Raising An Independent Math Learner

 

In celebration of Mathematics Awareness Month in April, Sylvan Darien offers tips that parents can use to help students succeed in math

Every student studies mathematics, and it has always been an important component in education. It is a tool that helps us make sense of the world around us, and it is particularly important because success in mathematics has been linked to success in college and future careers. Simply stated, math counts when it comes to a bright future.

In celebration of Mathematics Awareness Month in April 2012, Sylvan Learning located in Darien is offering tips that families can use to help their student excel in mathematics education and become an independent learner.
 
The theme of this year’s Mathematics Awareness Month is “Mathematics, Statistics, and the Data Deluge,” to demonstrate how mathematics and statistics provide the tools to understand data collected every day from various devices, networks and other sources. Continue reading

The Teenage Brain

 

The October 2011 National Geographic lead story is “The New Science of the Teenage Brain” – http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2011/10/teenage-brains/dobbs-text -  a must read for educators and professionals working with young adults. One insight is that what is perceived as risky behavior is frequently more rational than many adults may think such as driving fast on a dry straight road with no traffic. Risky behavior and exasperating traits of teenagers may also be keys to success in later life. Risky Business as measured in a graph goes down substantially in the eighteenth year and into the twenties.  If you can make it through these years as a parent (relatively successfully), your teenager may well be on the road to a productive and challenging career (although it might take several tries to find the best fit).

Another tenet of this article is that billions of dollars spent on counseling adolescents are, for the most part, ineffective. Active, involved parents can help guide and provide kernels of wisdom, and they have to gain trust and be supportive. The prolonged plasticity of the late-developing frontal areas of the brain in teenagers allows for growth from mistakes and experimentation before speed transmission from the brain’s white matter slows down, and maturity sets in. A final thought – If we smartened up at a younger age, we would end up dumber.

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.