Monday, December 15, 2014

QUICK AND SIMPLE LIFE HACKS: SURVIVAL EDITION

1. Soda can reflector for candle

2. Charcoal in egg carton fire starter

3. Insect repeller, put rosemary or sprinkle Basil on the fire

4. Instant lantern, fill soda can 1/2 fullnof olive oil & for wick, place twisted paper towel down into can wit small piece sticking out of top. 

5. Solar oven: Cut open box makin an open lid. Line with tin foil and place in sun. 

6.  Clean water: place dirty water in  cup. Place one end of the wound up cloth into the dirty water and the other end into a clean cup. Water will drip clean into empty cup. (Boil water to drink)

7.  Compass North: take small metal object like a needle, electrify it by rubbing it against your clothes several times. Place it in a small leaf I a bowl of water and it will turn north. 

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

HOMESCHOOL, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

Should I Homeschool My Kids? Thinking through the school decision.

Are you wondering if homeschooling would be a good option for your kids?  This is the time of year when everyone seems to be thinking about school choices for next year!

This spring, we are finishing up our 6th year of homeschooling.  Next year, I will have a 6th grader, which is hard to believe. There are so many benefits to homeschooling, and although we have some difficult days for sure, we’re committed to continuing – well, for the next year at least!  I do want to say that as much as we like educating our kids at home, we do not believe that the Bible commands homeschooling. Instead, it’s a decision that each family must make.

Should you homeschool your kids?  I don’t know!  But here are some things that might be helpful to think through as you ponder the school issue.

Should I homeschool my kids?

Things to consider:

  • Is my husband on board with homeschooling?  From a Biblical standpoint, it’s important to let our husbands be the leader in our homes.  We need to respect their leadership.  Beyond that, though, it’s just plain miserable to try to make homeschooling work if Dad is not behind it!  I am so thankful to have a husband who helps grade papers, works with the boys on schoolwork in the evenings if need be, and helps with laundry and cleaning because he knows I can’t do it all.  I definitely couldn’t do it without him!
  • Am I truly committed to teaching my children at home?  Or is is possible that I’m just feeling pressured because others are doing it?  Homeschooling is a big commitment, and it’s definitely not something to enter into lightly. Homeschooling involves time, energy, space in your home, and money.  If homeschooling is what God is leading you towards, there are ways to work around all kinds of time, money, and space constraints!  But if your heart is not truly in it, it will be hard to overcome the challenges.  Sometimes it’s difficult to sort out whether or not to you want to homeschool. Every now and then, something happens that confirms our decision to homeschool and makes the hard days worth it.  If you’re feeling unsure, you can always proceed with your best decision, and then see how you feel about it as you go forward. One year, my oldest son was given a partial scholarship at the private school where I was teaching music at the time.  We were so excited and enrolled him right away!  But when it came down to buying the uniforms, I just couldn’t do it!  I realized that even though homeschooling was challenging, I was not ready to give up on it.  There were too many things I enjoyed about experiencing the “little years” at home.
  • Am I hoping to shelter my children from poor influences?   I really believe that homeschooling should not be an attempt to escape from the world.  But at the same time, my husband and I believe that young children are often not ready to “be a light” in their community.  It’s asking a lot for a 5 or 7 year old to stand up for what is right and to not be influenced by the attitudes and behavior around him.  I overheard some sickening things at our neighborhood playground the other day that would have been impossible for my boys to “un-hear” if they had heard them.  As parents, we want to be careful with the lives God has entrusted us with!  I think that homeschooling is not so much a means of sheltering but more an opportunity to build God’s word into the lives of our children so that they will be ready to operate in the world in which they live.

Common concerns that don’t need to be deal breakers for homeschooling:

  • Do I have enough patience to homeschool?  The answer to this is no.  No, you don’t.  And I don’t either!  But by God’s grace, I am growing in patience (and the ability to handle multiple needs at once) and my children are growing in their ability to wait and share.   Perfection in mothering is certainly not a prerequisite to homeschooling.  Also keep in mind – no classroom teachers are perfect either!  And they have 15-20 or more students to deal with.  The key to homeschooling is being willing to work through the challenges.
  • What if I don’t have an education background?  It is not necessary to have an education degree to homeschool your children, unless of course you live in a state that requires this.  I have an education degree, but I certainly don’t remember everything that I was taught in school!  I’m often learning along with my kids, and that’s okay!
  • I’m afraid that we’ll have too many interruptions.  Over the past 6 years, we’ve had interruptions that range from mild (doctor’s appointments, errands, etc.) to severe (selling our house and moving, a baby with severe infant reflux and feeding difficulties), and yet my 5th grader tested on grade level and above on a standardized achievement test.  We compensate for the interruptions by doing some school work throughout the summer, and some of the loss is naturally compensated for by the fact that it doesn’t take as long to cover the material when you’re working one-on-one.
  • I’m worried about socialization.  My oldest son is a VERY social kind of guy.  However, I don’t think that homeschooling harms him at all!  He plays with neighborhood kids, goes to children’s choir and Awana at church, and has participated in various sports.  I think that homeschoolers are often better at social skills because they learn to get along with and appreciate a wide range of age groups and not just their same-age peers.

