Author: barboakley

Barbara Oakley, PhD, PE is a Professor of Engineering at Oakland University in Rochester, Michigan; Michigan’s Distinguished Professor of the Year; and Coursera’s inaugural “Innovation Instructor.” Her work focuses on the complex relationship between neuroscience and social behavior. Dr. Oakley’s research has been described as “revolutionary” in the Wall Street Journal. She is a New York Times best-selling author who has published in outlets as varied as the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the Wall Street Journal, and The New York Times. She has won numerous teaching awards, including the American Society of Engineering Education’s Chester F. Carlson Award for technical innovation in engineering education and the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers William E. Sayle II Award for Achievement in Education. Together with Terrence Sejnowski, the Francis Crick Professor at the Salk Institute, she co-teaches Coursera – UC San Diego’s “Learning How to Learn,” one of the world’s most popular massive open online courses with over three million registered students, along with a number of other leading MOOCs. Dr. Oakley has adventured widely through her lifetime. She rose from the ranks of Private to Captain in the U.S. Army, during which time she was recognized as a Distinguished Military Scholar. She also worked as a communications expert at the South Pole Station in Antarctica, and has served as a Russian translator on board Soviet trawlers on the Bering Sea. Dr. Oakley is an elected Fellow of the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering and of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering.

Cheery Tuesday Greetings–Today marks the Launch of Mindshift, the Book!

Cheery Tuesday (Yes, Tuesday!) Greetings to our Learning How to Learners!

The Launch of Mindshift, the Book!

This week we’re writing earlier and more briefly than usual. That’s because today, we’re in New York City for the launch of Barb’s new book Mindshift: Break Through Obstacles to Learning and Discover Your Hidden Potential. Here’s a wonderful pre-review of the Mindshift book by by science writer Jef Akst: “Mindshift: A Book Review–A good read if you’re considering a career change, or even if you’re not.” If you’ve ever wondered if there’s something more you’ve wanted from your life or your learning, Mindshift is for you.

Audio Version of MindshiftRead by Barb

For audio book fans, here is the Audible version of the Mindshift book, which Barb read in a four day marathon in an icy Michigan studio in the middle of January.  (If you want to try Audible, you can get two free audiobooks through this link.)

Follow This Week’s Adventures

Incidentally, Barb will be kicking off the keynote speech at Lynda.com’s Learning Summit in Chicago on Thursday, April 20th. You  can follow Barb’s New York and Chicago going’s on over the next few days on Facebook, or Instagram at @barb_oakley.  She’s doing interviews with the Wall Street Journal, LinkedIn, Inc, Big Think, Helio, and many others—exciting times!

First (Glowing!) Reviews of the Mindshift MOOC

The first actual reviews of the Mindshift MOOC are out now, and they’re terrific!

Focused Mode

Writing a book is an all-consuming task.  Making a MOOC is likewise.  So writing the book and making a MOOC at the same time was a little crazy (but in a good way).  We can only hope you’ll forgive us if this week we focus only on Mindshift. Next week, we’ll be back to the usual programming. 😉

That’s all for this week. Have a happy week in Learning How to Learn!

Barb, Terry, and the entire Learning How to Learn team
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The Upstarts

Cheery Friday greetings to our Learning How to Learners!

Book of the Week

Some of our previous book choices may have hinted at the fact that we’re intrigued by the unusual confluence of creativity found in Silicon Valley.  We’re now deep into Brad Stone’s new book The Upstarts: How Uber, Airbnb, and the Killer Companies of the New Silicon Valley Are Changing the World. (Audible version here.) In The Upstarts, Stone contrasts Uber and Airbnb, two of the biggest players around in the new shared economy. This double-pronged approach provides deeper contextual insight than if Stone had just chosen to cover a single company, or had chosen to cover a number of companies lightly. All this provides profound insight into an epic era and area for creativity. Stone is a real reporter who doesn’t do puff pieces —his books are always well worth reading.  (We’ve previously touted Stone’s The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon.)

A New Memory Tips Video from 4 X US Memory Champion Nelson Dellis

Here’s another new video from our friend, memory maestro Nelson Dellis, on how to memorize names and faces.  All of Nelson’s videos can also be found as bonus videos in our new MOOC Mindshift.  If you would like to join Nelson in his efforts to support research on memory, please take the Extreme Memory Challenge.)

