Learning does not work the way most people think it does. The few that figure it out, and are willing to do it regularly, seem 'talented' but anyone can do it.
Sometimes the worst place we can look for advice to learn how to get better at something is by looking to the best. Yet we make that mistake time and time again. . .https://t.co/PgaUOELGFa
A short, intense, fun podcast interview about the great misunderstanding of talent (if it even exists) and mindset stuff. Not the feel good trope mindset has become in schools, but the real deal.
@letsgowin365
Podcast: https://t.co/cxmSmFY7ax
YouTube: https://t.co/uarOOzLK8g
I've kept a journal called, "Essay Thoughts," for years, jotting down things I've figured out about learning that I thought I would share someday. Today is that day, more to come.
Once we start getting good at playing/singing beware The Artist's Curse!
https://t.co/nc7CjmjS3w
Don't worry, I'm not going to sing!
I will talk about the things very few people understand that achieve great performance in ANY domain from math to football and yes, music as well. Anyone can do it!
https://t.co/TiiHjMmSJp
https://t.co/6vnzEG02ZE
https://t.co/g8zkV4Wgh3
Is the paper you need stuck behind a paywall?
Five websites every researcher should know to access any research paper for free
@AcademicChatter@OpenAcademics
@P_A_Kirschner@thebandb@CasperHuls You've gotten it just right enough to get it wrong. Here is a clue to the generalizable benefit of studying a performance art.
https://t.co/5MFRhUQcqL
@hybridconsnance @griffinmusiced Hi @hybridconsnance I Came across this recently https://t.co/NevLEPoYrD It appears to be the final step toward virtuosity. I'm now trying to see how it might be taught in small doses to early stage students (pedagogically). This very well may be what makes young ones seem gifted
If you teach you may want to check this out.
The courses I've been teaching/experimenting with have led to this interactive masterclass format. How to teach students to meet and exceed your expectations every lesson. https://t.co/63DS3b2y8b
@spencerideas He hates a piece of literature he previously loved because of an assignment? Hmmm. . .this type of hyperbole only weakens the intended point. So many moving parts oversimplified into a tweet. This type of thing is why educators are not trusted. We must do better.