How do I know if I should homeschool?

Some benefits that we love about homeschooling:

  • Time with my children.  I really enjoy being with my kids and learning with them.  I can’t imagine how much I would miss if they were gone all day, followed by a hurried evening of homework and getting ready for the next day!
  • The freedom to teach from a Christian worldview.  I love being able to study all subjects and especially history and science from a Christian point of view!  We absolutely love our science curriculum (Apologia – Young Explorers series).  Right now, we’re also reading a book on church history.  I love that we have the time to do this.
  • The opportunity to pursue interests and to develop a real love for learning.  Yes, we have our interruptions, but we also don’t have to stop when the clock says to stop!  If we’re enjoying a project, we can keep going.  We can go more in depth with a topic that we want to study.  All of this fosters a good attention span and a love for learning.  I feel like I am able to help my kids learn how to learn.
  • The flexibility to choose our own schedule.  I love the fact that we can take days off when the weather is beautiful.  We did school on days when the public schools were closed for snow and ice (what else would we have done?) and now we can take some days off in the spring.  Also, I don’t have to worry about whether half-sick kids should be going to school or not.  And they can sleep in if they need to.  Basically, we have some much-needed margin in our lives.
  • Having the time to volunteer or take field trips that we want to take.  I enjoy having the flexibility to go help plant flowers at our church, visit the aquarium, or spend the day at the nature center.  I think it’s good for the boys to be able to spend time serving and working with their hands rather than sitting in a classroom all day.

If you’ve made the decision to homeschool, you might find these resources helpful:

  • My kids have not ever been to school, so we have not had the experience of starting school and then making the decision to homeschool.  For some thoughts on leaving the public schools, check out this post from Creekside Learning.





Monday, July 14, 2014

Learning Algebra on the Right Side of the Brain

Learning Algebra on the Right Side of the Brain

Why is algebra (perhaps the "language of God") such a high-stress, high-failure subject? One of every two students fails the course and walks away with the harmful conclusion, "I guess that I am no good at mathematics!" I want to present three explanations for this strange result that disables 50 percent of our student population. I will conclude with solutions that promise an exciting turn-around for students of all ages.

Seventh-graders were asked to solve this word problem: "Orville and Wilbur owned a bicycle shop which also sold tricycles. One day, they decided to take an inventory of their stock. They each volunteered to count one item, which would have worked out just fine if one had counted bicycles and the other had counted tricycles. But Orville and Wilbur were both very independent thinkers. Orville counted the number of pedals in the shop and Wilbur counted the number of wheels.

     "Orville found that they had 144 pedals in the shop, and Wilbur found that they had 186 wheels. All pedals and wheels were actually parts of either bicycles or tricycles. They were just about to start over with their inventory when their friend Kitty, who was a good problem solver, challenged them to figure out the number of bicycles and tricycles from the inventory they had already done. Can you help the Wright brothers? How many bicycles and tricycles did they have in their shop?..." (San Jose Mercury News, April 3, 1995).

     Some kids perceive this as a fun puzzle and joyfully speculated about possible ways to develop an answer. Other youngsters perceive this word problem as absolute nonsense. They reason: We are talking about the Wright brothers, owners of a bicycle shop in Ohio. The brothers are famous for doing the impossible---inventing a bicycle that flies in the air. Secondly, these thoughtful students (who probably will get "F" in algebra) do not believe that the geniuses who invented the airplane would waste valuable hours counting wheels and pedals when the simple solution is to count bicycles and tricycles. Surely these intellectual giants have something better to do with their time.

Nobody cares about word problems--- not even the writers of algebra textbooks

The reason we find nonsensical word problems in those textbooks is that it is impossible to find meaningful problems in real life. (I challenge anyone to e-mail me one meaningful word problem from the real life of ordinary people that can be solved with algebra. You can reach me at TPRWORLD@aol.com) Writers must invent synthetic word problems that are of no interest to anyone, including those who wrote the textbook. For example, Ellen is 7 years older than her sister, and the sum of their ages is 21 years. How old is each? First, this is a puzzle and not a problem because no one cares one way or the other about Ellen or her sister.

Secondly, not only is the answer already known, but the answer came before the question. Unless you already know the ages of both Ellen and her sister, how can you conclude (a) that Ellen is 7 years older than her sister, and (b) the sum of their ages is 21 years? The ages of Ellen and her sister had to be known in advance. So why ask the question?

Here is another example taken from a textbook used in the first algebra course. Notice that the question will be of interest to no one---not even the author of the algebra text: "In a class of 37 pupils there are five more girls than boys. How many boys and how many girls are there?" We could continue with those mind-numbing word problems about trains going in opposite directions and meeting somewhere on the journey. Why would anyone want to predict where they will cross paths and how long it will take to do this? I wonder whether professional railroad personnel have ever bothered to sort out the answers to this puzzle. Does it have a trace of relevancy to the operation of a railroad? Is it of any interest to passengers on a train? If it is of no concern to those who operate or ride trains, why should it be of concern to us?

Explanation Number 2 for why students fail

There is the assumption that algebra is absolutely positively an essential skill for boys and girls in all walks of life. Not only does everyone need algebra, but students cannot hope to pass those entrance examinations to enter college without an understanding of algebra. 

