2013-11-29

Hacking Language Learning: Benny Lewis at TEDxWarsaw


source: TEDxTalks  2013年05月15日
"Some people just don't have the language learning gene." To prove that this statement is patently untrue is Benny Lewis's life mission. A monoglot till after leaving university, Benny now runs the World's most popular language learning blog and is learning Egyptian Arabic which will be language number twelve, or maybe thirteen. But who's counting?

Steven Pinker - How The Mind Works (10/15/97 at MIT)


source: TheEthanwashere  2012年8月4日
Dr. Pinker talked about his new book How the Mind Works. He examined two different approaches to studying the mind and offered examples from everyday life to illustrate his ideas. Following his prepared remarks, Dr. Pinker took questions from the audience.

Authors@Google: Steven Pinker


source: Talks at Google  2011年11月01日
The author of The New York Times bestseller The Stuff of Thought offers a controversial history of violence.

Faced with the ceaseless stream of news about war, crime, and terrorism, one could easily think we live in the most violent age ever seen. Yet as New York Times bestselling author Steven Pinker shows in this startling and engaging new work, just the opposite is true: violence has been diminishing for millennia and we may be living in the most peaceful time in our species's existence. For most of history, war, slavery, infanticide, child abuse, assassinations, pogroms, gruesome punishments, deadly quarrels, and genocide were ordinary features of life. But today, Pinker shows (with the help of more than a hundred graphs and maps) all these forms of violence have dwindled and are widely condemned.

Exploding fatalist myths about humankind's inherent violence and the curse of modernity, this ambitious and provocative book is sure to be hotly debated in living rooms and the Pentagon alike, and will challenge and change the way we think about our society.

Why Are Bad Words Bad?


source: Vsauce

Steven Pinker - The Stuff of Thought: Language as a window into human na...


source: The RSA 2010年02月04日
For Steven Pinker, the brilliance of the mind lies in the way it uses just two processes to turn the finite building blocks of our language into infinite meanings. The first is metaphor: we take a concrete idea and use it as a stand-in for abstract thoughts. The second is combination: we combine ideas according to rules, like the syntactic rules of language, to create new thoughts out of old ones.
Note - This video contains strong language.

2013-11-28

Sandwiches, Modernity, and Lyrics: A Thanksgiving Episode | Idea Channel...


source: PBS Idea Channel 2013年11月27日
In honor of Thanksgiving, we present two ideas to discuss with your loved ones around the dinner table. First up: sandwiches. They are the perfect food for today's fast-paced lifestyle. But was it the creation of this versatile food that ushered in the period of classical modernity?

Next up: music lyrics websites. We all love singing the wrong lyrics and then looking look up the actual lyrics on rap genius. But are these sites stealing from the recording industry by profiting off of artist's lyrics? Check out the episode and leave your thoughts in the comments below!

2013-11-25

Slavoj Žižek. Lacanian Theology and Buddhism. 2012


source: egsvideo  2012年11月28日
http://www.egs.edu/ Slavoj Žižek, philosopher and author, talking about Lacanian theology in relation to Christianity and Buddhism. In this lecture Slavoj Žižek discusses the Kantian sublime in opera and film, the spectral texture of narrative, the mediation of desire, the Freudian unconscious, the fall in Christianity and Badiou's conception of the event of love in relationship to Jacques Lacan, Joan Copjec, Immanuel Kant, Richard Wagner, Alain Badiou, Gioacchino Rossini, Gilles Deleuze, G.K. Chesterton, Martin Luther, Sigmund Freud, Franz Kafka, Soren Kierkegaard, Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Plato focusing on the Lacanian formulas of sexuation, Tristan and Isolde, object a, Christian prohibition, Catholic propaganda, enjoyment, infinite judgment, lamella, the undead, death drive, immortality, logic of envy, capitalism, anamnesis, objective appearance, truth. Public open lecture for the students and faculty of the European Graduate School EGS Media and Communication Studies department program Saas-Fee Switzerland Europe. 2012.

