Wednesday, 14. June 2006, 03:02:51
childhood, student life, study, parenting
Parents need to learn how to use multiple points of view when raising children. True, you are the adult and they are the kids. True, you are older and they are younger. True, you know more and have experienced more than they. These facts give you many advantages regarding them but limit your point of view to a superior one.
In fact, they are growing up in a world that is different than the one you grew up in. The challenges they face, the problems they must overcome, and the dangers in their environment are not the ones that you faced when you were young.
So, learn how to relate to them in more open ways.
Give them opportunities to chose real outcomes, even if you think you know what they should chose. Talk it over and explain as best you can what your ideas are and ask them to explain what their ideas are. In this you treat them as equals.
Ask them for help with personal choices. What to wear, what to prepare for dinner, how to spend the weekend. These kinds of things put them in the driver's seat and let them feel 'grown up' and experience the consequences of their choices.
When you must act as the parent, do it in a supportive way. It is easy to criticize without providing true answers or directions. Accepts some rebelliousness from their growing personality as they test limits. But adhere to the limits anyway, in a loving way. If they have homework, then they must do it. Help them or get a tutor for them if they don't understand it. Don't allow them to fail.
Maintain work diaries of their school work that will keep you informed of their progress and learning difficulties. Don't harass the teachers about these problems. Solve them at home with more reading or tutoring to cover the topics in ways that suit your child. The teachers may not be able to do this, and it does no good to demand more from them.
Provide an area at home where they and their friends can go to do the homework together. Encourage your child to set up regular study groups to tackle the harder classes.
These skills: Writing study diaries for reviewing, and creating and using study groups - will be invaluable throughout their education.
Watch out for the killers. Drugs and promiscuous sex are world wide problems. They were in your day as well but the drugs are 'better' and the sex is more dangerous. They face synthetic drugs far more dangerous and addictive than the ones you faced. They face a population with higher percentages of HIV than you faced. They face a more sophisticated user and pusher population than you faced. These dangers will up-end any loving home-life if you are not aware of what is happening until it is too late. So, make sure you are aware of that environment. Don't use drugs yourself. Don't be promiscuous yourself. Don't be a hypocrite. As a last resort, be prepared to move to another place to save your children. If you need to move, to get them away from a situation that they can not get away from themselves, then do it sooner rather than later.
All the hard work that is done in the early years can be wasted if the young person choses to use drugs. All the dreams will be lost if the young person has to start raising a family too soon. All the hopes and dreams will be lost if the young person dies of AIDS.
Raise the children as if they were the hope of humanity. Love them as if they were the most important things in your universe. Guide them in ways that show the results of love and the consequences of fear.
Thursday, 8. June 2006, 15:25:57
ESL, Learn English, student life, study
To use your imagination
______________________ is to create a new world.
To write your thoughts
______________________ is to expand your mind.
To write beautifully
______________________ is to communicate clearly.
To use your curiosity
______________________ is to expand your knowledge.
To be involved in cooperation
______________________ is to embrace success.
To use creativity
______________________ is to increase your potential.
To be organized
______________________ is to use the wisdom of the whole.
To use good design
______________________ is to show your sense of style.
To share your understanding
______________________ is to invite friendship.
To share your experience
______________________ is to invite joy into your life.
by China Jon
Friday, 2. June 2006, 00:21:38
Learn English, study, student life
Teachers usually post the grading criteria somewhere. Be sure to check that and see where you are scoring in each area.
Understand the 'forgetting curve.' It is the basic enemy of any student. To overcome it, you need to keep a study diary so that you can review properly. Cramming for tests is counter productive. It is much better to create a proper review schedule based on your study diary. Simply put, you need to take good notes during the day of what you learned. Include the date.
1. Every day, at the end of the day, but before it gets too late, ask yourself what you learned. Write useful descriptions into your study diary, just as if you were writing about your love-life. Include anything that will be tested. If something is really important, write a reference to the original material in the text or in your class notes.
2. Turn back and read your entry from one week ago. Ask yourself if you still understand it or have forgotten it. Bring it up to your 'got it' level of consciousness.
3. Turn back and read your entry from one month ago. Ask yourself if you still understand it or have forgotten it. Bring it up to your 'got it' level of consciousness.
Improve your reading study habits.
1. Scan the material's graphics, charts, and pictures and their descriptions.
2. Read any study questions found at the back of the section.
3. Read the bold type in the section and try to relate it to the graphics and study questions.
4. Read the first and last sentence in each paragraph.
5. See how many study questions you can /can't answer.
6. Find the material that explains the questions you can't answer and read it thoroughly.
7. If you don't understand it, write the question, and your estimated guess in your class notes, and ASK THE TEACHER the next time you have that class. Keep asking questions in class until you understand it. To ask good questions, you have to think before you speak. Never say 'I don't get it.' You will just make the teacher angry at your stupidity and he won't want to help you. If you ask clear, concise questions that have answers that will help everybody in the class understand the material, the teacher will be very thankful, and will want to help you. He will also give you more class participations points.
Stop telling yourself that you are not good at math. You are not good at math BECAUSE YOU TELL YOURSELF THAT YOU ARE NOT GOOD AT MATH! Students often create mental blocks for themselves by this self-hypnosis. Instead, tell yourself 'Math will give me the keys to the universe.' and 'Math will enable me to win in Las Vegas.' and 'I am falling in love with math!' and 'I never knew how easy math was before!' and 'Finally! I understand math!'
Don't be a loner when you study. Join - or create - study groups. Share notes and insights in regular, organized get together every week. Summarize the points learned this week, last week and main points for this section. Be sure to do your share in these groups or they will kick you out. Asking good questions that help the group understand is acceptable. Saying 'I don't get it' will make you less valuable to the group and they will not want to help you.
Remember to be a real student, not a fake student who just crams for the exams and forgets it all within 2 weeks. Keep notes that are good enough to help you understand something years later, when the topic actually comes up in your future career.
Relax when you have time to relax. Don't worry about it. If you are doing your best, and are using good study/learning habits, then accept - without recriminations - whatever grades you get.