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Jenny Gilbert

Things You Really Need to Learn ~ Stephen's Web - 0 views

  • But while you are in school, you should always be taking the opportunity to ask yourself, "what will happen next?" Watch situations and interactions unfold in the environment around you and try to predict the outcome. Write down or blog your predictions. With practice, you will become expert at predicting consequences.
  • The four major types of writing are: description, argument, explanation and definition. I have written about these elsewhere. You should learn to recognize these different types of writing by learning to watch for indicators or keywords.
  • learn how sentences are joined together to form these types of writing.
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  • A lot of writing is fill - wasted words intended to make the author look good, to distract your attention, or to simply fill more space. Being able to cut through the crap and get straight to what is actually being said, without being distracted, is an important skill.
  • find a basic book on informal logic (it will have a title like 'critical thinking' or something like that).
  • The first thing to learn is to actually question what you are told, what you read, and what you see on television. Do not simply accept what you are told. Always ask, how can you know that this is true? What evidence would lead you to believe that it is false?
  • Every day, subject at least one piece of information (a newspaper column, a blog post, a classroom lecture) to thorough scrutiny. Analyze each sentence, analyze every word, and ask yourself what you are expected to believe and how you are expected to feel.
  • you need to repeat it over and over, in order to grow this neural connection.
  • Part of this process involves seeing things through someone else's eyes.
  • When you are empathetic you will begin to seek out and understand ways that help bridge the gap between you and other people. Being polite and considerate, for example, will become more important to you. You will be able to feel someone's hurt if you are rude to them.
  • The trick is to understand how creativity works. Sometimes people think that creative ideas spring out of nothing (like the proverbial 'blank page' staring back at the writer) but creativity is in fact the result of using and manipulating your knowledge in certain ways.
  • Creativity also arises in response to a specific problem: how to rescue a cat, how to cross a gap, how to hang laundry.
  • earn to look for problems to solve, things that merit a response, needs that need to be filled.
  • Creativity, in other words, often operates by metaphor, which means you need to learn how to find things in common between the current situation and other things you know.
  • Knowing what to say is often a matter of structure.
  • Inside this overall structure, writers provide arguments, explanations, descriptions or definitions, sometimes in combination.
  • Learning to write clearly is a matter of learning about the tools, and then practice in their application. Probably the best way to learn how to structure your writing is to learn how to give speeches without notes. This will force you to employ a clear structure (one you can remember!) and to keep it straightforward. I have written more on this, and also, check out Keith Spicer's book, Winging It.
  • Then practice your writing every day.
  • When you learn, you are trying to create patterns of connectivity in your brain.
  • But it is important to at least recognize that there are other people, and that they live in their own world as well.
  • Think about learning how to throw a baseball. Someone can explain everything about it, and you can understand all of that, but you still have to throw the ball several thousand times before you get good at it. You have to grow your neural connections in just the same way you grow your muscles.
  • but learning is more like recognition than remembering.
  • you should be asking, "what is the pattern" (and not merely "what are the facts")
  • Learning to learn is the same as learning anything else. It takes practice.
  • Think, always, about how you are learning and what you are learning at any given moment. Remember,
  • Every day, seek to be active in some way
  • Advertisers make you feel badly so you'll buy their product, politicians make you feel incapable so you'll depend on their policies and programs, even your friends and acquaintances may seek to make you doubt yourself in order to seek an edge in a competition.
  • but they are meaningless if you do not feel personally empowered to use them; it's like owning a Lamborghini and not having a driver's license.
  • Valuing yourself is partially a matter of personal development, and partially a matter of choice.
  • How we think about ourselves is as much a matter of learning as anything else.
  • But if you repeat, and believe, and behave in such a way as to say to yourself over and over, I am valuable, then that's what you will come to believe.
  • For example, it's the belief that you are good enough to have an opinion, have a voice, and have a say, that your contributions do matter. It's the belief that you are capable, that you can learn to do new things and to be creative. It is your ability to be independent, and to not rely on some particular person or institution for personal well-being, and autonomous, capable of making your own decisions and living your live in your own way.
  • Tell yourself that you are smart, you are cool, you are strong, you are good, and whatever else you want to be. Say it out loud, in the morning - hidden in the noise of the shower, if need be, but say it. Then, practice these attributes. Be smart by (say) solving a crossword puzzle. Be cool by making your own fashion statement. Be strong by doing something you said to yourself you were going to do. Be good by doing a good deed. And every time you do it, remind yourself that you have, in fact, done it.
  • your dedication to some purpose or goal. But it is also your sense of appreciation and dedication to the here and now.
  • What is worth doing? That is up to you to decide.
  • If you don't decide what is worth doing, someone will decide for you,
  • you control your thoughts. Your thoughts have no power over you;
  • Another aspect of this is the following: what you are doing right now is the thing that you most want to do. Now you may be thinking, "No way! I'd rather be on Malibu Beach!" But if you really wanted to be on Malibu Beach, you'd be there. The reason you are not is because you have chosen other priorities in your life - to your family, to your job, to your country.
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    Really usefull advice for all students but especially VCE students
Jenny Gilbert