Scott Young: Flow Doesn’t Lead to Mastery

As many of you know, we’re fans of Scott Young’s work (Scott, the “Marco Polo of Learning,” did a great bonus interview which can be found in week 2 of Learning How to Learn).  Here’s another worthwhile article of Scott’s on how “Flow Doesn’t Lead to Mastery”.

Learning mnemonics boosts memory and triggers lasting changes in the brain

This great new article from npg Science of Learning by Shelly Xuelai Fan describes how the Method of Loci, (which we get you started on in Learning How to Learn), makes physical changes in the connectivity of your brain that improve your memory.

The Potential of Sports Analytics to Revolutionize STEM Education

We’ve known bioengineer, sports scientist, and basketball player John Drazen for a long time–since he first was beginning his graduate studies. Read his description of the work he’s doing in using sports analytics to encourage interest in STEM, particularly amongst the disadvantaged.  

That’s all for this week. Have a happy week in Learning How to Learn!

Barb, Terry, and the entire Learning How to Learn team
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Launch of Mindshift, the MOOC!

Cheery Friday greetings to our Learning How to Learners!

MOOC of the Month!

At long last, our new MOOC Mindshift: Break Through Obstacles to Learning and Discover Your Hidden Potential opens on Monday, April 10th! Barb & Terry are back as instructors to show you how to leverage the results of science to learn, grow, and change. We sometimes put ourselves into a box regarding what we can and can’t do, and it makes us afraid to change.  Mindshift is designed to help you open your mind about your real capabilities, which are much bigger than you might think.  Plus, of course, we have a lot of fun!

If you’ve been looking for a sequel to Learning How to Learn, this is itit has a booster pack of review that launches you onto greater new insights.  Mindshift can be taken independent of, concurrent with, or subsequent to, its companion course of Learning How to Learn.  See you in the videos!

Book of the Week

Our book this week is Now You See It: How Technology and Brain Science Will Transform Schools and Business for the 21st Century by Cathy N. Davidson (Audible version here). Now You See It is one of those books we recommend, not because we agree with all the ideas, but rather, because the book is so wide-ranging and thought-provoking. You may shake your head at some of Davidson’s provocative writing, but you will undoubtedly walk away from this book thinking about education in a different way.  Plus, if you do anything with online learning, Davidson’s discussions of how we pay attention to the visual medium are very useful.

A New Memory Tips Video from 4 X US Memory Champion Nelson Dellis

Here’s a great new video from our friend, memory maestro Nelson Dellis, on how to memorize numbers.  (If you would like to join Nelson in his efforts to support research on memory, please take the Extreme Memory Challenge.)

A History of the World in 100 Objects

The Director of the British Museum, Neil MacGregor, has narrated 100 podcasts that retell humanity’s history through the objects we have made. This is a tour de force of historical knowledge! [Hat tip Marta Pulley, Senior Mentor and Amharic Lead] MacGregor’s book on the subject titled (natch!) A History of the World in 100 Objects, was a runaway New York Times bestseller.  

Learning in Industry

Here is a nice video on learning in the workforce that has been posted by our friend Laurent Reich, the Learning Practice International Director at L’Oréal. L’Oréal is a company that is at the forefront of involving their employees in new learning opportunities.

That’s all for this week. Have a happy week in Learning How to Learn!

Barb, Terry, and the entire Learning How to Learn team
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Seeing through photographs

Cheery Friday greetings to our Learning How to Learners!

Book of the Week

Our emphasis this week is on photographs, so along those lines, we recommend Understanding Exposure: How to Shoot Great Photographs with Any Camera.  Veteran photographer Bryan Peterson “explains the fundamentals of light, aperture, and shutter speed and how they interact with and influence one another.”  This book has an extraordinary 5 star rating on Amazon, with 151 reviews.

MOOC of the Week

We’re at the Coursera Annual Conference here in Boulder, Colorado now, and it’s really quite spectacular seeing all the latest trends in worldwide learning!  We were fortunate to attend a presentation about the MOOC Seeing Through Photographs, taught by Sarah Meister from the Museum of Modern Art.  This is an extraordinarily popular course that will help you to look critically at photographs.

Making It Stick — A Developer’s Implementation Plan

One of the best books in the genre of learning is Make It Stick: The Science of Learning. (There’s an audio version, too!) If you are into coding, however, you may find it difficult to put the ideas of Make It Stick into practice. If this is the case, we recommend James Bowen’s interesting article on using flashcards and coding to improve your retention of concepts.

Foreign Reactions to US Schools

Here’s a fascinating article that speaks shines an intercultural spotlight on differences between US and foreign schools: Foreign Students Say U.S. High School Classes Are Absurdly Easy.

