Latest Episodes for this Channel
Thu October 30 2008
In this episode, I talk with Elaine Weitzman from the Hanen Centre. The Hanen Centre is an international organization focused on helping parents and e...
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In this episode, I talk with Elaine Weitzman from the Hanen Centre. The Hanen Centre is an international organization focused on helping parents and educators enhance the language and literacy skills
of young children. The programs they have been developed are research-based and the information they offer parents is practical, easy, every day things we can do to truly enhance how our children
lear...
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In this episode, I talk with Elaine Weitzman from the Hanen Centre. The Hanen Centre is an international organization focused on helping parents and educators enhance the language and literacy skills
of young children. The programs they have been developed are research-based and the information they offer parents is practical, easy, every day things we can do to truly enhance how our children
learn. The Hanen centre has come out with a yearly calendar that gives parents and teachers a month by month, week by week resource of how to specifically help build critical language skills for
young children. This is a straight-forward, easy to use guide to doing simple things that can have a big, long term impact on your child's education and literacy.To give you some perspective on how
important this is, a recent show entitled "Going Big" on This American Life by Ira Glass featured a segment regarding the Harlem Children's Zone, an ambitious program focused on helping parents help
their children in the same way the Hanen Centre does- and it's working miracles in terms of improving children's scholastic outcomes.It's simple things, like reading to your child, asking them
questions, talking about emotions, answering those endles "Why?" questions that help spark your child's curiosity about the world and encourage them to develop these critical skills necessary for
later literacy and academic success.Please contact the Hanen Centre through their website at www.hanen.org. The calendar for 2009 is now available, and sample months are available on their
website.Click here to listen to Elaine Weitzman, Hanen Center- Developing Early Language Skills with your kids
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Tue October 21 2008
In the second half of my conversation with Marcus Buckingham, we discuss why kids with learning difference don't always fit into a standard model, but...
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In the second half of my conversation with Marcus Buckingham, we discuss why kids with learning difference don't always fit into a standard model, but how it's even more important that we find things
that engage them and make them shine. Every child has something terrific and unique to contribute, and too often, the one-size fits all system ignores what individuals can add to the mix.We discuss
ho...
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In the second half of my conversation with Marcus Buckingham, we discuss why kids with learning difference don't always fit into a standard model, but how it's even more important that we find things
that engage them and make them shine. Every child has something terrific and unique to contribute, and too often, the one-size fits all system ignores what individuals can add to the mix.We discuss
how self-esteem is great, but self-efficacy, performance and contribution are the real measures of success. In the end, success should be defined by finding out where you can make the greatest
contribution, not always by external metrics of bank accounts. Many kids with learning difficulties have gone on to be wildly successful by almost every metric as adults, ranging from doctors, like
Dr. Edward Hallowell, to actors like Henry Winkler and Tom Cruise, to business people, like Charles Schwab. Part of this success is not about an easy path, but finding where on the path they seemed
to belong, and that's what I think we wish for all of our children.Marcus Buckingham is currently on a book tour across the Country- you can check this out at his website, www.marcusbuckingham.com.
Marcus is also hosting an online seminar you can take as time suits as part of Oprah Winfrey's Change Your Life program, which you shouldn't miss. And I guarantee that Marcus's new book, The Truth
About You is well worth the purchase price.For visitors to the website, I am running a special contest! Send an email to ldpodcast@gmail.com by November 1, 2008, with your feedback about the
interview with Marcus Buckingham, and you can win an audio book version of Marcus's first book, "First, Break all the Rules", and a copy of The Truth About You. We'll randomly select a winner from
all entrants!Click here to listen to Marcus Buckingham- The Truth about You
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Tue October 14 2008
Show #97- Marcus Buckingham, The Truth About You, Part 1I've been a fan of Marcus Buckingham's work for years. Through his books, I've helped to ident...
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Show #97- Marcus Buckingham, The Truth About You, Part 1I've been a fan of Marcus Buckingham's work for years. Through his books, I've helped to identify what I do best, and it's helped me focus on
where I can be most helpful and productive. Marcus has a brand new Kit out called the Truth About You- which combines a book, DVD, small pad to track strengths and weaknesses and links to online
materia...