Online Course Lady: Writing with Aesop: Conjunctive Adverbs - 0 views

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    Students need to learn when and how to sue these to help their writing flow well. This is a great page to share with them. 
Emmet Brown

Encountering conflict - 8 views

I think the 'war on terror' policy is dead in the water. In the early days it was about attacking Afghanistan, Iraq and possibly Iran. This changed to violent overthrowing of governments with a new...

conflict encountering-conflict refugees rugmaker asylum

Jenny Gilbert

Reading Critically - Interrogating Texts - Harvard Library LibGuides at Harvard Library - 0 views

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    how to fully and actively comprehend texts - in any subject. Note if you want to resell your book use sticky notes on the page. 
Jenny Gilbert

The Best Resources For Learning How To Write Response To Literature Essays | Larry Ferl... - 0 views

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    Oh yes! Thanks @Larryferlazzo
Jenny Gilbert

Global Conflicts Portal - 0 views

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    This would be a good lesson if we had time in the classroom - and did not cost. There is an option on each game to 'try' and there are reflective questions - all this would be good background knowledge work for encountering conflict. If you are a gamer I emcourage you to try it. Let me know how it goes. Ms G
Jenny Gilbert

Lesson Planning and the Common Core: A Unit Based on TED.com | Edutopia - 0 views

  • On my own website, you can learn about how students chose topics and you can download the worksheet that I used to guide them towards their choice.
  • The first thing I did was get the students familiar with the Persuasive/Memoir speech patterns that so many of the TED speeches possess. Many of the presentations, regardless of the length, whether they are 3 minutes or 23 minutes, tend to some share key common traits like: Hook Background Information Narrative Evidence Commentary Theme Call to Action Visuals
  • 1. Metasearching using dogpile What I like about this is that on the page where your results are listed, it categorizes your results in ways that might behoove better research. If the student types in "global warming," then it asks if you would also like results that only focus on "causes of global warming," "effects of global warming," and so on. 2. Google Advanced Search Obviously, the more specific you search, the less work you have to do. Let Google do the work by spending just a little time creating parameters for your results. 3. Google Scholar This can be a little heady, but it has also led to some really interesting results. 4. Reading URLs What does a .org mean? .gov? .edu? What symbols may indicate personal sites? Reading the sentences of the URL is the first step in reliable searching online.
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  • Breaking the Google Homepage Habit
  • Of course, there are also ways to do this same activity online using social bookmarks like CiteUlike , Diigo ,
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    some good tips and ideas for preparing and researching your oral presentation in this blog post. 
Jenny Gilbert

Evernote- A Teachers Perspective by Rebecca Spink on Prezi - 2 views

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    great presentation on using evernote - lots of how to videos and links,. 
Jenny Gilbert

Half an Hour: How to Write Articles and Essays Quickly and Expertly - 1 views

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    useful writing advice for VCE students
Jenny Gilbert

emrgnc - parable of the starfish - 0 views

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    the parable of the starfish illustrates that every little bit helps. How can this be applied to encountering conflict? 
Jenny Gilbert

Human Rights and Australia: how our country deals with Reconciliation and Refugees - 0 views

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    scroll down to docs specifically on refugees
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