Friday, May 30, 2008

How To-30: How to Teach Literature to College Students


from wikiHow - The How to Manual That You Can Edit

Literature is a very versatile subject and is generally considered one of the most difficult subjects to teach. There is no right or wrong way to teach a Literature class; however, there is a smart way to teach it. The idea in Literature is not just to get an answer, it is to get an in-depth, provocative and creative answer. The job of the professor is not to teach the student, it is to lead the student.

Steps

  1. Get a degree : No community college will let you teach English with less than a BA, and very few will let you teach with less than an MA. If you intend to teach at the university level, you will most likely require a PhD, as well as recent publication in respected journals. Obviously, most English teaching jobs will go to people who have studied in the Humanities, particularly English majors.
  2. Do your research: Find out about the various kinds of Literature existing in different periods of time and how it evolved through the ages. If your training in step one didn't prepare you in this way, you are probably not ready to be in front of a college English class.
  3. Emulate, but don't copy: If you're about to be teaching college English, you've already spent at least four to ten years in post-high-school classrooms. It would be naive to suggest that you don't know how to teach; You've spent much of your adult life watching other people do it. Use what you know. Take the best examples from your educational past and craft them around your current situation, and within that history, find a voice of your own. If you merely copy your past instructors, or crib lesson plans from a website, you're probably not destined to be much of a teacher.
  4. Always read excerpts of material in class: Students often rely upon study guides and predigested responses to texts they have never experienced as living works of art. Remember to allow plenty of time for regular readings and re-readings of a poem, for example, so that its impact as sound can be enjoyed before it is analyzed simply as a complicated kind of prose. This is equally important with many prose writers such as Dickens or Jane Austen for whom some basic impact is in the rhythmic shape and weight of a paragraph as a key part of its "meaning". They may set a slow versus a staccato tempo, to indicate boredom or excitement for instance.
  5. Keep the class especially challenging for the first few weeks: Usually you will find a group of students will enroll for a class for no good reason. Because of this you tend to get slackers in class or people who are not intellectually cut out for such a subject. If you make the class extremely challenging and provocative for the first few weeks, it will cause a few of the less interested students to become slightly alarmed and they will drop the class. The ones who stay will become more alert and get more involved. (NOTE: If your school receives state funding based on attendance, you might want to wait until the census date has passed before engaging in actions that will cause students to drop; your dean may cancel the class if a minimum number are not enrolled.)
    • Make it a rule from the get go that the pace of the class will be fast. If the student doesn't begin to answer after 20 seconds, just lash out some interpretive exercise. For example, if a student isn't answering, ask something like: "Name three possible interpretations of the phrase: 'Cowards die many times before their deaths'" or "The color Red symbolizes what?" or "Name three mythological creatures that can fly". These do not have to be related to the material, but must be related to Literature in general. If it is something humorous and informative, it will be appreciated by the students and they will be more alert during class.
  6. Set new questions. Do not borrow questions from textbooks or any other material. Especially not the Internet. Make sure the questions you set have not been discussed in detail in class. Of course the questions have to be similar but ensure that they are not the same. You are grading the students on their literary analysis not on their note-taking skills.
  7. Always ask "why" For any piece of work, the most important question in literature is 'Why?'. Make sure every student knows the importance of this question from the first class. You have to train the class to be opinionated and try to interpret every line according to the reason and the intention behind it. The heart of all Literature is its intention.