I invite you to visit any shopping mall in America, stop ten people at random, and ask this question: "Once you were out of school, can you think of a time in your life when you used algebra to solve an important problem? If so, what was it?"

I predict that you will not find one person in ten who will answer in the affirmative. Even airline pilots have tables and ready-made graphs for plotting distances and estimating time of arrival. People in finance have ready-made tables for finding the answers to financial problems that they frequently encounter such as compound interest. Most people are successful in their everyday lives without using algebra.

Well then, how about getting into college? We need algebra for that. True, but this is an artificial gate for admittance. It is like the requirement that candidates for officer training, especially flying, be a college graduate. In an interview with an Israeli Air Force general, 60 Minutes reporter, Mike Wallace, discovered that one did not have to be a college graduate to be accepted into the Israeli flight program---a training experience that produces excellent fighter pilots. "Why then," Wallace asked, "does the U.S. Air Force insist upon a college education before a person can enter our flight training?"

"Mike," the general responded, "I don't know. It may be one of those things we assume is necessary, but have no proof one way or the other."

Algebra is a screening device for college entrance much as Latin was a hundred years ago. How can anyone consider themselves educated without Latin? Proof that precollege algebraic skill is essential for success in college is non-existent.

Explanation Number 3 for why students fail

When students ask, "Why do I have to take algebra?" The answer is quasi-religious: "Trust me! You will need algebra  to be successful as a scientist, engineer or doctor. You will need algebra to take college chemistry, physics, and mathematics. Algebra is a must!"

 Merely asserting that algebra is valuable is not enough. This is like a car ride with children in the back seat who keep asking their parents, "Where are we going?" "When will we get there?" You will not quiet the children with, "We are on our way to Saint Louis. We will arrive in five days." The children will want to stop frequently before Saint Louis. Some of their favorite places are the colorful balls in the play area at MacDonalds, and the swimming pool at the motel.

In other words, the teacher's goal is not necessarily the student's goal. The children do not believe there is a place called Saint Louis. The students do not believe that a long mathematical journey with no attractive places along the way is worth the effort.

Well then, what do you recommend?

 I recommend three options we can try. The first is to make algebra an elective rather than a mandatory course for all students. Many students enjoy the intricate pattern- making activity of algebra. These students find the patterns fascinating apart from any synthetic attempt to make the product relevant. They will enjoy the course. Algebra should be declassified from its current status as "something everyone has to know" to "here is another interesting elective you may enjoy along with art, botany, or sports."

But, what about those who "need to know" for work in the physical sciences as chemistry and physics?

The key words here are "need to know." Our model should be the police academy where my son graduated after earning a degree from San Jose State University. Police officers "need to know" a huge chunk of law to be effective in their work. As the candidate progresses through the police academy, they internalize statute after statute on a "need to know" basis. I see a similar strategy in chemistry or physics. As we move through the course, when we "need to know," the mind opens up a window. We seem to understand information in almost one exposure.

But, don't we want our children to be math-literate?

Of course we do. But how are we going to do this? Obviously, our current attempt at "forcing" the information into young learners is not working. Evidence: We spend more on remedial mathematics in America than all other math programs put together.

Now consider this: We have successful electives that attract thousands of students. The names of these courses: Art Appreciation and Music Appreciation. It is time for a new elective called Mathematics Appreciation.

In my new book, The Super School of the 21st Century, I suggest that the content of this new elective should be the dramatic stories of mathematicians. For example, there is intrigue in the story of Bertrand Russell and Alfred North Whitehead who wrote a prize-winning volume to explain why 1 + 1 = 2. How can someone write an entire book on something as obvious as 1 + 1 = 2?

Then there is Rene Descartes, the 15th century French soldier and mathematician, who discovered the "Atlantis" of the mathematical world. For centuries, mathematicians believed there was no connection between geometry and algebra. Descartes felt that his colleagues were wrong. He began to search for the mysterious connection that he believed was there, but invisible.

In his diary, Descartes wrote, " One night when I was in a deep sleep, the Angel of Truth came to me and whispered the secret connection between geometry and algebra." Without this revelation, our world as we know it, would disappear. There would be no architecture, engineering or science. All of our technological, scientific, and medical marvels were discovered because of a visit from Descartes' Angel of Truth. 

Carl Friedrich Gauss, recognized as the Prince of Mathematics, wrote his thoughts in a scientific diary that is now revered as "the most precious document in all mathematics." One of his famous discoveries was to see a hidden pattern in numbers that was invisible to mathematicians for hundreds of years.

We must include in our stories the Michelangelo of science and mathematics, Sir Isaac Newton. He discovered calculus, the composition of white light, and the laws of gravity. Sir Isaac believed that God must make some personal adjustments from time to time to keep planets in their orbit. Most people do not know that Newton conducted secret experiments in alchemy, a capital offense for which people were executed in 18th century England. He was fascinated with the occult, a subject he explored in a million words written in his private notebooks.

 The history of mathematicians will intrigue young people. For example, Laura Nickel and Curt Noll were only 15 years-old when they heard the story of the Chinese mathematician Chen Jin-Run. This person dedicated his professional life to exploring the fundamental theorem of arithmetic that involves prime numbers.

