Tips for Learning & Lifelong Learning

 

Sylvan - Darien recently gave a presentation to a local Chamber of Commerce on Learning & Lifelong Learning. These were some of the highlights.
1) Always have a book or article
It doesn’t matter if it takes you a year or a week to read a book or article.
Always strive to have a book that you are reading through. Shaving off a few
minutes in-between activities can lead to 1-2 books per month or 10-20 each
year.
2) Keep a “To-Learn” List
You have a to-do list. Now add a “to-learn” list. On it you can write ideas for new
areas of study –  a new language, learn a
skill or read the collective works of Shakespeare. Whatever motivates you,
write it down.
3) Develop More Intellectual Friends
Start spending more time with people who think and discuss what they know or have
learned.   People who invest a good part
of their time in learning new skills. Their habits will rub off on you. Even
better, they will probably share some of their knowledge with you.
4) Guided  and Recorded Thinking
Albert Einstein once said, “Any man who reads too much and uses his own brain too
little falls into lazy habits of thinking.” Studying the wisdom of others is
great, but lifelong learning requires you to think through ideas yourself.
Spend time journaling, meditating or contemplating over ideas.
5) Learn and Practice
Skill based learning is useless if it isn’t applied. Reading a book on C++ isn’t the
same thing as writing a program. Studying painting isn’t the same as picking up
a brush. If your knowledge can be applied, put it into practice.
6) Teach Others
You learn when you teach. If you have an outlet of communicating ideas to others, nurture
it and use it. Start a blog, mentor someone or even discuss ideas with a
friend.
7) Clean Your Input and Rotate to New Sources
Regularly clean out old blogs or media if you are only skimming them. Great blogs and
media can be a powerful source of new
ideas.  

8) Learn in Groups
Join organizations that teach skills. Workshops and group learning events can make
educating yourself a fun, social experience.
9) Be Ready to Unlearn Assumptions
You can’t add green tea to a full cup. I always try to maintain a  perspective to any new idea and let it
percolate. Too many convictions simply mean too few paths for new ideas.
Actively seek out information that contradicts your worldview.
10) Find Work that Encourage Learning
Pick a career that encourages continual learning. If you are in a job that doesn’t
have much intellectual freedom, consider switching to one that does.  

11) Start a New Project
Set out to do something new. Forced learning in this way can be fun and
challenging. If you don’t know anything about computers, try a class or even building
one. If you consider yourself a non artist, try painting.
12) Follow Your Intuition
Lifelong learning is full of wandering and discovery. You can’t be sure what to expect
and there isn’t always an end goal in mind. Intuition can guide you and make
self-education more enjoyable. Much in our lives is logical, so much so that
making choices on the fly is suffocated.
13) Fifteen Minutes a Day
Use fifteen minutes of your day as a period for education. If you put it off to later
in the day, don’t let urgent activities push it out of the way.
14) Make it a Priority
Few external forces are going to persuade you to learn. The desire has to come from
within. Make lifelong learning a habit, and reinforce it weekly and even daily
- it is up to you to make it a priority in your life.

 

Backpacks for School; Now Enrolling for Fall; “Learning and Lifelong Learning”

 

There was an excellent article on backpacks in the Wall Street Journal (D1) on Wed August 31. The weight should not exceed 10% of your child’s body weight. there are photos and descriptions of 8 types of backpacks.Wheeled backpacks are out of favor and have, in some cases, been banned because they do not fit in the school lockers.

Sylvan is hosting and open house for the Darien Chamber of Commerce on Thursday Sept 8 from 7:30 -9 at 14 Brook Street.  Come by and join us for coffee and bagels. Doug will be giving a short talk on “Learning and Lifelong Learning”.

 

Learning Styles – How does your child learn?

 

Wikipedia has an extensive entry on learning styles (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Learning_styles), research, and comments and critiques on several theories. Connecting with your teacher is important, and research has shown that effective teachers use different learning styles tailored to their students. Sylvan-Darien has 18 teachers, and we custom design a program for your child based on the results of a detailed evaluation.