  8. Add fuel to the fire: There is no room for a unanimous agreement in Literature. Every line is subject to interpretation, levels of importance and hidden meaning. Make sure that your students are not exposed to one view. The best way to do this is to play devil's advocate. When they express a view, disagree. If they agree with you, change your view. This will make for interesting debate and force the students to defend their viewpoint and explain why they are right. Try to be as unreasonable with your stand as you can, this will get the students more 'heated' and force them to think in the abstract manner necessary to write a Literature paper. This is also good for waking up those students at the back who snooze every class. An argument is much more interesting than the face of the desk.
  9. Add history to the material: As your students become familiar with the material, allow them to become familiar with the face behind the material: the writer. Tell them a little bit about their past and the way they lived their lives and some of the documented inspiration behind their works. A lot of very famous writers lived rather interesting (and somewhat tragic and scandalous) lives, it's always interesting to hear about, and it might provide more meaning to their words.
  10. Involve every single student: Each class has students that are not really interested in the material but come to class each day for unidentified reasons. Each class also has students who tend to monopolize the conversation and centre discussions towards their opinions. Avoid that at all costs. Even the lazy students can usually provide some sort of input. Ask a lot of questions and give everyone an equal shot at answering. Don't stand there and wait for an answer (You will be wasting precious minutes while the student goes: "Ummm....well....errr").
    • Maintain an interest in each and every student. Students can usually tell if you like them or not or if you prefer one over the other. Avoid this at all costs. Your job is to promote the imagination of all the students and to treat them all equally. Talk to all of them personally at least once.
    • Recognize the students' weaknesses and strengths: By giving your students a lot of opportunities to do various kinds of work (speaking, arguing, writing, interpreting, etc.) you can assess the weaknesses and strengths of each one. Praise each student on their strengths and talk to them about their weaknesses. Allow your students the freedom to choose the form they are more comfortable with. For example, if a student is good at verbal discussion and not good at written communication, you can allow for one of their assignments to be verbal. To be fair, however, you must give all students a chance to choose the form they are good at. Talk to the students personally about their weaknesses and how to improve them.
  11. Grade the thought, not the content: When marking papers, you need to be aware that Literature is not like most other subjects where the content is what is essential. It is the creativity and thought behind the content that makes a Literature essay stand out. You are also grading the content, obviously. But in Literature, you have to give more marks to the student with a controversial and creative interpretation and a few less to the student with the 'textbook' interpretation. For example, the student who can convince the reader that Frankenstein's monster was actually his alter ego, with support from lines in the book, is a better student than one who treats the monster as just a creature who had the misfortune to be created by man.
  12. Give appropriate homework. The students must be treated like adults, the homework should be appropriate and challenging. Be clear about how you like your papers to be written and make sure they follow a certain format. The best kind of homework is a variable kind. Make sure they do a lot of research-based papers but also give them a good amount of unconventional homework like: an essay on the difficulties of a literature student, or writing a poem, or interpreting a fairy tale (there actually is a lot of symbolism in stories like 'Beauty and the Beast' and 'The Pied Piper').
  13. Emphasize references. No matter how creative the thought, it has to be backed up by quotes from the material. A student might have a particularly brilliant idea but if it is disproved by the material, the idea is worthless. Stress on the fact that every claim has to be supported by lines, verses and dialogue in the text.
  14. Read out the work of other scholars: Expose the students to interpretations by other Literature analysts. You ought to keep the papers submitted by your old classes as well, to read out to the new ones. Challenge the students to respond to those interpretations. Ask them questions like: "In what ways could he/she be correct or incorrect?"
  15. Enjoy the experience: If you are heading to class and you are dreading it or feeling like you ought to just turn back and go home, it is time to reschedule the class or postpone it. If you are not giving a class 'your all', the students will notice and it affects the environment of the classroom. Also, the students will probably like you more for the extra couple of hours of time you've given to them.