All numbers seem to be composed of certain other numbers called primes. What fascinated Nickel and Noll was the notion that primes are a sort of DNA of all numbers. The two high school students were surprised that no pattern has yet been found to predict the highest prime ever discovered. They set out to find that number. :

Mathematics professors warned them that their project was doomed to failure, but they vowed to prove the experts wrong. After 2,000 hours of work and 44 computer tests, they found the elusive number which was confirmed by theoretical mathematicians at the University of California's Berkeley campus.

If a student is to be wildly passionate about mathematics, the student must have the opportunity to experience the romance of mathematics. Romance comes first. Later comes the skills.

 James J. Asher is the recipient of the Outstanding Professor Award in a faculty of 1,500 Ph.Ds from California's historic first public institution of higher learning, San Jose State University. Both Berkeley and UCLA were branches of San Jose State when they started. His teaching specialty is applied research statistics. This article was excerpted from his books, Brainswitching: Learning on the Right Side of the Brain and The Super School of the 21st Century: Teaching on the Right Side of the Brain published by Sky Oaks Productions, Inc., P.O. Box 1102, Los Gatos, CA 95031.


Brand New! Check out Dr. Asher's fantastic new book, The Weird and Wonderful World of Mathematical Mysteries. This book includes some of the most colorful people in history such as Archimedes, Pythagoras, Euclid, Fermat, Descartes, Cauchy, Goldbach, Newton, and Einstein... who often went for days without eating or sleeping trying to decipher these mysteries--then, the excitement of discovery! You will find out how they used the right side of their brain to make spectacular breakthroughs that dramatically changed our world. Also, Dr. Asher shows how he solved two of the world's most baffling mathematical mysteries! To purchase online visit the catalog.





ALGEBRA

The Keys to Learning Basic Algebra

Convinced that learning basic algebra is far from basic?  These 3 key algebraic concepts will make life a lot easier.

1. Expressions vs Equations--What's the Difference?

Up until the time you reached algebra, the equal sign, =, was probably used as a way of signifying the answer to a problem.  Now that we are growing into higher levels of math, the equal sign will now be used as a way of separating the two sides of an equation.

The easiest way to determine if you have an expression or an equation is by asking yourself this question:  "Does my problem have an equal sign in it?"  If the answer to this question is yes, then you have an equation.  Look, the word equation has the first four letters of the word equal right in it.  *Remember, equations have equal signs, expression don't.*

Examples:

 

Equations (equal sign)

Expressions (no equal sign)

  2x = 123x + 4
  y = 4x - 25x + 2y
  3x + 5y = 158x + 3y + 6

 

2. Simplify Expressions by Combining Like Terms 

Expressions need simplified - we do this by combining like terms.  A "like term" is a number that has the same letter attached to it.

Examples:

To give expressions more meaning, you can give each letter a name.

     Let x stand for x-box (or x-ray, whatever you want...)

Looking back at the first expression above, it should make sense to you that "3 x-box's plus 2 x-box's makes 5 x-box's."

Another Example: 

 

3x + 4y

Is NOT 7x or 7 - leave it as 3x + 4y

 

Let x stand for x-box and y stand for yoohoo

Remember, 3 x-box's and 4 yoohoo's cannot combine!  In terms of math, leave the expression 3x + 4y as it is - you cannot simplify it.

One More Example:

 
 

2x + 3


Each letter is its own group, and can only be combined with other numbers with the same letter.  The plain numbers (2, 5, 13, -8, etc.) are a separate group as well.  You can think of these as dollar bills.


2 x-box's and $3 cannot combine.  Leave 2x + 3 as it is.


* Helpful tip give each lettered group a different color - then combine only numbers that have the same color.  Take a look...


4x + 2y + 5x + 3 + 9y + 10         (original expression)


9x + 11y + 13                  (simplified expression)      


Do not combine the different colors


Do you get it?  Good, you are learning basic algebra! 


3. Solve Equations by Isolating the Variable

Equations have equal signs.  This means that your answer should also have an equal sign in it - like x = 4.  Being able to properly solve equations is essential to learning basic algebra.

The equal sign in an equation separates the two sides of the equation into the left hand side (LHS) and the right hand side (RHS).  Viewing the equal sign as a divider instead of an answer mark is essential to learning basic algebra. 

Example: LHS

 Equal

RHS
4x + 2x

=

10 + 8

6x

=

18

x

=

6

Each side of the equation is actually an expression.  Simplify each expression first if it is possible.  Take a look back at the lesson on combining like terms if you are unsure. 

Once you have combined all like terms, it is time to solve for your variable.  You need to remove everything else by doing the opposite.  In the example above, I got rid of 6 times x, by dividing by 6. 

A more in depth look of how to solve equations is also available if you think you need more help with that key to learning basic algebra.

Hopefully these three key points will help make learning basic algebra easier for you.  You may want to explore some of our free printable math worksheets as a nice way to practice.