Slavoj Žižek. The Irony of Buddhism. 2012


source: egsvideo  2012年11月26日
http://www.egs.edu/ Slavoj Žižek, philosopher and author, talking about the truth and irony of Buddhism. In this lecture Slavoj Žižek discusses Badiou's conception of the Event and supernumerary element, the universality of truth, the paradox of inactivity, the temporality of analysis, American ideology, the problem of bodhisattva, politics of sacrifice and the gap between ethics and enlightenment in relationship to Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Ayn Rand, Jean Pierre Dupuy, Alain Badiou, Karl Marx, Jacques-Alain Miller, Jacques Lacan, George Orwell, Theodor Adorno and Adam Kotsko focusing on retroactivity, the symptomal point, freedom of choice, capitalism, Stalinism, the Dali Lama, suffering, reincarnation, nirvana and Mahayana. Public open lecture for the students and faculty of the European Graduate School EGS Media and Communication Studies department program Saas-Fee Switzerland Europe. 2012.

Slavoj Žižek. Object a and The Function of Ideology. 2012


source: egsvideo  2012年11月05日
http://www.egs.edu/ Slavoj Žižek, philosopher and author, talking about the structure of belief and the mediation of desire. In this lecture Slavoj Žižek discusses his polemic with Badiou on the notion of subtraction as a political and philosophical category, object a as cause of desire, the event, inconsistency in the symbolic order and the function of the master signifier in relationship to Jacques Lacan, Alain Badiou, Karl Marx, Michel Foucault, Jacques Rancière and Charles Darwin focusing on singular universality, the supernumerary element, Zapatistas, evolution, minimal difference, the point, ecology, nature, love, and generic sets. Public open lecture for the students and faculty of the European Graduate School EGS Media and Communication Studies department program Saas-Fee Switzerland Europe. 2012.

Slavoj Žižek. On Melancholy. 2012


source: egsvideo 2012年11月19日
http://www.egs.edu/ Slavoj Žižek, philosopher and author, talking about melancholy as the loss of the object cause of desire. In this lecture Slavoj Žižek discusses the zero level of dialectics, the death of God, Christianity, the symbolic order and the Freudian distinction between mourning and melancholy in relationship to Jacques Lacan, Karl Marx, Alenka Zupančič, Mladen Dolar, Friedrich Nietzsche, Sigmund Freud, Judith Butler, Daniel Dennett, Gilles Deleuze and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel focusing on lamella, suture, big Other, commodity fetishism, fantasy, object a, desire, death drive and the unconscious. Public open lecture for the students and faculty of the European Graduate School EGS Media and Communication Studies department program Saas-Fee Switzerland Europe. 2012.

Slavoj Žižek. Ontological Incompleteness In Painting, Literature and Qua...


source: egsvideo 2012年11月12日
http://www.egs.edu/ Slavoj Žižek, philosopher and author, talking about ontological incompleteness in modernist painting, literature and quantum theory. In this lecture Slavoj Žižek discusses void and multiplicity, pre-ontological reality, spectral materiality, theology, detective novels and political revolution in relationship to Jacques-Louis David, Giorgio Agamben, Alain Badiou, Jacques Lacan, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling, Quentin Meillassoux, Walter Benjamin, Franz Kafka, William Shakespeare, Agatha Christie, David Bohm, Vincent Van Gogh, Karen Barad, Peirre Bayard and Edvard Munch focusing on The Death of Marat, Jacobins, Robespierre, Lenin, science fiction, love, desire, not-all, Columbo, temporal paradox, retroactivity, wave particle duality and Heisenberg's principle of uncertainty. Public open lecture for the students and faculty of the European Graduate School EGS Media and Communication Studies department program Saas-Fee Switzerland Europe. 2012.

2013-11-21

Joel Primack: Dark Matter Reveals the Structure of the Universe


source: Big Think 2013年11月20日
We know that the dark matter has to be pretty cold - moving so slowly that its motion hardly matters - and that allows us to predict in great detail the large scale structure of the universe.

Transcript - Dark matter is the vast majority of the mass of the entire universe. It's the mass that holds all galaxies together, and in fact, led to the formation of galaxies. And it also holds clusters together and it made the most important contribution to the organization of the structure of the universe.