Tips

  • If your students have a problem with interpretation or seeking hidden meanings, try this exercise at the beginning of the class. Write a word on the board, any simple word, like 'Dust', as each student to interpret what it could mean. For example, since dust settles in untouched places, it could be a product of abandonment or it could mean something that is worthless or abundant, or remnants of something...etc.
  • If the classes seem to be getting monotonous, change the pace. Move to a garden or some place outdoors. Call for a role play, where every student has to be a writer (one student can be Shakespeare, another Shelley) and ask them to do their best imitation of them. Refer to pop culture and modern media and ask them to interpret them (it would be interesting to see how they can compare 'Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde' to 'Fight Club') or you could make it mandatory for all the students to adopt an accent during one class (e.g. a British accent if you are teaching outside of England for example).
  • Bring pictures to class. There are many paintings and illustrations of mythical creatures, heroes of literature and writers. In the modern world, there is much more emphasis on the visual as compared to the written word. It would add a bit of interest to the classes and you can use them for comparison. For example, you could ask: "Is this illustration of 'The Inferno' an accurate description of the text?"
  • Encourage your students to read. Not just the texts, but anything that interests them. They have to get into a habit of reading to truly bring forward their best to a Literature class.

Warnings

  • Be flexible with your deadlines and schedule. It is unrealistic to assume that the students will require an equal amount of time to understand and debate all the different materials. This is almost never the case. If students are having trouble with poetry but are very good at the prose, spend more time on poetry. It is understandable to have a schedule but things will be easier to handle if you expect it to be erratic. Your job is to be a professor not an organizer.
  • If you have students who cannot handle the class or cope with the work, suggest to them privately that they drop the class or if they are really interested, recommend that they audit the class instead.
  • Do not alter your grading scale to match the class potential. You are not meant to have an equal amount of A's and B's and C's. You are measuring the quality of the work. If all of them turn in horrible essays, give them all an F but allow for a re-take or extra credit.

Related wikiHows

Article provided by wikiHow, a collaborative writing project to build the world's largest, highest quality how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to Teach Literature to College Students. All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.

How To-29: How to Be an Effective Learner


from wikiHow - The How to Manual That You Can Edit

We all have the ability to learn and unlearn as quickly and with as much detail we allow ourselves. Let us see how we too can be effective learners in every phase of our lives.

Steps

  1. If you are in a classroom, make sure you listen to your instructor attentively.
  2. Make mental notes and also maintain a notebook.
  3. Ask questions when in doubt. Ask again if not convinced.
  4. Go through manuals, handouts, or textbooks.
  5. Summarize all the notes the next day to foolproof everything.
  6. Lastly, be aware at all times.

Tips

  • Try using a search engine to get more information if you don't understand something.
  • Share and discuss what you've learned with fellow classmates.
  • Try to see the same question from different perspectives.
  • Make sure your notes are neat and descriptive so that they're easy to refer to. Organizing your notes will help you organize your thoughts as well.
  • If you feel that you are having a lot of trouble understanding a certain subject, talk to the instructor outside of class.

Warnings

  • Don't overload yourself with too much information from the beginning. You need to understand the basics in order to understand more complicated subjects.

Related wikiHows

Article provided by wikiHow, a collaborative writing project to build the world's largest, highest quality how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to Be an Effective Learner. All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.

How To-28: How to Be an Inspirational Teacher


from wikiHow - The How to Manual That You Can Edit


An editor has suggested that this article be merged with: "How to SpecialBe a Teacher" Per the merge policy, if these topics are determined to be similar but distinct, then the articles will remain separate. Please comment on the discussion page. Notice added on 2008-01-24.

This article needs to be converted to wikiHow format as specified by the Writer's Guide. You can help by editing it now and then removing this notice. Notice added on 2007-08-28.
This article will show that any teacher can Be inspirational.

Steps

  1. Empathy. Probably the greatest quality a teacher can have. Creating empathy is about bonding with your students. Cry with them, laugh with them. Try to be on their wavelength. Get to know their emotions and understand their feelings. Young people are easily stressed and sometimes under great pressure, but all you might see is anger, aggression, bad attitude or impatience. At this time you need to be compassionate and understand some bad stuff is going on in their lives. Search for the real person underneath and when you find them they will open up to you.
  2. Positive Mental Attitude. Teachers are human like anyone else; however, the stresses of working with young people especially those with attitudinal and behavioural problems can sometimes be immense. This is the time you need to be strong. To keep a smile on your face when things get tough. To see the bright side of things. To seek to find the positive in every negative situation. To be philosophical. Why? Because your attitude is contagious. You have the choice to bring a light into your classroom or cast a shadow.
  3. Verbal Skills. Every great teacher is a great orator. If you can keep your students focused and interested just by talking to them then you are doing a great job. When was the last time you spoke about something and you could hear a pin drop? 'Just talking to them' means using passion, emotion, great eye contact, animated body language, voice modulation and feeling. Talk with conviction. Believe in what you say. Take your students on a wonderful journey every day.
  4. Respect. Respect every human being that is in your classroom. Talk to them like you would talk to your closest friends. No one is more important in this world than anyone else. A great inspirational teacher is a human being who respects everyone no matter their attitude, colour, religion, creed or country. Every one of your students has a place on this earth. You can help them make a positive impact on it too. You have the power to change their lives. The Law of Reciprocity (you reap what you sow) will ensure that the respect you give out will come back to you a hundredfold.
  5. Individualize. Know your students inside and out. Do not pick on reward/punishment for all students, because they are all different individuals. Talk to your students and be involved iin their lives. Use different teaching styles and strategies within the classroom, because everyone learns differently. Have options for big projects or presentations within your class. Most importantly, let your students be creative, do not limit them. Also, do not judge them. Do not have your own thoughts about them before they walk in your room, or after they leave. Look for the deeper meaning behind actions, instead of getting angry or upset.
  6. Noble Profession. The day a teacher realizes that they have been given a great gift - the power to change lives, is the day an inspirational teacher is born. You have a choice either to believe you are a mediocre teacher teaching a boring subject to boring kids. Or, a human being helping other human beings to realize their full potential and go on and make a positive difference in their world. Your beliefs create your world.