A Bump in the Road

So you may wonder why last week’s “Cheery Friday’ email was sent out on Thursday (at least in the Western hemisphere).  Well, Barb and her husband Phil were driving to Montreal, with Barb as usual in the passenger seat, typing away on her laptop.  She was doing the final edits on last week’s email whenboom, the car hit a bump in the road, she accidentally hit a space bar, and off the email went a day early.  Apologies!

That’s all for this week. Have a happy week in Learning How to Learn!

Barb, Terry, and the entire Learning How to Learn team
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Eyes Wide Open

Cheery Friday greetings to our Learning How to Learners!

Eyes Wide Open

We had the good fortune to read Isaac Lidsky’s Eyes Wide Open: Overcoming Obstacles and Recognizing Opportunities in a World That Can’t See Clearly. Isaac was a child star, “Weasel,” on the television series Saved by the Bell: The New Class. He went on to graduate from Harvard at age nineteen with degrees in mathematics and computer science, and then went to Harvard Law, ultimately clerking for Supreme Court Justices Sandra Day O’Connor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg. But the real formative experience in Isaac’s life was going blindlosing his sight entirely by age 25.  Isaac’s book is an inspiring reminder about appreciating what you have in life.  Isaac’s interview with Barb is a blog post, and a YouTube videobut honestly, we think you’d prefer Isaac’s book. Isaac himself reads the Audible version of his book, always a plus for us!

Memory Tips Video

Here’s a brand new  4 minute video from our friend Nelson Dellis, 4 time US Memory Champion, that gives some great memory insightsthis one’s on remembering grocery lists. (It’s kind of a treat watching Nelson trash his apartment.) If you would like to join Nelson in his efforts to support research on memory, please take the Extreme Memory Challenge.

7 Killer Memory Improvement Tips From The World Of Conference Interpreting

This is an outstanding guest post and podcast narration by Lukas Van Vyve, on the “Magnetic Memory Method” blog of our friend, memory expert Anthony Metivier. This post is outstanding because it goes beyond simply improving your memory to also give tips on how to enhance your ability to focus and maintain attention.  Not to be missed! On a side note, here also are some of Anthony’s very worthwhile books on language learning:

 

 

Santiago Ramón y Cajal Exhibition

As many of you know, we’re big fans here at Learning How to Learn of Santiago Ramón y Cajal, the Nobel Prize winning father of modern neuroscienceand artist extraordinaire. A travelling exhibition of Cajal’s original drawings is wending its way around North Americaincluding Minneapolis, Vancouver BC, New York City, Cambridge Massachusetts, and Chapel Hill North Carolina.  See the touring schedule here. Hat tip librarian Mary O’Dea.] And don’t forget the best-selling book about Cajal’s artistic landmarks of science: Beautiful Brain: The Drawings of Santiago Ramon y Cajal, which is finally back in stock.

That’s all for this week. Have a happy week in Learning How to Learn!

Barb, Terry, and the entire Learning How to Learn team
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Exciting news—impending launch of the Mindshift book & MOOC!

Cheery Friday greetings to our Learning How to Learners!

Book of the Month

We have VERY exciting news for you this week! Barb’s next book is at a major milestoneone month from publication!  The buzz is already building!  

Barb’s book is Mindshift: Break Through Obstacles to Learning and Discover Your Hidden Potential, from Penguin-Random Houseit’s a lead title for their Spring lineup, and is already earning great reviews! Here’s a bit about the book:

Mindshift is designed to help boost your career and life in today’s fast-paced learning environment. Whatever your age or stage, Mindshift teaches you essentials such as how to get the most out of online learning and MOOCs, how to seek out and work with mentors, the secrets to avoiding career ruts (and catastrophes) and general ruts in life, and insights such as the value of a “talent stack,” and of “selective ignorance.”

Get your copy pre-ordered now so it isn’t sold out when you try to get your hands on it. You can order via Amazon or Barnes & Noble.

Barb’s last book, A Mind for Numbers, (the basis for Learning How to Learn!) became a New York Times science best-seller and is available in over a dozen languages.  That’s understandable, because it’s one of the very best books around to give to colleagues, parents, and students who want to learn more easily and with less frustration. All signs are soaring as well for Mindshift, which is like Learning How to Learn on a booster rocket!