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Show #97- Marcus Buckingham, The Truth About You, Part 1I've been a fan of Marcus Buckingham's work for years. Through his books, I've helped to identify what I do best, and it's helped me focus on
where I can be most helpful and productive. Marcus has a brand new Kit out called the Truth About You- which combines a book, DVD, small pad to track strengths and weaknesses and links to online
material, that is truly excellent. I admit having some initial skepticism, as I am not a big "kit" person, but I was really impressed by everything, especially the DVD material. So much that I sat my
kids down to watch as well, to reinforce that they need to start looking at what they do best, every day, for themselves.The first half of my conversation with Marcus addresses what strengths are,
and why this is so much more than just what your child is good at, or some mystic way to boost their self-esteem. A strengths-based approach is trying to help your child figure out where they are
most effective- where they contribute the most, as well as what gives them the most joy and success. This is about actual performance and outcomes for kids, not just puffery. And importantly, Marcus
also talks about his own experiences with his son, and why we have to help kids honor who they are and make the most of it every day.In the second half, we talk more about how we need to help kids
get really specific about their strengths and where they're most effective. In the DIY culture, we're all supposed to be the est at everything, but in reality, it means we may be a jack of all trades
but a master at none. We ask kids to be perfect at all aspects of school, yet do very little to let them really investigate and hone their areas of interest and natural talent. This does not mean
doing the easy thing- nothing's harder than continuously honing and improving your skills- and this has the side effect of building resiliency along the way- a one-two punch for setting kids on a
path of knowing who they are and realizing how very much they have to offer. Click here to listen to Show #97- Marcus Buckingham- The Truth About You
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Thu October 02 2008
In this second part of my interview with Dr. Van Schaack, we talk about how technology can help students, and what it can't do. One of the most import...
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In this second part of my interview with Dr. Van Schaack, we talk about how technology can help students, and what it can't do. One of the most important things we need to remember is that the tech
might make some things easier, but it doesn't replace real learning.The crux of this new "computer in a pen" is that while you are taking notes in a regular spiral notebook (on special paper with a
wate...
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In this second part of my interview with Dr. Van Schaack, we talk about how technology can help students, and what it can't do. One of the most important things we need to remember is that the tech
might make some things easier, but it doesn't replace real learning.The crux of this new "computer in a pen" is that while you are taking notes in a regular spiral notebook (on special paper with a
watermark...), it is recording the audio in the classroom, at a meeting- wherever, at the same time. The pen stores your handwriting, diagrams, and notes exactly how you write them, and this will get
transferred to your PC as a PDF file- just like you took a picture of your notes. It also syncs the audio to exactly when you wrote those words, so whenever you go back to your notes and tap on the
word, online or offline, you can hear the audio recorded at that moment. Moreover, your notes also become searchable, so you can find exactly when the professor was talking about the effects of
inflation in the economy, or what would be on the midterm.So you are saying, "Cool, but is it worth the cost?"Research into how people learn best shows that notetaking is important in the learning
process- but when they looked deeper into why, they found that the value is in having this external storage system for information. And if you know that capture of information is worthless without
having meaningful access to it, making all of your notes searchable takes on greater meaning, even if there is no accompanying audio! Now, good note taking is a skill in and of itself. People talk at
40 -50 phonemes a second, much faster than people can read or write. Studies also show the cognitive load of listening to a lecture and taking notes is as strenuous as playing grandmaster-level
chess. So assuming even the best notetakers can't keep up with the lecturer, word for word, maybe we need to alter how notes are taken in class, and add the ability to rehear and fill in details
later as a better strategy.For me, I became intrigued with this "gadget" because I could finally get a handle on what my kids were taking for notes during class, and afterwards, be able to compare
what the teacher was saying to what my child was writing- and in the process, we're trying to hep him build a more effective note taking and studying strategy, that he will surely need for high
school and college. Factor in his poor handwriting, and this tool can really help make up for a cognitive and fine motor task that is very difficult for him.This is not really an infomercial for this
product, but a show where you can hear about how something like this product might really make a difference in the classroom- also as a tool for teachers to provide meaningful audio feedback to
students, that students are more likely to use to change their future performance, as well as understand the time and effort the teacher is putting into reviewing their work- critique becomes more
meaningful, even if the student and teacher are not in the same place at the same time.I'm excited about this product and how it's working so far for us, and I hope you'll find the science behind the
learning process as exciting as I do.Oh, and someone posted on the blog that if you use this code, SCRIBE5A20 on the Livescribe site, you can receive a 5% discount on the purchase of the pen, which
is great!Click here to listen to Dr. Andy Van Schaack and the Livescribe Pen- Part II
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Mon September 29 2008
I had the pleasure of speaking with Dr. Andy Van Schaack from Vanderbilt University about Education and Instructive Technology. We spoke specifically ...