Tips

  • be different
  • be humorous
  • be kind
  • be patient
  • be respectful
  • be understanding
  • be helpful
  • be loving
  • just be the very best human being you can be

Article provided by wikiHow, a collaborative writing project to build the world's largest, highest quality how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to Be an Inspirational Teacher. All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

How To-27: How to Encourage Your Child to Love Learning


from wikiHow - The How to Manual That You Can Edit

Ultimately, we want our kids to love to learn. A passion for learning is quite different from just studying to earn a grade or to please parents or teachers. Those who develop a love of learning at an early age continue the process throughout their lives and are generally more successful, interesting, and happier than those who don't.

Steps

  1. Talk with your child about the things you read and hear, especially the things you find interesting.
  2. Ask your kids how they feel about various issues (current events, relationships, values). Allow them to have opinions without passing judgment. Ask your children to help you understand why they feel the way they do.
  3. Pursue your own hobbies and interests. Share these with your child, but do not require that he or she follow your pursuits.
  4. Encourage your kids to have interests of their own. If they show curiosity about a hobby, area of study, sport, or instrument, encourage and support them in any way your finances allow.
  5. Read books. Read on your own, which sets a good example. Read to your kids, to get them hooked on books.
  6. Expose your child to a wide variety of experiences including music, plays, sports, museums, travel, reading, dance, games, food, puzzles, ethnic activities, etc. One never knows how what exposure may influence future life choices.
  7. Play "thinking games" with your kids. These are games where there is not just one answer. Scrabble and chess are examples. Emphasize the value of thoughtful moves rather than the importance of winning.
  8. Remember that you are your child's best teacher. School, educational games and television, and a shelf full of books all can't accomplish what you can in the education of your child. It doesn't take much effort to inspire a child's brain in the everyday world - the place where they need it the most. Here are a few simple things you can do to engage your child: count the number of houses, black cars, bicycles, etc. that you pass as you drive; search for letters, numbers, or colors on the restaurant menu; when you are going to use a gum-ball machine, hold out a handful of coins and explain the differences, and that the machine will only take the quarter (then let your child pick out a quarter and put it in the machine - they love this!).
  9. Provide your child with free time. Children need plenty of free time to discover and explore. Don't jam pack your schedule with errands and activities. Give your child time for free play, day dreaming and roaming around in the back yard.
  10. Start sooner, rather than later. Fostering independence in your child is very important for their brain development and how they feel about learning. Sometimes, activities seem too difficult for your child only because you haven't encouraged them to do it yet. For example, things like peeling their own banana, picking out which shirt to wear, and feeding the family cat, are all things that a young toddler can do. Letting your child do things like this makes them feel more in control of their world, which in turn inspires them toward bigger and better exploits. When the world is in your hands, you want to do something with it, don't you?

Tips

  • If you demonstrate excitement about learning and are open to your children pursuing their own interest areas, it will be hard for them to resist the opportunities.
  • Explain to your child why he or she is learning, and how it will be worthwhile (e.g. learning multiplication tables)
  • Leave interesting books and materials lying around for your child to explore.

Warnings

  • Try not to go overboard about grades. If your child makes a low grade, don't scream and yell, but instead show them what they did wrong and help them understand. For good grades, don't buy big, expensive things to celebrate (at least not all the time). Your child will feel pressured/persuaded to do well and will dread low grades. Giving too many rewards also encourages bad habits and manners, such as bragging, and can lead to complexes (such as fear of failure). Understand that not all children will get A's and B's and that C's are OKAY and considered good, as C's are average.

Related wikiHows

Sources and Citations

Article provided by wikiHow, a collaborative writing project to build the world's largest, highest quality how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to Encourage Your Child to Love Learning. All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.