MOOC of the Month

And speaking of booster rockets, we have a double surprise for you this week. Yes, there is a Mindshift MOOC, and it’s just opened for pre-registration in the past 24 hours. The course is taught by Barb and Terry, just as with Learning How to Learn! The course launches April 10th.  If you liked Learning How to Learn, you’ll LOVE Mindshift!  Here’s a little bit from the course description:

This course is designed to show you how to look at what you’re learning, and your place in what’s unfolding in the society around you, so you can be what you want to be, given the real world constraints that life puts on us all. You’ll see that by using certain mental tools and insights, you can learn and do more—far more—than you might have ever dreamed.

For the Mindshift MOOC, Barb and Terry have partnered with one of the most visionary MOOC-making institutions around—McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. McMaster has an extraordinary video production team—you’ll see that Mindshift is like no other MOOC. McMaster, incidentally, is also one of the world’s leading universities—you should definitely consider it if you or someone you know is looking for an international experience.  

We’re a little busy this week getting ready for the double book-MOOC launch—we’ll be back next week with a more usual “Cheery Friday” email!

That’s all for this week. Have a happy week in Learning How to Learn!

Barb, Terry, and the entire Learning How to Learn team
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Ryan Holiday’s books

Cheery Friday greetings to our Learning How to Learners!

Books of the Week

Lately, we’ve found ourselves caught up in Ryan Holiday’s thought-provoking books.  We found a lot to like in his The Ego Is the Enemy, (Audible version here) which provides a refreshing break from today’s relentless onslaught of books about successful egotists. Ryan’s reflections on his own ego-related failures, as well as well as those of intriguing people through history, can give you good strategies for avoiding these problems yourself. Ryan’s excellent related book which has understandably developed a cult following is The Obstacle Is the Way: The Timeless Art of Turning Trials into Triumph (Audible here).

For those who want their philosophical insight on living in daily doses, The Daily Stoic: 366 Meditations on Wisdom, Perseverance, and the Art of Living is just the ticket. We couldn’t agree more with one reviewer who noted: “The great Stoics remind me never to be satisfied with learningI must always be doing.”

Holiday came to prominence with his notorious but well-worth-the-read first book, Trust Me, I’m Lying: Confessions of a Media Manipulator (Audible here), followed by Growth Hacker Marketing: A Primer on the Future of PR, Marketing, and Advertising (Audible here). Both provide insight on today’s media landscape and how it can unwittingly shape your thinking.

Ryan reads most of his own audio booksa real plus for us Audible aficionados. (If you want to try Audible, you can get two free audiobooks through this link.)

Memory Tips Video

Here’s a wonderful 5 minute video from our friend Nelson Dellis, 4 time US Memory Champion, that gives some great memory insights. When you get to the end of the video and realize what Nelson’s actually just got you to do, you’ll be surprised.

If you would like to join Nelson in his efforts to support research on memory, please take the Extreme

Memory Challenge.

Online Class of the Week

We’ve heard good things about the online course Columbia Business School Course on Digital Strategies For Business by Colombia marketing professor David L. Rogers.  See a nice synopsis of the course here. Rogers argues that digital transformation is not about updating your technology but about upgrading your strategic thinking.  Rogers is also the author of the book the course is based on: The Digital Transformation Playbook: Rethink Your Business for the Digital Age. [Hat tip, Desmond Eng, one of our friends at Singapore’s Adam Khoo Learning Technologies Group.]

Education, Education, Education – but mainly EdTech

We find great value in reading Chris Fellingham’s e-newsletters, which are largely about the world of MOOCs and online education. See a copy of Chris’s most recent e-newsletter here, and sign up if you like the information he’s providing.

Good study habits to maximise learning

We really like this popular article on maximizing your learning by using good study habits, written by Lakshini Mendis, PhD for npj Science of Learning and its affiliated community.  We especially appreciate that the npj community is promoting popular articles and videos that help translate key findings from research for the regular folks who ultimately need this information.

That’s all for this week. Have a happy week in Learning How to Learn!

Barb, Terry, and the entire Learning How to Learn team
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Three books about break-through entrepreneurs

Cheery Friday greetings to our Learning How to Learners!

