Monday, August 12, 2013

EDUCATION IS THE KEY TO SUCCESS

You know how you hear the saying "education is the key to success" well as a matter of fact that is true. Education is the key because without that you get nowhere in life, you may only get so far but in the end you go nowhere. People succeed with their amount of education, not saying you have to have a high education just saying always go far and never fall back and to keep striven for the best!!! Giving up dropping out or quitting will leave a person with no success later on down the line, stuff may get hard but one of the ways through life is education!!! So strive and never give up!! J

Education is the key of success. Once you have education you can do anything you want but if you just concentrate on music for example and you make One Track in people go of you. What have you got then? At least with education you have got endless possibilities. I know stressing your brain seems annoying while you’re doing but, I’m sure you realize life is nothing without learning.


I think education is important especially for our and future generations. Education is the key to success, that is totally true, but the big fact is that the person holding the key is the one responsible to open the door which leads to success.

The Quality of Life: Life Story

The quality of life that you have is determined solely by the effort you put into giving your life value, purpose and a reason – Steven Redhead –
The American investment banker was at the pier of a small coastal Mexican village when a small boat with just one fisherman docked. Inside the small boat were several large yellow fin tuna. The American complimented the Mexican on the quality of his fish and asked how long it took to catch them.

The Mexican replied, “Only a little while.”

The American then asked “why didn’t he stay out longer and catch more fish?”
The Mexican said he had enough to support his family’s immediate needs.
The American then asked, “But what do you do with the rest of your time?”

The Mexican fisherman said, “I sleep late, fish a little, play with my children, take siesta with my wife, Maria, stroll into the village each evening where I sip wine and play guitar with my amigos, I have a full and busy life.”

The American scoffed, “I am a Harvard MBA and could help you. You should spend more time fishing and with the proceeds, buy a bigger boat with the proceeds from the bigger boat you could buy several boats, eventually you would have a fleet of fishing boats. Instead of selling your catch to a middleman you would sell directly to the processor, eventually opening your own cannery. You would control the product, processing and distribution. You would need to leave this small coastal fishing village and move to Mexico City, then LA and eventually NYC where you will run your expanding enterprise.”

The Mexican fisherman asked, “But, how long will this all take?”

To which the American replied, “15-20 years.” “But what then?”

The American laughed and said that’s the best part. “When the time is right you would announce an IPO and sell your company stock to the public and become very rich, you would make millions.” “Millions. Then what?”


The American said, “Then you would retire. Move to a small coastal fishing village where you would sleep late, fish a little, play with your kids, take siesta with your wife, stroll to the village in the evenings where you could sip wine and play your guitar with your amigos.”

                                                                       By: Steven Redhead      

Life after Life by: Jill McCorkle

From the knowing grandmother in the novel “Tending to Virginia” to the failing mother stressing out her daughter in the short story “Going Away Shoes,” elderly characters have always played their parts in Jill McCorkle’s small-town, intergenerational fiction. But the “manly voice” with “pipes and whistles in his sound,” as Shakespeare put it, reverberates in its own distinctive fashion in the retirement home setting of McCorkle’s new novel, where the yoga class finds “a whole roomful of old folks breathing deeply and chanting — one sounding like a sewing machine and another a squirrel.”

In its quiet way, “Life After Life,” McCorkle’s sixth novel, is a daring venture — an attempt to tell a big story inside a tiny orbit. At the Pine Haven retirement center in the author’s familiar, fictional Fulton, N.C., dinner is finished early, which is fine with sunny Sadie, “who likes to watch ‘Jeopardy’ in her pajamas.” Other occupants are less delighted with the place: crusty Toby, a retired schoolteacher, repairs to her room, “haunted by little past moments,” and Rachel, once a lawyer up North, sniffs at Southern manners and sweet tea, succumbing to “a wave of time sickness” for her former life.
The prospect of spending hours among these people might seem tedious to a reader not having to bunk at Pine Haven himself (“Who in the hell wants dinner at 5:30?” as feisty Rachel complains), but McCorkle is a poet of the everyday. The 26-year-old house beautician, C. J., asks residents, “Does that feel good?” while rubbing lotion into their “old worn-out feet. Some call them Pat and Mike. Some call them the old dogs. One calls them her little tootsies.”
McCorkle has an ear for Southern banter, both funny and sad. Stanley, another retired lawyer, “often sees the arrival of the funeral home car over at nursing. They try to be discreet but how impossible is that?” Although his theatrically feigned dementia seems an overworked story line, he’s nevertheless comic in his outbursts. “Here I am, big Billygoat Gruff ready for some action,” he proclaims in the dining hall, scandalizing the ladies.
McCorkle wisely seeks out connection, gnarled hands reaching for others as the clock ticks down. As if trying to supply more oxygen for her narrative, she expands Pine Haven society to include the family that lives next door, most engagingly 12-year-old Abby, who treats the residents like surrogate grandparents. Less successfully drawn is Abby’s mother, restless in her marriage and, like the beautician and a hospice volunteer named Joanna, looking for love in all the wrong places.
The back stories for these women tend to divert the reader’s focus from the main action at Pine Haven. And the good-­hearted Joanna, who composes mini-­biographies for recently deceased residents, has a suspiciously polished literary style for a woman who spends most of her time running a hot dog emporium.
Clearly, McCorkle is after more than final dramas. The novel’s title hints at resurrection, but don’t mistake “Life After Life” for a peek at heaven in the classic sense. For each character reaching Shakespeare’s seventh age, “sans everything,” McCorkle offers a heightened, stream-of-consciousness journey, punctuated with a last glance backward. But the real successes in this novel are found in simple, often luminous moments this side of the great divide — when, for example, Stanley puts Herb Alpert’s “Taste of Honey” on his antique stereo, welcoming Rachel into his arms. “We can dance to this one,” she says. “We can pretend it’s 1965.”