 




Thursday, July 3, 2014

EDUCATION: TOO MUCH TOO SOON

Earlier this month the "Too Much, Too Soon" campaign made headlines with a letter calling for a change to the start age for formal learning in schools. Here, one of the signatories, Cambridge researcher David Whitebread, from the Faculty of Education, explains why children may need more time to develop before their formal education begins in earnest.

In England children now start formal schooling, and the formal teaching of literacy and numeracy at the age of four.  A recent letter signed by around 130 early childhood education experts, including myself, published in the Daily Telegraph  (11 Sept 2013) advocated an extension of informal, play-based pre-school provision and a delay to the start of formal ‘schooling’ in England from the current effective start until the age of seven (in line with a number of other European countries who currently have higher levels of academic achievement and child well-being).

This is a brief review of the relevant research evidence which overwhelmingly supports a later start to formal education. This evidence relates to the contribution of playful experiences to children’s development as learners, and the consequences of starting formal learning at the age of four to five years of age

There are several strands of evidence which all point towards the importance of play in young children’s development, and the value of an extended period of playful learning before the start of formal schooling. These arise from anthropological, psychological, neuroscientific and educational studies.  Anthropological studies of children’s play in extant hunter-gatherer societies, and evolutionary psychology studies of play in the young of other mammalian species, have identified play as an adaptation which evolved in early human social groups. It enabled humans to become powerful learners and problem-solvers. Neuroscientific studies have shown that playful activity leads to synaptic growth, particularly in the frontal cortex, the part of the brain responsible for all the uniquely human higher mental functions.

In my own area of experimental and developmental psychology, studies have also consistently demonstrated the superior learning and motivation arising from playful, as opposed to instructional, approaches to learning in children. Pretence play supports children’s early development of symbolic representational skills, including those of literacy, more powerfully than direct instruction. Physical, constructional and social play supports children in developing their skills of intellectual and emotional ‘self-regulation’, skills which have been shown to be crucial in early learning and development. Perhaps most worrying, a number of studies have documented the loss of play opportunities for children over the second half of the 20th century and demonstrated a clear link with increased indicators of stress and mental health problems.

Within educational research, a number of longitudinal studies have demonstrated superior academic, motivational and well-being outcomes for children who had attended child-initiated, play-based pre-school programmes. One particular study of 3,000 children across England, funded by the Department for Education themselves, showed that an extended period of high quality, play-based pre-school education was of particular advantage to children from disadvantaged households.

Studies have compared groups of children in New Zealand who started formal literacy lessons at ages 5 and 7. Their results show that the early introduction of formal learning approaches to literacy does not improve children’s reading development, and may be damaging. By the age of 11 there was no difference in reading ability level between the two groups, but the children who started at 5 developed less positive attitudes to reading, and showed poorer text comprehension than those children who had started later. In a separate study of reading achievement in 15 year olds across 55 countries, researchers showed that there was no significant association between reading achievement and school entry age.

This body of evidence raises important and serious questions concerning the direction of travel of early childhood education policy currently in England. In the interests of children’s academic achievements and their emotional well-being, the UK government should take this evidence seriously.

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Licence. If you use this content on your site please link back to this page.


Monday, June 23, 2014

300+ Mind Expanding Documentaries

300+ Mind Expanding Documentaries

I watch a lot of documentaries. I think they are incredible tools for learning and increasing our awareness of important issues. The power of an interesting documentary is that it can open our minds to new possibilities and deepen our understanding of the world.

On this list of mind expanding documentaries you will find different viewpoints, controversial opinions and even contradictory ideas. Critical thinking is recommended. I’m not a big fan of conspiracy documentaries but I do like films that challenge consensus reality and provoke us to question the everyday ideas, opinions and practices we usually take for granted.

Watching documentaries is one of my favorite methods of self-education. If I find a documentary inspiring, I usually spend more time researching the different ideas and interesting people interviewed in the film. I hope you find these documentaries as enlightening as I did!

[1] Life In The Biosphere

Explore the wonder and interconnectedness of the biosphere through the magic of technology.

Home
How Many People Can Live on Planet Earth
The Magical Forest
Ants: Nature’s Secret Power
Mt. Everest: How It Was Made
Mariana’s Trench: The Deepest Spot On Earth
Natural World: The Andes
Shining Mountains: The Rockies
Grand Canyon: How It Was Made
The Intelligence of Plants

[2] Creativity and Design:

Learn about all the amazing things that people create with their imaginations.

Everything Is A Remix
The Creative Brain: How Insight Works
Design: The New Business
PressPausePlay: Art and Creativity in the Digital Age
Infamy: A Graffiti Documentary
Influencers: How Trends and Creativity Become Contagious
RIP: A Remix Manifesto
Design: e² – Sustainable Architecture
The Genius Of Design

[3] The Education Industrial Complex:

The modern school where young minds are moulded into standardized citizens by the state.

The College Conspiracy
Declining by Degrees: Higher Education at Risk
The Forbidden Education
Default: The Student Loan Documentary
College Inc.
Education For A Sustainable Future
Networked Society: The Future of Learning
The Ultimate History Lesson With John Taylor Gatto
The Education System in Communist China
The War On Kids

[4] The Digital Revolution:

The Internet is now the driving force behind change and innovation in the world.