Books of the week

This week, we’d like to contrast three books about break-through entrepreneurs.  Reading these books can help you think more boldly about your own life and what you would like to accomplish, whether you want to start a global business or simply have a happy family life. Here’s our lineup:

  • Alibaba: The House That Jack Ma Built, by Duncan Clark. We loved learning that Jack Ma, unlike many other brilliant entrepreneurs, is an enormous success despite his lack of math skills! Clark’s book focuses more on how Alibaba helped establish the internet sales market in China, than on Jack Ma himself. But the very different nature of internet sales in China versus the sales in the Western hemisphere makes this a worthwhile read.  Audible version narrated by Jim Meskimen.
  • The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon, by Brad Stone. This book provides insight both on how Amazon emerged and on Bezos himself. Like all three of the breakthrough leaders of these books, Bezos has a relentless work ethic as well as a broad vision that others initially thought was crazy. The Everything Store was selected as a best book of the year by the Washington Post, Forbes, the New Republic, The Economist, Bloomberg, and Gizmodo, and as one of the top 10 investigative journalism book by Nieman Reports. The Audible version of this book, narrated by Pete Larkin, was an Audie Award Finalist.
  • Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future, by Ashlee Vance. Musk, like Bezos and Ma, is pioneering a whole new entrepreneurial vision–but at least at present, Musk is in a class by himself in broadly expanding the scope of what humanity may achieve.  This book has won copious awards and was named our Learning How to Learn “Book of the Year” for 2016. The Audible version, narrated by Fred Sanders, was an Audible Best Book of the Year.

A great interview with Nasos Papadopoulos of MetaLearn

Sometimes podcasts can be a challenge for Barb, because the interviewers routinely ask the same sorts of questions.  Nasos Papadopoulos (with his elegant British accent), breaks the mold, going far beyond the usual questions in this in-depth podcast to explore areas that Barb hasn’t spoken of before. This interview is worth listening to, especially if you want to learn more of the future of online education, Barb’s upcoming book, or her past in the US Army. 😉

5 Reasons Why You Are Not Speaking English Fluently

Here’s a worthwhile article on why you aren’t speaking English the way you might want to.  (Hat tip, technical support engineer Irina Petrova.)

10 MOOCs That Support Lifelong Learning

Senior Mentor (and Amharic Language Lead) Marta Pulley recommends this article by Marianne Stenger on 10 MOOCs That Support Lifelong Learning. Marianne missed Learning How to Learn, :P, but the other MOOCs look great!

Taking scientific studies with caution

We’re obviously keen proponents of science here at Learning How to Learn, but it’s important to remember that there can be severe challenges with science as it is currently conducted. The problems aren’t just with social sciencethey’re also found in “hard,” clinical science. As John Ioannidis notes:  “Empirical efforts of reproducibility checks performed by industry investigators on a number of top-cited publications from leading academic institutions have shown reproducibility rates of 11% to 25%.”

Here are two not-to-be-missed articles and studies that describe why we should use caution with seemingly solid scientific results:

 

 

That’s all for this week. Have a happy week in Learning How to Learn!

Barb, Terry, and the entire Learning How to Learn team
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What Barb Wishes All Employers (and Employees) Knew About Online Learning

Cheery Friday greetings to our Learning How to Learners!

What Barb Wishes All Employers (and Employees) Knew About Online Learning

Here’s a brilliant articlea featured article on Coursera’s blogtitled “What One of Coursera’s Most Popular Instructors Wishes All Employers Knew About Online Learning.” Writer Lee Price managed to synthesize Barb’s rambling thoughts into a pithy “must read” for employers as well as employees. (Click the “heart” if you like it. 🙂 )

Books of the Week

Here’s a wonderful new booka surprise top best-sellercalled Beautiful Brain: The Drawings of Santiago Ramon y Cajal. As the cover description mentions: “At the crossroads of art and science, Beautiful Brain presents Nobel Laureate Santiago Ramón y Cajal’s contributions to neuroscience through his groundbreaking artistic brain imagery.” We would talk more intelligently about the book, but it’s sold out nearly everywhereorder your own copy, (just as we have), now! To tide you over, here is a lovely New York Times article about the book. (Hat tip: Jerónimo Castro, Director of COLFUTURO.) We also recommend Cajal’s Butterflies of the Soul: Science and Art, by neuroscientist Javier DeFelipe.

And if you’re interested in how art improves our ability perceive and understand, we highly recommend Amy Herman’s Visual Intelligence: Sharpen Your Perception, Change Your Life.  (We prefer the hard copy over the e-reader copy, because the images are easier to see on the hard copy.)  This book will definitely improve your powers of observationeven while some of the stories are so compelling that the book’s tough to put down. And yet another excellent, but hard-to-get book on art is Vision and Art: The Biology of Seeing, by Margaret Livingstone.