Roy Hoffman is the author of an essay collection, “Alabama Afternoons,” and a forthcoming novel, “Come Landfall.”

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Cooperative Learning

Cooperative learning 


                - is an approach to organizing classroom activities into academic and social learning experiences. It differs from group work, and it has been described as "structuring positive interdependence." Students must work in groups to complete tasks collectively toward academic goals. Unlike individual learning, which can be competitive in nature, students learning cooperatively capitalize on one another’s resources and skills (asking one another for information, evaluating one another’s ideas, monitoring one another’s work, etc.).Furthermore, the teacher's role changes from giving information to facilitating students' learning. Everyone succeeds when the group succeeds. Ross and Smyth (1995) describe successful cooperative learning tasks as intellectually demanding, creative, open-ended, and involve higher order thinking tasks. Five essential elements are identified for the successful incorporation of cooperative learning in the classroom.

Types:

Formal cooperative learning 
              - is structured, facilitated, and monitored by the educator over time and is used to achieve group goals in task work (e.g. completing a unit). Any course material or assignment can be adapted to this type of learning, and groups can vary from 2-6 people with discussions lasting from a few minutes up to a period. Types of formal cooperative learning strategies include jigsaw, assignments that involve group problem solving and decision making, laboratory or experiment assignments, and peer review work (e.g. editing writing assignments). Having experience and developing skill with this type of learning often facilitates informal and base learning.[13] Jigsaw activities are wonderful because the student assumes the role of the teacher on a given topic and is in charge of teaching the topic to a fellow classmate. The idea is that if the student can teach something, he/she would have already learned the material.
Informal cooperative learning 
             - incorporates group learning with passive teaching by drawing attention to material through small groups throughout the lesson or by discussion at the end of a lesson, and typically involves groups of two (e.g. turn-to-your-partner discussions). These groups are often temporary and can change from lesson to lesson (very much unlike formal learning where 2 students may be lab partners throughout the entire semester contributing to one another’s knowledge of science). Discussions typically have four components that include formulating a response to questions asked by the educator, sharing responses to the questions asked with a partner, listening to a partner’s responses to the same question, and creating a new well-developed answer. This type of learning enables the student to process, consolidate, and retain more information learned.[13]
In group-based cooperative learning
             - these peer groups gather together over the long term (e.g. over the course of a year, or several years such as in high school or post-secondary studies) to develop and contribute to one another’s knowledge mastery on a topic by regularly discussing material, encouraging one another, and supporting the academic and personal success of group members. Base group learning is effective for learning complex subject matter over the course or semester and establishes caring, supportive peer relationships, which in turn motivates and strengthens the student’s commitment to the group’s education while increasing self-esteem and self-worth. Base group approaches also make the students accountable to educating their peer group in the event that a member was absent for a lesson. This is effective both for individual learning, as well as social support.

Cooperative Learning Techniques:

               Schul (2011) discusses cooperative learning techniques. There are a great number of cooperative learning techniques available. Some cooperative learning techniques utilize student pairing, while others utilize small groups of four or five students. Hundreds of techniques have been created into structures to use in any content area published by Dr. Spencer Kagan (1994). Among the easy to implement structures are Think-Pair-Share, Think-Pair-Write, and variations of Round Robin. A well known cooperative learning technique is the Jigsaw, Jigsaw II and Reverse Jigsaw. Anne Brown has made many contributions to cooperative learning with the Reciprocal Teaching technique.
  • Think Pair Share
Originally developed by Frank T. Lyman (1981), Think-Pair-Share allows for students to contemplate a posed question or problem silently. The student may write down thoughts or simply just brainstorm in his or her head. When prompted, the student pairs up with a peer and discusses his or her idea(s) and then listens to the ideas of his or her partner. Following pair dialogue, the teacher solicits responses from the whole group.[19]
Students are members of two groups: home group and expert group. In the heterogenous home group, students are each assigned a different topic. Once a topic has been identified, students leave the home group and group with the other students with their assigned topic. In the new group, students learn the material together before returning to their home group. Once back in their home group, each student is accountable for teaching his or her assigned topic.
  • Jigsaw II
Jigsaw II is Robert Slavin's (1980) variation of Jigsaw in which members of the home group are assigned the same material, but focus on separate portions of the material. Each member must become an "expert" on his or her assigned portion and teach the other members of the home group.
  • Reverse Jigsaw
This variation was created by Timothy Hedeen (2003), It differs from the original Jigsaw during the teaching portion of the activity. In the Reverse Jigsaw technique, students in the expert groups teach the whole class rather than return to their home groups to teach the content.
  • Reciprocal Teaching
Brown & Paliscar (1982) developed reciprocal teaching. It is a cooperative technique that allows for student pairs to participate in a dialogue about text. Partners take turns reading and asking questions of each other, receiving immediate feedback. Such a model allows for students to use important metacognitive techniques such as clarifying, questioning, predicting, and summarizing.It embraces the idea that students can effectively learn from each other.
  • The Williams
Students collaborate to answer a big question that is the learning objective. Each group has differentiated questions that increases in cognitive ability to allow students to progress and meet the learning objective.
  • STAD (or Student-Teams-Achievement Divisions)
Students are placed in small groups (or teams). The class in its entirety is presented with a lesson and the students are subsequently tested. Individuals are graded on the team's performance. Although the tests are taken individually, students are encouraged to work together to improve the overall performance of the group.