 

The Case for Common Educational Standards

 

An interesting article by Joel Klein (former Chancellor NYC schools) and Jeb Bush (former Governor of Florida) on Friday June 24, 2011 Wall Street Journal A13. Too many high school grads are not ready for college. States are stepping up to raise standards and require students to achieve at a higher level.

Another article of note in the Wall Street Journal on June 28 A15 by Meghan Cox Gurdon called My “Reprehensible” Take on Teen Literature.  Are teens reading too many books in school that dwell on ugliness, dysfunction, barbarity  and cruelty?

 

Sylvan – Darien Suggests Creative and Memorable Summer Activities for Kids; Now Enrolling for Summer

 

Sylvan – Darien Suggests Creative and Memorable Summer Activities for Kids

Come summertime, kids are always looking for something fun, lucrative, or rewarding to do. After all, there are only so many TV reruns to watch and video games to play before their cries of “I’m bored!” begin. With summer just around the corner, parents still have time to encourage their kids to do something special—and maybe even a little different—this year.

Gwynne Campbell of Sylvan Learning located in Darien suggests ways to inspire some memorable fun this summer and keep children learning in the process. Sylvan Learning is North America’s leading provider of in-center and live, online tutoring at home to students of all ages, grades, and skill levels.

Put on a play or concert and enhance creativity. Kids love to show off their talents. If you have an aspiring actor or musician in the family, suggest she get together with other performer-friends to entertain families or neighbors. Kids can write their own short plays from their favorite books—Amelia Bedelia books make for fun, silly plots—or Google “short plays for kids” for other ideas. If your kids are musicians, they can choose their favorite selections or write their own songs. If they’re really lucky, they can do both, and put on a musical!

Help a neighbor and develop caring and responsible values. Many neighbors in your community would greatly appreciate some help around the house, in the yard, with the shopping, walking pets, washing cars, or with errands. An hour or two a week allows your child to be helpful and gives your neighbor some assistance and company.

Start a book club and sharpen reading skills. If your kids have been given a summer reading list, they’ll have an easier time of it if they work with study buddies. Invite their friends over for reading and discussion followed by pizza, swimming, or a movie. For a list of recommended summer reading, visit www.SylvanLearning.com.

Start a new sports team and learn research skills. Kids are always interested in the new and unusual. Find a safe sport that isn’t on your school’s physical education curriculum—windsurfing, sailing, bocce—and help your kids learn about it, try it, and have fun with it.    Hike a hundred miles and teach perseverance and writing skills. What says summer more than trekking through the woods? Set a distance goal, and go for it! Even if you’re not near nature trails or green forests, measure a few routes around your neighborhood and hike away a couple of times a week. An inexpensive pedometer and a “hiking journal” let you keep track of your progress. Include descriptions of new things you discovered, whom you walked with, what you talked about, what songs you sang, and maybe even some clever drawings.

Make a movie and sharpen writing and leadership skills. It’s easier to become a “junior filmmaker” these days, thanks to inexpensive cameras and computer programs that help develop creativity and imagination. Kids can write their own scripts, rewrite scenes from favorite movies, create new endings for those films, or dramatize episodes from favorite books.

Do some gardening and learn geometry, botany, and working within a budget.   Organize a small plot of yard for flowers, plants, or vegetables. At the library or online, help kids research gardens and gardening techniques.   Give them an allowance for seeds. Help them design the plot, nurture it, and reap the benefits.

Exhibit paintings or photographs and boost creativity, writing and social skills. Every child has an artistic streak. Encourage kids to draw, use pastels, watercolor, or paint. Or take photos of friends, games, pets, flowers, neighbors, events, or hikes. Put the photos in a hard-copy album or post online to share with others. Add captions: “My friends and I had a great time at the pool on the Fourth of July. Here we are swimming, having a barbecue, and watching the fireworks. It was awesome!”