If you’re interested in an audio book related to art, check out Leonard Shlain’s Leonardo’s Brain: Understanding da Vinci’s Creative Genius. Shlain is one of our favorite writers and thinkers, and if you listen to this fascinating book, you’ll see why.

MOOC of the Week

And speaking of art, we’ve stumbled across an intriguing new MOOC called “Art of the MOOC: Public Art and Pedagogy,” by Pedro Lasch and Nato Thompson of Duke University.  We believe that MOOCs are a phenomenal new form of art, even as they form fantastic teaching tools. So we couldn’t resist the opportunity to sign up for this MOOC, which begins on March 13th.

Interview with Dhawal Shah of Class Central

Dhawal Shah, founder of Class Central, is interviewed in this great “what’s going on behind the scenes” interview with Quincy Larson. Quincy, incidentally, is the founder of Free Code Camp, an open source community of 500,000+ people who learn to code together and build projects for nonprofits.

Inequality in Education

Here is a thought-provoking article about a pocket of inequality in American society in substantive need of improvementthat of the American university system and its treatment of adjunct professors and graduate students.

That’s all for this week. Have a happy week in Learning How to Learn!

Barb, Terry, and the entire Learning How to Learn team
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A terrific new math program for kids—Smartick

Cheery Friday greetings to our Learning How to Learners!

Books of the Week

As you know, we’re big fans of biographies. And we’ve got an exceptional one to tout: Cleopatra: A Life, by Stacy Schiff. Great biographies give a sense of what might have been happening behind the scenes in important times in history. While giving a sense of the person, they also give a great feel for the place and time. Read Schiff’s book and savor a trip back to the tumultuous times when the Roman and Egyptian worlds collided. Stacy Schiff herself read the audio version of the book.

If you’d like to get a sense of a very different place and time, we strongly recommend The Little House on the Prairie series, by Laura Ingalls Wilder.  These books tell about the true story of young Laura growing up during US pioneer days in the late 1800s and early 1900s. These books aren’t just kids’ booksBarb’s husband Phil, (a tough motorcyclist!), has been enthralled by these books for years. There’s a reason why these books have sold millions worldwide.  If you’d like to start with just one, we recommend The Little House on the Prairie. Incidentally, these are great books also to read aloud with your family. (And there’s an Audible version, also.)

How to Help Your Child Excel in Mathand Have a Great Career

Speaking of family, when her daughters were growing up, Barb wanted them to be “free range” kids who largely directed themselves in whatever they wanted to learn or do outside school.  There was one rule: that Barb herself got to pick one single activity that her girls had to do, whether they liked it or not. That single activity was 20 minutes or so of extra math practice on most days. Barb has found that many school systems, at least in Western countries, place so much emphasis on understanding of math that they don’t work to also build the procedural fluencythat is, in chunkingthat research shows is essential in acquiring expertise in any subject.  So Barb placed her daughters in Kumon math, which emphasizes a brief period of daily practice in the solid fundamentals.  Cut to the chasenow, twenty-five years later, Barb (and her husband Phil’s!) two daughters went from initially disliking and not being good at math, to great career success as a doctor and journalist.

The reason we’re sharing this story is because we’ve found a modern day, much-improved version of the math program Barb used with her girls.  This new program is Smartick.  The founder of Smartick, engineer Daniel González de Vega, was inspired to begin his world-class company when he discovered that the methods being used to teach math were not helpful for his sister.  Now, many years later, Smartick works with leading researchers to ensure their approach is not only sound, but supplies the best possible approaches to building your child’s intuition about math.

Barb believes that one of the greatest gifts you can give your child is a an open future where all doors are open, career-wiseand the best way to do that is to ensure your child has a solid foundation in math.  We’re big believers in Smartick’s system, and we think that if you check out their free 15 day trial, you’ll become believers, also. (And no, we don’t benefit by promoting Smartick.) So if you have a child, whether he or she is already a superstar in math, or is struggling with math, give Smartick a try.

Interview on “Daily Bits”

Here’s a nice interview with Barb about learning and her upcoming book Mindshift on “Daily Bits Of,” a website devoted to giving you daily bits to help your learning.

Online Courses through Amazon

Our perceptive friends at Class Central are always on top of the latest trends in online learning.  A recent move of interest is that edX is making a few of their courses available on Amazon for certificate purchase.  As Class Central notes in their overview article, “Amazon has over 7,000 ‘educational courses’ that can be purchased on their site.”

That’s all for this week. Have a happy week in Learning How to Learn!

Barb, Terry, and the entire Learning How to Learn team
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