How To-26: How to Become a Software Engineer


from wikiHow - The How to Manual That You Can Edit

Software Engineering was recently listed by Time magazine as still being the #1 career for pay/stress load. In spite of all the media hype about offshoring of these type of jobs, it's still a job that's in high demand. This article is for anyone considering Software Engineering as a career path who is at the high school or college level

Steps

  1. Plan on getting a degree. With all the success stories of college drop outs becoming billionaire CEOs in the 90's, there is a certain lure that "as long as I think outside the box and have outstanding problem solving and programming skills I don't need a four year degree". It's difficult for entry level software engineers to obtain a position without a four year degree.
  2. Get all the math you can in High School. Try to advance to college level math before leaving high school, you'll need a ton of math to complete any Computer Science program and Engineering program.
  3. Qualify your degree by what you want to do. If your love is game design and you wish to enter that industry as a game programmer, you'll need a Computer Science degree. If you want to work for IBM, Intel, Microsoft, Google, etc... A Computer Science degree will be favored. If you're looking to work for a non-technical corporation building mostly business applications, consider a degree in MIS (Management Information Systems) or one of the many business technical degrees now offered. This type of degree is best for most, because it provides management and general business skills and doesn't focus on a lot of information that will not be useful to most.
  4. Supplement your classwork with personal research. Search job boards and note what technologies are hot and buzzing. The colleges simply can't keep up with everything, so you'll need to buy additional technical books and teach yourself
  5. Unless you're planning to get your foot in the door through an intern position, try to find side projects while in school. No one wants to take a risk and hire someone fresh out of school without projects under their belt. Internships are great and taking care of this problem, but unfortunately a lot of students can't land an internship or do so only to discover they would prefer to work elsewhere. The only way to give yourself options is to find some non-classroom work to put on your resume.

Tips

  • Software Engineering dress varies greatly from company to company. At one office you may wear a suit at another T-Shirt, shorts and sandals is fine. Always call prior to the interview and ask if a suit is appropriate for the interview. This is a good question because often, even if dress is casual a professional look will still win huge points for showing that you're the type of person who makes an effort to look your best and to be professional.
  • If you are asked a series of technical questions during the interview, always answer honestly, however be careful with the words you select. Never say "I don't know", instead say "I haven't encountered a scenario where I would use that yet", then explain the process you would go through to find the information if you had to. Only do this once during the interview and if you get stumped again on a technical question just remind the interviewer about your resourceful approach.
  • Always ask questions at the end of the interview and if the interviewer is technical, try to come up with some relevant technical questions. Don't try to interview the interviewer here, but just try to come up with a clever question that will answers some piece of technical trivia that's relevant to the company or the specific project you are being hired into. Be careful with this though and when in doubt, if it's not something that genuinely interest you, leave this trick in the bag.
  • Rather than getting a Computer Science Degree and working you way into a Software Engineering position, just get a Software Engineering Degree to start with. Many schools now offer this degree, and Software Engineers usually have receive larger starting salaries at the same companies than Computer Science Majors do. The reason for this is that proper design and documentation of a system is more important than the ability to program.
  • Apart the university degree, there is another path to this position through becoming a Free software hacker but it is is also very difficult. While Free software community can give an excellent skills, you will likely need to prove you really have them, and you must first find a job where you would be allowed to try. If there is any possibility to choose, the university is highly recommended anyway.

Warnings

  • Be prepared for a rollercoaster ride, the industry is always changing and your self-education will never end. If you don't enjoy teaching yourself new and complex things often, change majors now.

Related wikiHows

Article provided by wikiHow, a collaborative writing project to build the world's largest, highest quality how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to Become a Software Engineer. All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.

How To-25: How to Force Yourself to Seriously Study


from wikiHow - The How to Manual That You Can Edit

Can't study and actually apply that knowledge on your SAT?
This article will how you how to study and get the A+ so either you can go to that rave or you can show Elmer that you are capable of an A+.

Steps

  1. Get some peace. Nothing is more interfering than unwanted noises and other disturbance. Turn off your computer, television, ask your parents/room mates to be quiet, etc.
  2. Open your books and start reading. This might be the hardest step, but once you get used to it, it feels normal, and easy.
  3. Write notes in your book. In most cases, when you think you know it all, you usually don't. Write it down. It helps you memorize the subject, therefore making it easier to learn.
  4. Set a period of time for studying. You might be mentally exhausted from all the reading and writing, making you less interested in the subject, and there's a risk of forgetting what you just read.
  5. If all this doesn't work for you, take some time to think about how you study best. Some people have an easier time studying when the TV is on, but muted or at a low level. Others must have absolute silence. If you are one of these, try wearing earmuffs or headphones to dull the noise if at home or in a crowded area.

