never happen. You guys live in another world. However, I can tell you this: things are better than ever before, and it is people like you and places like this that make it better.
  • We have so little to lose by sacrificing the current highschool curriculum in favor of discussing actual mathematical ideas (i.e. posing questions, trying to come up with answers). O
    • monika hardy
       
      so little to lose really edupunk isn't so risky really
  • The potentially valuable aspect of studying high school math isn’t learning to solve certain random types of problems. It’s learning to think clearly about deceptively-simple concepts. In doing this you learn to attack problems, generalize techniques, define concepts, make convincing arguments, and find counterexamples. If you need to know the quadratic formula for some weird reason, then all you need to do is look it up. The skills listed above aren’t just useful to scientists, but to lawyers, writers, doctors, etc
  • his comes from
    • monika hardy
       
      read later - good examples - and need to delve into assessment section more
  • The point is you don’t start with definitions, you start with problems. Nobody ever had an idea of a number being “irrational” until Pythagoras attempted to measure the diagonal of a square and discovered that it could not be represented as a fraction. Definitions make sense when a point is reached in your argument which makes the distinction necessary. To make definitions without motivation is more likely to cause confusion
    • monika hardy
       
      great thoughts for an ebook
  • The problem, I think, is that the authors aim to prove rather than to communicate.
    • monika hardy
       
      beware of goals, why are we writing an ebook?
  • Math books should be written, if not in the order the math was actually created, then in the order in which the ideal mathematician might conceivably discover it.
  • pointing out the wrong ways we teach and inspire by writing such a mind numbing repetitive article is quite ironic.
    • monika hardy
       
      that's the way a lot of us do ed. we talk about new things and changes in the same old way
monika hardy

Online Stopwatch - 0 views

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    A Free flash online stopwatch, quick easy to use flash stopwatch! also a countdown timer!
kimhoss

Democracy Dies in the Blinding Light of Day - 0 views

  • But it seems ridiculous that in this time of incredible change that the future of politics has only one possible path or set of options. Coming out of the 1990s and the end of the Cold War, political choice seemed very limited. But now the future is wide open. And there is some hope in that.”
    • kimhoss
       
      Enjoyed the article. I feel the need to share with others as it makes you think about the past, present and obviously the future. Pretty powerful points made which I have highlighted and comment on throughout. Although I am not very argumentative, I can say that democracy has withstood for much longer than many in the past had prescribed and I think as a society we are changing and will continue to change and that is necessary - what was defined and meant in one way in the past is not exactly best defined in that way today. I will be honest to say I don't like change but it is necessary and important for those who are a part of change to be knowledgeable and aware of the process. Democracy is not dead. One cannot return from the dead, but instead it is and has changed and needs to be challenged and needs to be altered to fit the advancing society of today.
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