Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Not "gonna" Turn It Down!
"Company officials say they have no qualms about taking all the tax breaks legally available to them. To do otherwise would be like a consumer “insisting on paying full price during a store sale,” wrote Jeff Brown, a company spokesman. Even E.A.’s competitors acknowledge that its tax strategies aren’t particularly aggressive compared with others in the industry."
POINT TAKEN! Time for Congress to get to work.
Self-Sabotage? or Self-Preservation?
Self-sabotage is an ongoing concern. I appreciate your take on the subject, as it provides another perspective in my ongoing efforts to use it to my benefit. I’ve read some of this research about the fixed and incremental theories of ability, yet this take is interesting. So, I’m wondering if the point is “Never give up! Never surrender!”?
One of my students reached out to me after lecture the other day. He noticed that I was low on energy, even a bit down. I had been trying to hide it, but was truly disappointed that attendance in the class was so low that day. We were covering one of the central topics of the course–
the importance of focusing on adopting an incremental rather than a fixed view of ability and intelligence. To summarize: believing that your ability is fixed is great when the course material is easy (“I’m brilliant!”), but puts students at risk for disengagement when the material is hard and when one doesn’t do well (“I suck; why come to class anyway?”). By contrast, if you believe your ability is something to nurture and grow, those same academic challenges become indicators of growth and development.
As I thought about the poorly attended lecture on the ride home, I realized something. I have been expecting that the incremental message should be enough to motivate my students to do the little, doable things, like coming to class or section, that slowly build up to success. And it dawned on me that it the issue here may not be that the students haven’t been listening to the message about incremental learning, but rather, that they’ve been listening closely.
A recent study by Niiya, Brook, and Crocker, published in 2010
identified study participants whose self-esteem was tied to getting good grades — in other words, people who were invested in doing well academically. Within this group, some people believed that ability is fixed (the entity theorists) and others believed that ability is nurtured through effort (the incremental theorists).
Read more at blogs.berkeley.eduThese findings show us that even when we believe that our abilities are the result of our effort- a mindset I have urged my students to adopt– we are not out of the woods when it comes to academic motivation. The knowledge that our effort (as opposed to our genetics) is tied to our abilities can be threatening precisely because it’s in our hands, and incredibly, puts us at risk for self-sabotaging our own success to protect ourselves– just in case our efforts are not enough.
Wednesday, September 7, 2011
Saturday, September 3, 2011
Science In the Know Now 09/04/2011
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Research shows skeleton to be endocrine organ
tags: Science skeleton endocrine_system body_system research
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Bones: Human Skeletal System WebQuest
webquest for upper elementary (4-5)
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The Skeletal System: Multiple-Choice Questions
tags: science skeleton assessment body body_system multiple_choice
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BBC - Science & Nature - Human Body and Mind - Interactive Body
this is very helpful for students to learn that there are gender differences in skeletal and other body systems.
tags: anatomy Science Interactive education Game gender skeleton body_system
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a variety of sources for this topic: skeletal system; ranked by age level
tags: science skeletal Unit 9: Structure Systems resources hotlist
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tags: anatomy education science skeleton skeletal body body_system
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GetBodySmart: Interactive Tutorials and Quizzes On Human Anatomy and Physiology
online textbook; may be too complicated for elementary
tags: anatomy science physiology biology interactive skeleton system body body_system
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requires Adobe Shockwave player
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BBC - Science & Nature - Human Body and Mind - Interactive Body
games to help students learn various parts of body_systems
tags: science interactive anatomy biology Health skeleton body_system Human Growth & Development
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a 3D look at the various bones in a human skeleton; there is a searchable aspect: look up various animals
tags: science bones anatomy biology human eskeletons body body_system skeleton endoskeleton search comparative_anatomy
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select the animal and find its taxonomic tree
tags: science body_system skeleton taxonomic_tree search species order endoskeleton UT@Austin
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tags: science anatomy biology skeleton interactive
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BBC NEWS | Health | Robo-skeleton lets paralysed walk
tags: Health News science medicine robots skeleton exoskeleton endoskeleton
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The Children's University of Manchester: The Body and Medicines
tags: body skeleton interactive elementary science middle school science
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BBC - Science & Nature - Skeleton jigsaws
tags: Science ScienceandTechnology fossils dinosaurs elementary skeletal systems
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Fuel Our Future Now - Jumpstart Students' STEM Education with Free Teacher Resources
tags: Science education STEM elementary middle school projects