We already know that the dark matter is cold. I invented this terminology back in 1983, calling the dark matter hot, warm or cold depending on how rapidly it's moving in the early stages of the Big Bang. Hot if it's moving at nearly the speed of light, cold if it's moving so slowly that its motion hardly matters, and warm is an intermediate case. We know that the dark matter has to be pretty cold, but it could be a little bit warm. And that would make a great difference to what we call small scale structure, the amount of satellite galaxies and things like that. We don't yet know the real nature of the dark matter beyond that it's pretty cold.

Being pretty cold is enough to allow us to predict in great detail the large scale structure of the universe, the organization of the galaxies and to some extent the satellites of the galaxies. But the small scale structure of the universe really depends in more detail of the nature of the dark matter. Also, the dark matter can possibly interact with itself and annihilate and two dark matter particles come together and then make a lot of other stuff. And this could have played an extremely important role in the early universe, and it could still be producing effects that are sensitive detectors in space and on the ground can find experimentally.

We haven't yet seen clear evidence for any of these things, although there are a number of experiments that are reporting tentative detections. So, it feels very much like we're on the verge of major breakthroughs in trying to understand the nature of the dark matter. If we finally do figure out the nature of the dark matter, we will then have a single unified picture of the origin and evolution of the entire universe. One that scientists all over the world have contributed to and that can become the basis for a shared origin story that could possibly solidify the bonds of humankind. We've never had a single picture, thoroughly supported by scientific evidence, and we're coming close to it now.

So I think we scientists are feeling very hopeful that we're about to cross this threshold and have a complete understanding of the origin and the evolution of the universe. And of course, we're also coming to a much better understanding of the evolution of life. So these last decades of the 20th century and the first decades of the 21st century are a real turning point, I think, in our understanding of how we got here.

Directed / Produced by Jonathan Fowler, Elizabeth Rodd, and Dillon Fitton

2013-11-19

Basic Cornell Notes

source: Sophia Caramagno

Advanced Cornell Notes

source: Sophia Caramagno

how to create and use Cornell Notes (by S. Clowes)

source: SCEduVideos

How to... Cornell Notes

source: sofiatreeproductions

How to take Cornell notes

source: Jennifer DesRochers


2013-11-10

Peter Price. Sound and material. 2013


source: egsvideo 2013年11月09日
http://www.egs.edu/ Peter Price, critical media theorist and composer, talking about sound, material, vibrations, time, past, present, future, organic, temporal, object, identity, sorting. In the lecture Peter Price discusses energy, force, process oriented work, space, cosmic trigger, fidget, and situation. Public open lecture for the students and faculty of the European Graduate School EGS Media and Communication Studies department program Saas-Fee Switzerland Europe 2013 Peter Price.

Peter Price, Ph.D., is a critical media theorist as well as a composer, electronic musician, and digital artist. Price is co-director of the fidget space, a platform for his collaborative work with choreographer and wife Megan Bridge. The project is based in Philadelphia as a research laboratory for new forms of art, performance and media. Peter Price completed his doctorate at The European Graduate School (EGS) in Switzerland. Today Price teaches an intensive summer seminar there. As a philosopher, Peter Price's project is to reassess the nature of musical meaning in light of two epochal shifts in the twentieth century: firstly the technological events of electricity and digital computation, and secondly the openings to thought initiated by Heidegger and unfolding today in continental philosophy. Price examines the history of western music as an epiphenomenon of the unfolding of western metaphysics. For today that means music needs to be thought in the context of the event of technology as Gestell. Peter Price follows Adorno in diagnosing a serious crisis in musical forms of music making and hears this as linked to the ruptures and fault lines of technological modernity. Rejecting the dominant thinking of music through the filters of style and genre, Price asserts that locating musical meaning today means staying attentive to the entirety of sonic phenomena, from avant-garde experimentalism to DJ culture, from ring tone downloads to what remains of the classical music tradition, and from the disappearing musics of indigenous peoples to the persistent roar of capitalist globalization.

Peter Price has published two books of music philosophy with EGS' press, Atropos: Becoming Music: Between Boredom and Ecstasy with Tyler Burba in 2010, and Resonance: Philosophy for Sonic Art in 2011. Both books are finding an eclectic readership from DJs to experimental musicians and theorists.