Play marathon board games and encourage logical thinking. Once or twice a summer, it’s fun to have a game marathon. Choose your game: Monopoly®, Scrabble®, Clue®, cribbage. Invite friends over, serve snacks, laugh a lot. Take a few pictures for the summer journal.

There are so many other ideas, adds Campbell. Your main purpose, of course, is to keep your kids’ minds and bodies active, their social skills keen, and their summer enjoyment high. Memories are made this way!

For more information contact Gwynne Campbell at (203) 655-3276 or gmcsylvan@aol.com. Parents looking for additional resources can visit the Parent Resources section at www.SylvanLearning.com

 

 

 

Sylvan Learning Center Supports “Feed My Starving Children” Campaign

 

Sylvan Learning Center Supports “Feed My Starving Children” Campaign

Preparations are underway for Darien’s 3rd annual Feed My Starving children (FMSC) Mobile Pack Event, to be held on October 1 & 2, 2011 at MiddlesexMiddle School.  The event is hosted by Darien’s 11 local churches and co-sponsored by the council for DarienSchool Parents, and last year over 1,000 Darien children and adults gathered at the middle school to pack 228,096 meals!   Local Sylvan students and their families are invited to participate in this unique weekend program, the goal of which is to package 300,000 meals, nutritionally designed for optimum health, that will be delivered to thousands of starving children across the globe.  Each sponsoring community underwrites the cost of the program (this year $57,000) through various town-based fundraising events.  FMSC and Sylvan will be handing out FREE tubes of M & Ms, which, when empty, can be filled with quarters and returned to the Center. Each tube holds 56 quarters ($14.00) enough to create 73 Manna-Pack rice meals.  Proceeds from the M & M fundraiser will go directly to the support the October Mobile pack Event.

Feed My Starving Children, a Minnesota based, Christian not-for-profit, was founded in 1987 and since its inception has packed and delivered hundreds of millions meals for people around the world in life-threatening situations.  Each day more than 18,000 children die from starvation in the world.  But FMSC is making a difference!   1,500 Volunteers will be needed for the October event for shifts lasting two hours, and signs-ups will begin in early September.

Sylvan is proud to help support this life-changing event – we hope you will join us by saving your quarters and filling your tubes, after you have enjoyed your M & Ms, of course!  If you prefer instead to fill your tube with bills or write a check, all contributions will be welcome.  Checks should be made out to FMSC with event code #1110-58.

 

Turn a Summer Vacation into a Great School Year! Summer classes begin June 25th.

 

Turn a Summer Vacation into a Great School Year! 

Summer classes begin June 25th!

For most children, summer is a time to leave classes and homework behind.  However, when they return to school in the fall after the long summer break, students can find themselves struggling to catch up.

Skills and knowledge gained throughout the school year fade during the summer months.  Experienced educators all agree that loss of retention begins within a few days of the end of school unless the new information is reinforced for applied within a reasonable amount of time.  After a month without some form of reinforcement, a significant percentage of what students learned during the year can be lost.

For children who have been struggling at school, summer can be their opportunity to catch-up on key skills and feel more confident when they head back to class.  For students who do well in school, a summer program can be an opportunity to keep their enthusiasm for learning strong or can provide a chance to pursue enrichment or extra-credit classes.  Students who have struggled in a particular subject, like math or science, find that a summer preview class in that very subject can help ease the transition in the fall.

Sylvan’s eight-week summer program begins on Saturday, June 25th and individualized classes in beginning and academic reading, creative and expository writing, elementary math, algebra I and II, geometry, calculus, social studies, Spanish and SAT/ACT/ISEE and SSAT test prep will be offered Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday mornings and Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday afternoons.  Before enrolling in a Sylvan Summer Program, students are given an individualized assessment to determine academic strengths and weaknesses so that a personalized learning profile and program can be developed for each student.

Summer classes fill quickly, so don’t delay in calling to schedule classes. For additional information about how Sylvan can give your child a head-start on the next school year, please contact Gwynne or Kathy weekdays between 9 am and 3 pm.or log on to the Center website at @www.sylvandarien.com.