The Age of Big Data
Resonance: Beings of Frequency
Life In A Day
Networked Society: On The Brink
Us Now: Social Media and Mass Collaboration
WikiRebels: The WikiLeaks Story
The Virtual Revolution: The Cost of Free
How Hackers Changed the World

[5] A New Civilization:

We are at the dawn of a new golden age of human inventiveness.

THRIVE: What On Earth Will It Take?
Zeitgeist III: Moving Forward
Paradise or Oblivion
2012: Time For Change
The Crisis of Civilization
The Collective Evolution II
The Quickening: Awakening As One
2012 Crossing Over: A New Beginning
Collapse
The Awakening

[6] Politics:

Explore the politics of power and control and how it affects your life.

Owned and Operated
UnGrip
The Power Principle
The True Story of Che Guevara
Earth Days
Capitalism Is The Crisis
WikiLeaks: The Secret Life of a Superpower
The Putin System
The War On Democracy
Rise Like Lions: Occupy Wall Street and the Seeds of Revolution

[7] Biographies of Genius:

The biographies of modern geniuses who pushed humanity forward.

Isaac Newton: The Last Magician
The Unlimited Energy of Nikola Tesla
The Missing Secrets Of Nikola Tesla
Richard Feynman: No Ordinary Genius
How Albert Einstein’s Brain Worked
The Extraordinary Genius of Albert Einstein
Leonardo Da Vinci: The Man Who Wanted to Know Everything

[8] War:

War is history’s oldest racket for stealing from the powerless and redistributing resources to the powerful.

Psywar: The Real Battlefield Is Your Mind
The Secret History of 9/11
Robot Armies in the Future
The Never Ending War in Afghanistan
Shadow Company: Mercenaries In The Modern World
Why We Fight
The Fog Of War
The Oil Factor: Behind The War On Terror

[9] Economics:

Learn about the financial system works and how people and societies are enslaved through debt.

The Corporation: The Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power
Overdose: The Next Financial Crisis
The Ascent of Money: A Financial History of The World
The One Percent
Quants: The Alchemists of Wall Street
The Last Days Of Lehman Brothers
The Four Horsemen
Inside Job: The Biggest Robbery In Human History
Capitalism A Love Story
Money and Life

[10] Digital Entrepreneurship:

Profiles of the entrepreneurs who used technology to change the world.

The Life Of A Young Entrepreneur
Profile: Google’s Larry Page and Sergey Brin
Profile: Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg
Starting-Up in America
Steve Jobs: One Last Thing
Steve Jobs: The Billion Dollar Hippy
Elon Musk: Risk Takers
The Story of Twitter

[11] Sports:

Watch the inspiring stories of amazing athletes.

Fearless: The Jeb Corliss Story
Carts of Darkness
Usain Bolt: The World’s Fastest Man
Wayne Gretzky: The Life and Times
Mike Tyson: Beyond the Glory
Birdmen
The Legacy Of Michael Jordan
We Ride: The Story of Snowboarding

[12] Technology:

Find out more about the impact of exponential growth and the approaching Singularity.

Ray Kurzweil: The Transcendent Man
How Robots Will Change the World
Human 2.0
Trance-Formation: The Future of Humanity
The Venus Project: Future By Design
Bionics, Transhumanism And The End Of Evolution
The Singularity Is Near
Car Technology Of The Future

[13] Origins of Religion:

Explore the original religious experience of mankind at the dawn of civilization.

Entheogen: Awakening the Divine Within
Manifesting the Mind: Footprints of the Shaman
Ancient Egypt and The Alternative Story of Mankind’s Origins
The Hidden Knowledge of the Supernatural
Re-Awaken: Open Your Heart, Expand Your Mind
Shamans of the Amazon
The Root of All Evil: The God Delusion
Ancient Knowledge
The Naked Truth
Before Babel: In Search of the First Language

[14] Western Religion:

The fascinating history of the three Abrahamic religions: Judaism, Christianity and Islam.

Secret Quest: The Path of the Christian Gnostics
The Secret Gate of Eden
Forbidden Knowledge: Lost Secrets of the Bible
Banned From The Bible: Secrets Of The Apostles
The Road To Armageddon
Muhammad: The Legacy of a Prophet
A Complete History of God
Gnosis: The Untold History of the Bible

[15] Eastern Religion:

Expand your mind by also studying the entirely different religious worldviews of the East.

Inner Worlds, Outer Worlds
The Life Of The Buddha
The Seven Wonders of the Buddhist World
Mysteries of the Cosmic OM: Ancient Vedic Science
Where Science and Buddhism Meet
The Yogis of Tibet
Taj Mahal: Secrets To Blow Your Mind
Light at the Edge of the World: Tibetan Science of the Mind
Myths of Mankind: The Mahabharata
Ayurveda: The Art of Being

[16] Consciousness:

Learn about the basic unity of existence and the miracle of consciousness.

Athene’s Theory of Everything
Theory of Everything: GOD, Devils, Dimensions, Dragons & The Illusion of Reality
The God Within: Physics, Cosmology and Consciousness
5 Gateways: The Five Key Expansions of Consciousness
Return to the Source: Philosophy and The Matrix
The Holographic Universe
DMT: The Spirit Molecule
Kymatica
Neuroplasticity: The Brain That Changes Itself

[17] Mysteries:

Indiana Jones-style explorations into the unsolved mysteries of the past.