2013-11-08

Why is yawning contagious? - Claudia Aguirre


source: TED-Ed 2013年11月07日
View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-is-yawn...
*Yaaawwwwwn* Did just reading the word make you feel like yawning yourself? Known as contagious yawning, the reasons behind this phenomenon have been attributed to both the physiological and psychological. It's been observed in children as young as four and even in dogs! Claudia Aguirre visits the many intriguing theories that might explain contagious yawning.
Lesson by Claudia Aguirre, animation by TED-Ed.

2013-11-07

Vicki Phillips: The Technology Wave Hits Education


source: Big Think 2013年11月06日
We are seeing students and teachers using technology-enabled tools that make learning more real time, more powerful, and it gives them access to things they wouldn't have had access to before.

Transcript --
I think we're just beginning to realize the power of technology in education actually. And isn't it interesting that education's sort of the last profession that technology has transformed. And I think a lot of that is because we can't just plop down, you know, new tools into an old system and expect that to work.

So a lot of where we're seeing the Internet be the most powerful is in these blended school models where schools are starting to flip their classrooms and use the Internet and technology enabled tools. Whether that's videos of experts talking to students or whether it's students getting online and doing assignments in a collaborative way, answering a really powerful and critical question that their teachers might assign. Or whether it's back and forth feedback between kids and teachers.

And this blend of both face-to-face with teachers and technology seems to be a really powerful both motivator for kids but also, you know, the beginning numbers say it gets incredible impact, particularly for students who may have been before lagging behind. So those collaborative ways to bring kids into ownership of their own learning and to use those tools in ways that kids live and work today are very powerful.

But it's also proving to be really powerful for teachers so that teachers are also getting online and collaborating with each other and using a number of social networks. They're also coming together and co-designing tools that will help them be successful and sharing things that they've found that are really effective practice. And uploading, you know, videos and looking at their own practice and having others critique it and critiquing each other. So all of those things are just now beginning to take root and materialize in schools. And I think, you know, some places are further ahead. I think what's exciting is in three or four years we're gonna look back and be amazed at how much that has exploded and how much teachers have actually driven -- and students -- that conversation. But it's also true that there's big challenges, right.

Connectivity's is a big challenge. Actually having the tool -- the hardware tools, the platforms to work from remains a big challenge. And in education, you know, not a lot of innovators and entrepreneurs are willing to step in and develop those things because we had 50 different states with 50 different standards and different procurement systems and it just made it hard. And I think there are things happening now like the Common Core State Standards, like this demand on the part of both teachers and students for content delivered in more creative ways to them for both of their learning that you're starting to see that change because demand is starting to meet up with, you know, sort of those people who'd like to really tackle that in ways that we haven't experienced before.

What we see happening across the country that we think is actually more of the wave and more powerful is this blended learning environment in which kids and teachers together use technology enabled tools that make the learning more real time, more powerful, give them access to things they wouldn't have had access to before. And so we really believe that's the wave of the future. So I think we want to keep thinking about the fact that kids really need that opportunity to collaborate with their peers and they're still gonna need the facilitation and guidance of great teachers. And so how do you make all those things come together in a really magical and powerful way.

Directed/Produced by Jonathan Fowler and Dillon Fitton

2013-11-01

LBCC - Study Skills (lectures 1-14)

# automatic playing for the 14 videos (click the up-left corner for the list)

source: LongBeachCityCollege   Last updated on 2015年6月25日
The Learning and Academic Resources Department encourages you to view these videos of workshops to gain tips and learn strategies on a variety of learning and study skills topics! You can go to the LAR Study Skills Video webpage and download workshop handouts and summary sheets. Also we invite you to visit the LAR website to find out about all of the courses and services we offer at LBCC.
http://www.lbcc.edu/LAR/index.cfm -LAR website
http://www.lbcc.edu/LAR/studyskills.cfm - LAR Study Skills Video webpage