Research supporting cooperative learning

             Research on cooperative learning demonstrated “overwhelmingly positive” results and confirmed that cooperative modes are cross-curricular. Cooperative learning requires students to engage in group activities that increase learning and adds other important dimensions.[ The positive outcomes include: academic gains, improved race relations and increased personal and social development. Brady & Tsay (2010) report that students who fully participated in group activities, exhibited collaborative behaviours, provided constructive feedback and cooperated with their group had a higher likelihood of receiving higher test scores and course grades at the end of the semester. Results from Brady & Tsay’s (2010) study support the notion that cooperative learning is an active pedagogy that fosters higher academic achievement (p. 85). Cooperative learning has been found to also increase attendance, time on task, enjoyment of school and classes, motivation, and independence.
Slavin states the following regarding research on cooperative is learning which corresponds with Brady & Tsay’s (2010) findings.
  • Students demonstrate academic achievement
  • Cooperative learning methods are usually equally effective for all ability levels.
  • Cooperative learning is effective for all ethnic groups
  • Student perceptions of one another are enhanced when given the opportunity to work with one another
  • Cooperative learning increases self-esteem and self-concept
  • Ethnic and physically/mentally handicapped barriers are broken down allowing for positive interactions and friendships to occur
Johnson and Johnson (1989) concluded cooperative learning results in:
  • Increased higher level reasoning
  • Increased generation of new ideas and solutions
  • Greater transfer of learning between situations
According to Reijo Siltala cooperative learning is significant in business field.
  • Cooperative learning can be seen as characteristic for innovation businesses.
  • The five stage division on cooperative learning creates a useful method of analysing learning in innovation businesses.
  • Innovativity connected to cooperative learning seems to make the creation of innovations possible.


Limitation

Cooperative Learning has many limitations that could cause the process to be more complicated than first perceived. Sharan (2010) describes the constant evolution of cooperative learning as a threat. Due to the fact that cooperative learning is constantly changing, there is a possibility that teachers may become confused and lack complete understanding of the method. Teachers implementing cooperative learning may also be challenged with resistance and hostility from students who believe that they are being held back by their slower teammates or by students who are less confident and feel that they are being ignored or demeaned by their team.
Students often provide feedback in the success of the teamwork experienced during cooperative learning experiences. Peer review and evaluations may not reflect true experiences due to perceived competition among peers. A confidential evaluation process may help to increase evaluation strength.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Attitude

1. A scientist must be curious about the world:

Galileo Galilei's curiosity about the heavenly bodies made him the first person to use a telescope to study the moon, the sun, the planets and the stars.

2. A scientist is logical and systematic:

Among the reasons why Gregor Mendel discovered the principles of heredity when others have failed was his logical experimental methods and his careful an
d accurate record keeping.

3. A scientist is open-minded:

An open-minded person is one who can modify plans or discard hypotheses if necessary. One such person was Johannes Kepler who was hired to develop evidence that planets moved along perfect circles.

4. A scientist is intellectually honest:

Isaac Newton built his laws of motion on the previous work of Galileo and others.

5. A scientist works hard and is persistent:

Marie Curie was the first person ever to be awarded the Nobel Prize twice. It was not surprising considering how hard she worked.

6. A scientist does not jump to conclusions:

John Dalton's atomic theory was backed by experimental evidence. He was not the first to propose that the atom was the smallest particle of matter, but he was the first to use experimental evidence to support his theory.

7. A scientist is a creative and critical thinker:

Albert Einstein was able to derive his theory of relativity because he went beyond what was given and known at that time. He saw links and connections where others did not. He looked at things from different perspectives.

8. A scientist is rational.

9. A scientist is willing to suspend judgment until he is sure of his results.

10.A scientist tries new approaches to arrive at solutions.