Alchemy: Sacred Secrets Revealed
The Day Before Disclosure
The Pyramid Code
The Secret Design of the Egyptian Pyramids
Decoding the Past: Secrets of the Dollar Bill
Origins of the Da Vinci Code
Forbidden Knowledge: Ancient Medical Secrets
Secret Mysteries of America’s Beginnings: The New Atlantis
Secrets in Plain Sight

[18] Mass Culture:

Learn about how our thoughts and opinions are influenced by mass culture.

The Century of the Self
All Watched Over By Machines Of Loving Grace
The Power Of Nightmares
Starsuckers: A Culture Obsessed By Celebrity
Human Resources: Social Engineering in the 20th Century
Obey: The Death of the Liberal Class
Motivational Guru: The Story of Tony Robbins
Bob Marley: Freedom Road
Radiant City

[19] Corporate Media:

Discover how the mass media and advertisers channel our irrational impulses.

Weapons of Mass Deceptions
Secrets of the Superbrands
Orwell Rolls in his Grave
The Esoteric Agenda
Propaganda
The Myth of the Liberal Media: The Propaganda Model of News
Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky and the Media
Symbolism in Logos: Subliminal Messages or Ancient Archetypes
Edward Snowden: A Truth Unveiled
Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch’s War on Journalism

[20] Art and Literature:

Explore the lives of famous artists and how art opens people’s minds.

Cosm: Alex Gray’s Visionary Art
Banksy’s Exit Through The Gift Shop
New Art and the Young Artists Behind It
Salvador Dali: A Master of the Modern Era
The Day Pictures Were Born
Off-Book: Digital Age Creativity
This Is Modern Art

[21] Health:

Explore issues in health, how our bodies work and the incredible power of our brains.

The Human Brain
The Truth About Vitamins
How To Live To 101
America’s Obesity Epidemic
The War On Health
The Beautiful Truth
Food Inc.
The Truth About Food
The Living Matrix

[22] Drugs:

Documentaries on the effect of drugs — legal and illegal — on the body and mind.

The Union: The Business Behind Getting High
The Drugging Of Our Children
How Marijuana Affects Your Health
Making a Killing: The Untold Story of Psychotropic Drugging
Clearing the Smoke: The Science of Cannabis
LSD: The Beyond Within
The War on Drugs: The Prison Industrial Complex
Are Illegal Drugs More Dangerous Than Legal Drugs?
The Prescription Drug Abuse Epidemic
Run From The Cure: The Rick Simpson Story

[23] Environment:

Thought-provoking documentaries on the environmental movement and the growing threats to our biosphere.

Earthlings
Blue Gold: World Water Wars
Shift: Beyond the Numbers of the Climate Crisis
All Things Are Connected
The Fight For Amazonia
Flow: For Love Of Water
Here Comes the Sun
The World According To Monsanto
The Story of Stuff

[24] Cosmos:

Expand your mind by exploring our indescribably large and beautiful Cosmos.

The Search for Planets Similar to Earth
Cosmic Journeys : The Largest Black Holes in the Universe
The Mystery of the Milky Way
Fractals: The Hidden Dimension
Into The Universe With Stephen Hawking: The Story of Everything
Pioneer Science: Discovering Deep Space
Carl Sagan’s Cosmos
The Strangest Things In The Universe

[25] Science:

The history of scientific discovery and how scientific instruments expand our perception.

The Complete History of Science
Secret Universe: The Hidden Life of the Cell
Stephen Hawking: A Brief History of Time
Quantum Mechanics: Fabric of the Cosmos
The Light Fantastic
DNA: The Secret of Life
Parallel Universes, Alternative Timelines & Multiverse
What Is The Higgs Boson?
Infinity

[26] Evolution:

The story of our evolution and the emergence of self-aware human beings.

The Origin of Life
Homo Sapiens: The Birth of Humanity
Beyond Me
The Global Brain
Metanoia: A New Vision of Nature
Birth Of A New Humanity
Samsara
Ape Man: Adventures in Human Evolution
The Incredible Human Journey
The Human Family Tree

[27] Psychology and The Brain:

New research is shining a spotlight on how we can improve our brains.

How Smart Can We Get?
The Science of Lust
The Secret You
What Are Dreams?
A Virus Called Fear
Beyond Thought (Awareness Itself)
The Human Brain
Superconscious Mind: How To Double Your Brain’s Performance
How Does Your Memory Work?
Secrets of the Mind

[28] Modern History:

The story of the Enlightenment, the Industrial Revolution and the rise of the modern world.

History of the World in Two Hours
The Industrial Revolution
The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
The French Revolution
Big Sugar
The American Revolution

[29] Pre-Modern History:

The story of the Americas and European history in the pre-modern world.

Socrates, Aristotle and Plato
The Medici: The Most Influencial Family In The World
A History of Celtic Britain
The Crusades: Victory and Defeat
The Vikings: Voyage To America
Copernicus and the Scientific Revolution

[30] Current Events:

Become more informed about current events that are shaping the world.