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I had the pleasure of speaking with Dr. Andy Van Schaack from Vanderbilt University about Education and Instructive Technology. We spoke specifically about what technology can and cannot do to aid
education and learning. We spoke about how it's even more important to go beyond just research-based learning and look at evidence-based instruction, working with what we know about psychology and
brain ...
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I had the pleasure of speaking with Dr. Andy Van Schaack from Vanderbilt University about Education and Instructive Technology. We spoke specifically about what technology can and cannot do to aid
education and learning. We spoke about how it's even more important to go beyond just research-based learning and look at evidence-based instruction, working with what we know about psychology and
brain function to maximize learning in the classroom and beyond.Technology tends to work best when it amplifies human capabilities, but real learning involves being able to take new information and
apply it in novel situations.The tests we're often given in school tends to value cramming versus encoding information for long term retrieval and use, so teachers and students alike have to be on
the look out for testing that requires recall of information, or merely recognizing the appropriate answer.The core issue here is the following: The best learning occurs when there are more
opportunities to respond with feedback. Teachers are invaluable to provide feedback to students, but we have to find a way to do this is a positively reinforcing way that mentors students as they
seek mastery of subjects and material.Dr. Van Schaack is the educational advisor for LiveScribe, which has developed a new computing platform- the Pulse pen- a computer in a pen. The pen uses special
paper that comes in an ordinary spiral notebook; it records fairly high fidelity audio that syncs up perfectly with the words written on the page. The audio and "picture" of the written notes are
then transferred to your PC as a PDF file, where you can listen to the lecture and see the notes being wirtten at the same time. This means you can jump to the exact place in a lecture where a
teacher talks about what's going on the mid-term, for example, without having to listen to the whole lecture again. If students also use the Cornell Notetaking system, they can end up with better and
more effective notes than ever before, making learning easier, especially in complex subjects. Not only that, the notes are searchable for key terms, so you can go exactly to the spot you need in a
notebook to look up a particular piece of information as needed.I purchased one of these for my boys, hoping it will help us teach them how to take more effective notes in class, and I have to say
that the kids have actually been debating over who gets to take the pen to school with them each day. I'm afraid I'm going to have to buy another one, shortly! I've used it for a community meeting I
attended and blogged about for the Philadelphia Inquirer, and was very pleased with the results.The first part of our interview focuses on using technology in education and what it can and cannot
accomplish; the second half, which will be released by the end of this week, will discuss the Livescribe Pulse Smartpen in more detail, including what kind of mental load notetaking has on the brain,
how fast we can process information, the research data about why we take notes in the first place, and how we should be using them, and we talk about how capturing information is fundamentally
useless without access.Links to things discussed on this episode:*Listener feedback*Check out Ken Robinson's presentation at TED in 2006. TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design. It started
back in 1984 as a conference bringing together people from those three worlds. Since then its scope has become ever broader, and I always learn a ton from the talks there- some of the best material
available on the web;The Obviousness of Social and Educational Research Results- NL Gage* Frontline Report- Kids Growing Up Online * BBC News: Basic Sums Stress 1.3Million AdultsCornell Note Taking
technique- Record Reduce (or question) Recite Reflect Review Recapitulate SampleClick Here to listen to Dr. Andy Van Schaack- Understanding Instructional Technology, Part I
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