Tips

  • Many schools have studying groups. Consider joining one of these if you're having trouble with your subject. Studying with other people makes it more fun to learn aswell.
  • Give yourself rewards for doing difficult tasks and questions.
  • Take short breaks during the studying, just to clear your mind.
  • Always have a sufficient amount of pencils and other writing gear.
  • While you are studying, have a calm mind. Try not to think about events that will affect your emotions.

Related wikiHows

Article provided by wikiHow, a collaborative writing project to build the world's largest, highest quality how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to Force Yourself to Seriously Study. All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.

How To-24: How to Exercise Your Brain


from wikiHow - The How to Manual That You Can Edit

Scientists believe that exercising your brain can create a 'cognitive reserve' that will help you stay sharp as you age.

Steps

  1. Take a class to learn something you have always wanted to know about. Learn to play bridge, or study Spanish, or take a seminar in photoshop.
  2. Do games and puzzles such as crossword puzzles and Sudoku puzzles. You can also play word games like Scrabble.
  3. Read often and read a lot of different types of books. Take a magazine and dedicate a certain amount of time to reading it each day or each week. Read the newspaper. Set your computer homepage to bring up news items of particular interest to you. And then read them each time you open the computer.
  4. Remember and repeat groups of words. Try memorizing your grocery list.
  5. Play computer brain games, such as Brain Age for Nintendo DS.
  6. Test and monitor your memory and attention with special computer games.
  7. Write or edit a wikiHow article every now and then.
  8. Meditate often. Take calm, deep breaths. Your brain needs a lot of fresh air.
  9. Eat foods containing omega fatty acids such as flax seeds, hemp seeds and fish. Omega fatty acids have been known to boost intellectual stamina.
  10. Perform math functions regularly.
  11. Learn new words from a word a day calendar or from a dictionary.
  12. Use your left hand if you are right handed, and reverse. You will be exercising the opposite side of the brain.
  13. Mess around with a twisty puzzle.
  14. Learn to read and play music (classical music is known to have the best effects.)
  15. Use the Mozart Effect - classical music increases brain activity more positively than other kinds of music. Two pieces of Mozart's music; Sonata for Two Pianos in D Major (K. 448) and Piano Concerto No. 23 (K. 488), were found to have this effect.
  16. Draw or paint.

Tips

  • Remember to exercise your body - a healthier mind results from a healthy body. Get plenty of physical exercise.
  • There are plenty of programs out there that will help with your memory. "Brain Age" or "Big Brain Academy" for the Nintendo DS are recommended and fun. These games were specifically made for improving your memory.

Related wikiHows

Sources and Citations

Article provided by wikiHow, a collaborative writing project to build the world's largest, highest quality how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to Exercise Your Brain. All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.

How To-23: How to Impress Others With Your Words


from wikiHow - The How to Manual That You Can Edit

Do you want people to listen to you with open mouths and a desperate desire to hear you continue then work on your vocabulary and word usage.

Steps

  1. Acquire a sophisticated vocabulary. Nobody will be hanging on to your ever word if you only know 80 words. Read a lot of books! They will supply you with all the mesmerising adjectives and dumbfounding verbs you could ever possibly need.
  2. Maintain a creative view point on the world. Watch the world around you carefully, taking it all in, so when someone asks you your opinion on something, it isn't a typical "I think this is good because...." You will be able to express a fascinating opinion on any subject no matter how boring.
  3. When you have your vocabulary and creative opinions on the world; you must have good presentation skills. The simplest and most important aspect of presentation skills is too make eye contact. To captivate your audience with your words you must hold their gaze. It shows confidence and shows that you know what you are talking about.
  4. Know when to raise and lower the volume of your voice for dramatic effect so your listener are aching to hear you speak on.
  5. Smile! It shows major confidence and conviction, nobody will dare to question you if you emanate such confident vibes.
  6. Keep the conversation dynamic so nobody will get bored, keep advancing the topic. This involves quick thinking by the speaker.
  7. Know which subjects to target at different people. A girl will not want to discuss wrestling or a nerd will not want want to discuss sport.
  8. Keep the eye contact, smiling and theatrical qualities to your words constant throughout your conversation. This can be a priceless quality for later life. It can never hurt to have good presentation skills.