LBCC - IMPROVING LISTENING SKILLS 48:47
LBCC - Memory Tricks 48:06
LBCC - More Memory Tricks 46:17
LBCC - How To Remember For Tests 44:34
LBCC - Taking Better Lecture Notes 44:27
LBCC- Great Ways To Study 37:06
LBCC - More Great Ways to Study 43:28
LBCC - Organizing Your Study Time - Part 1 46:20
LBCC - Organizing Your Study Time - Part 2 47:37
LBCC - Habits of Successful College Students 44:32
LBCC - Test Taking Skills 43:14
LBCC - More Test-Taking Skills #1 42:23
LBCC - Preparing For Tests 45:52
LBCC - How to Predict Test Questions 41:51

LBCC [study skills #1/14] - Habits of Successful College Students


source: LongBeachCityCollege
Gives and explains ten habits of successful college students and how to develop/strengthen those habits.
Workshop Handout for #1 /// Video Summary Sheet

LBCC [study skills #2/14] - Organizing Your Study Time (Part 1)


source: LongBeachCityCollege
Helps students examine how they spend (and waste) time now, teaches methods for setting and reaching goals, helps them understand the crucial study differences between high school and college, and shows them how to start getting more organized as an LBCC student.
Workshop Handout for #2 /// Video Summary Sheet

LBCC [study skills #3/14] - Organizing Your Study Time (Part 2)


source: LongBeachCityCollege
Shows students how to set up a successful, intelligent study schedule and focuses on why
students procrastinate and how to conquer that bad habit!
Workshop Handout for #3 /// Video Summary Sheet

LBCC [study skills #4/14] - Improving Your Listening Skills


source: LongBeachCityCollege    2011年9月22日
Explains problems that get in the way of good listening and teaches techniques designed to improve listening/concentration skills in (and out of) the classroom.
Video Summary Sheet

LBCC [study skills #5/14] - Taking Better Lecture Notes


source: LongBeachCityCollege
Discusses several common note-taking mistakes and provides techniques for recording, organizing,
and reviewing important information given during a lecture.
Workshop Handout for #5 /// Video Summary Sheet

LBCC [study skills #6/14] - How to Predict Test Questions


source: LongBeachCityCollege
Teaches several methods designed to help students create their own practice quizzes
in order to prepare more effectively for upcoming tests.
Workshop Handout for #6 /// Video Summary Sheet

LBCC [study skills #7/14] - Preparing For Tests


source: LongBeachCityCollege
Shows students important study principles and discusses how to spend the last few days
before a test studying in the most intelligent ways.
Workshop Handout for #7 /// Video Summary Sheet

LBCC [study skills #8/14] - Test Taking Skills


source: LongBeachCityCollege
Teaches some general test-taking strategies and focuses on true/false and essay questions.
Workshop Handout for #8 /// Video Summary Sheet

LBCC [study skills #9/14] - More Test-Taking Skills


source: LongBeachCityCollege
Helps students learn how to budget their time on tests, read multiple-choice questions the RIGHT way, and deal with lack/loss of confidence during a test.
Video Summary Sheet

LBCC [study skills #10/14] - How To Remember For Tests


source: LongBeachCityCollege
Uses two memory exercises designed to teach students how to remember more
of what they read in textbooks and how to organize material to increase understanding and retention of information
Video Summary Sheet

LBCC [study skills #11/14] - Memory Tricks


source: LongBeachCityCollege
Shows several fun and unusual memory tricks designed to help students memorize school-related information, names, etc. A few simple but effective math tricks will also be presented!
Video Summary Sheet

LBCC [study skills #12/14] - More Memory Tricks


source: LongBeachCityCollege
Gives students several more ideas about how they can use creative memory tricks to help them
memorize items in groups, definitions, and exact locations on a map or diagram.
Workshop Handout for #12 /// Video Summary Sheet

LBCC [study skills #13/14] - Great Ways To Study


source: LongBeachCityCollege
Teaches basic study techniques, focusing on several textbook reading and study methods.
Workshop Handout for #13 /// Video Summary Sheet

LBCC [study skills #14/14] - More Great Ways to Study


source: LongBeachCityCollege
Covers textbook study methods such as "reducing" and highlighting and discusses the best ways to use/review flash cards, etc.
Workshop Handout for #14 /// Video Summary Sheet