Syria: The Reckoning
Empire: Putin’s Russia
The New Arms Race
The Killing of Yasser Arafat
Egypt In Crisis
Inside Obama’s Presidency
The Untouchables: How Obama Protected Wall Street
Behind The Rhetoric: The Real Iran
A History of the Middle East since WWII
Climate Wars

[31] Ancient Civilizations:

Fascination explorations into the ancient civilizations of our past.

The Persian Empire : Most Mysterious Civilization in the Ancient World
What The Ancients Did For Us
What the Ancients Knew
Egypt: Beyond the Pyramids
Secrets of the Ancient Empires
Graham Hancock’s Quest For The Lost Civilization
Atlantis: The Lost Continent
Seven Wonders of the Ancient World

I hope you enjoy watching some of these mind expanding documentaries! If you have a personal favorite, please share it with everyone in the comments.

Credits: DIY Genius




 



Sent from my iPhone

Monday, February 17, 2014

More talking, longer sentences help babies' brains


LAURAN NEERGAARDPublished: Feb 13, 2014

WASHINGTON (AP) - The sooner you start explaining the world to your baby, the better.

That doesn't mean flash cards for tots, or merely pointing out objects: "Here's an orange. That's a bowl."

New research shows that both how much and how well parents talk with babies and toddlers help to tune the youngsters' brains in ways that build crucial language and vocabulary skills - a key to fighting the infamous "word gap" that puts poor children at a disadvantage at an even younger age than once thought.

The idea is to connect words and meaning, so the brain becomes primed to learn through context: "Let's put the orange in this bowl with the banana and the apple and the grapes."

"You're building intelligence through language," is how Stanford University psychology professor Anne Fernald explains it. "It's making nets of meaning that then will help the child learn new words."

And forget dumbed-down baby talk: Longer, more complex sentences are better.

"The advice I give mothers is to have conversations with your babies," said Erika Hoff, a psychology professor at Florida Atlantic University. "Children can hear lots of talk that goes over their head in terms of the meaning, and they still benefit from it."

The research, presented Thursday and Friday at a meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, comes amid a growing push for universal preschool, to help disadvantaged youngsters catch up.

But it also begs the question of whether children from low-income, less educated families need earlier intervention, such as preschool that starts at age 3 instead of 4, or higher quality day care or even some sort of "Let's talk" campaign aimed at new parents to stress talking, singing and reading with tots even before they can respond. That can be difficult for parents working multiple jobs, or who may not read well or who simply don't know why it's important.

Scientists have long known that before they start kindergarten, children from middle-class or affluent families have heard millions more words than youngsters from low-income families, leaving the poorer children with smaller vocabularies and less ready to succeed academically. Fernald said by some measures, 5-year-olds from low-income families can lag two years behind their peers in tests of language development, an achievement gap that's difficult to overcome.

Brain scans support the link, said Dr. Kimberly Noble of Columbia University Medical Center. Early experiences shape the connections that children's brains form, and kids from higher socioeconomic backgrounds devote more "neural real estate" to brain regions involved in language development, she found.

How early does the word gap appear? Around age 18 months, Stanford's Fernald discovered when she compared how children mentally process the language they hear. Lower-income kids in her study achieved at age 2 the level of proficiency that more affluent kids had reached six months earlier.

To understand why language processing is so important, consider this sentence: "The kitty's on the bench." If the youngster knows the word "kitty," and his brain recognizes it quickly enough, then he can figure out what "bench" means by the context. But if he's slow to recognize "kitty," then "bench" flies by before he has a chance to learn it.

Next, Fernald tucked recorders into T-shirts of low-income toddlers in Spanish-speaking households to determine what they heard all day - and found remarkable differences in what's called child-directed speech. That's when children are spoken to directly, in contrast to television or conversations they overhear.

One child heard more than 12,000 words of child-directed speech in a day, while another heard a mere 670 words, she found. The youngsters who received more child-directed speech processed language more efficiently and learned words more quickly, she reported.

But it's not just quantity of speech that matters - it's quality, Hoff cautioned. She studied bilingual families and found that whatever the language, children fare better when they learn it from a native speaker. In other words, if Mom and Dad speak Spanish but aren't fluent in English, it's better for the child to have a solid grounding in Spanish at home and then learn English later in school.

Next, scientists are testing whether programs that teach parents better ways to talk to tots really do any good. Fernald said preliminary results from one of the first - a program called Habla Conmigo, Spanish for Talk With Me, that enrolls low-income, Spanish-speaking mothers in San Jose, Calif. - are promising.

Fernald analyzed the first 32 families of the 120 the program will enroll. Mothers who underwent the eight-week training are talking more with their toddlers, using higher-quality language, than a control group of parents - and by their second birthday, the children have bigger vocabularies and process language faster, she said Thursday.



Wednesday, February 12, 2014

WORLD WAR 1

Closed Caption available by clicking on the CC at the bottom right of each YouTube video.  Be aware that some words do not translate literally and may need explanation for the DHH.)

WORLD WAR 1 - The Great War (BBC Documentary Bonus Episode 1)



WORLD WAR 1 IN 6 Minutes (in animation)







World War 1, The Great War Episode 1 (BBC Documentary with actual footage)