Tips

  • Always show that you know exactly what you are talking about(even if you don't fool them with your wit and performance skills.)
  • Present yourself well, be clean and tidy; it shows intelligence and authority with which nobody will argue against you.
  • Know your audience when you speak with them, lead the conversation down angles you and they will be able to easily talk about.
  • Often talk about a special talent of yours(if you have one) weave your words around that subject and people will soon think you are incredible and talented.
  • Do this often to someone you are attracted to. People will love intelligence and the ability to have a thrilling conversation; you may be rewarded for your use of the 'gab'

Warnings

  • Do not let your performance falter even once. It can ruin the effect completely.

Related wikiHows

Article provided by wikiHow, a collaborative writing project to build the world's largest, highest quality how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to Impress Others With Your Words. All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.

How To-22: How to Become an Advanced English Speaker


from wikiHow - The How to Manual That You Can Edit


This article is a stub. You can help by expanding and clarifying it. Notice added on 2008-01-02.
How to go from a beginner to advanced (in English).

Steps

  1. Read English constantly, whether it is books like Harry Potter or non-fiction, scholarly works.
  2. Read aloud in order to build both your written and spoken vocabulary.
  3. Practice writing a lot. Essays, article contributions, blogging, etc.
  4. Communicate as much as possible in English.
  5. Make use of the dictionary or thesaurus.
  6. When speaking English be relaxed and Confident.

Tips

  • Grammar is very important. Lay yourself a good grammar foundation and your English will improve exponentially. Nevertheless, don't get bogged down and held back by grammar rules. You want to speak the language, not learn how it's spoken.
  • Grammar is not only about sentence/verb formations. You should understand the implied meaning associated with the grammar used.
  • Try to think in English instead of your mother tongue/the language you are familiar with.
  • Use an English dictionary instead of a bilingual dictionary (as you progress).
  • Practice using natural English instead of finding the English equivalents from your mother tongue.
  • Watch movies in English without subtitles or English language satellite channels like BBC or CNN and try to understand it.
  • Find a friend with whom you can practice English.

Warnings

  • Be patient. Language learning takes a while.

Related wikiHows

Sources and Citations

Article provided by wikiHow, a collaborative writing project to build the world's largest, highest quality how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to Become an Advanced English Speaker. All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.

How To-21: How to Improve Education in a School


How to Improve Education in a School


from wikiHow - The How to Manual That You Can Edit

Some steps are suggested here to improve the education in the shcools, whih doing wonderful job for the mainstream education as well as those for the handicapped children.

Steps

  1. Start a daily physical fitness training and practice program.
  2. Include a variety of physical training methods to avoid monotony and improve efficacy.
  3. Start a daily sports activity. Add a variety of sports prevalent in other parts of the world to make them more interesting, entertaining and promoting global unity.
  4. Start a daily psychomotor training activity.
  5. Combine the psychomotor activity with production and sales so that students experience empowerment and self esteem and the school becomes more self sufficient.
  6. Start daily pranayam in the schools.
  7. Start a daily prayer, if already not in practice.
  8. Start daily program so byhearting poems and songs, preferably from at least couple of languages from other countries promoting global unity.
  9. Encourage maximum and daily person to person interaction and dialogue amongst the teachers and students.
  10. Introduce and incorporate examinations, which examine the actual skill, capacity or performance of the student, rather than his/her ability of repeating or reproducing things from books.

Tips

  • Physical, psychomotor, emotional and intellectual and spiritual training can be accomplished with pragmatic base in way described above. One can make improvements in the scheme through trial and errors and learning from others' experiences.

Warnings

  • The encouragement and provision of opportunities should not be replaced by rituals and impositions.
  • Every kind of open mindedness and tolerance should be encouraged, so that better international relations can be realized.

Things You'll Need

  • Perspective and conviction of Global Unity and global welfare.
  • Readiness to accept and introduce physiological insights and principles in the education.
  • Readiness and openness to have dialogue with experts in other fields.
  • Support from the society and government in terms of encouraging you efforts and providing you help.
  • Support from media and net websites, so that you can share your views, work and experiences and may be, inspire others!

Related wikiHows

Sources and Citations

  • Superliving: Dr. Shriniwas Kashalikar
  • Stress: Understanding and Management: Dr. Shriniwas Kashalikar
  • Conceptual Stress: Understanding and Management: Dr. Shriniwas Kashalikar

Article provided by wikiHow, a collaborative writing project to build the world's largest, highest quality how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to Improve Education in a School. All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.