Tuesday, 13 April 2021

Minizine, short stories by the young for the young

13-year-old starts website to host stories written by children

https://shaunlol.wixsite.com/minizine
 
Thirteen-year-old Shaun Ng, who is an avid writer himself, started a website during the pandemic last year to feature stories written by himself and other young people.
 
Known simply as “Minizine”, the website features “short stories by young people for young people”.
 
“I wanted to show people that everything is possible and that children can write good articles and stories too, ” he says.
 

Read More: 



让学生投稿提升英文能力,少年自学架设网站

Wednesday, 6 May 2020

A Few Lessons for ESL Learners

A Good Lesson for ESL Learners
https://youtu.be/1VxH7YodoY4
* ESL 🙄 = English as a Second Language
😒 But… 😅 I know… 😇 It sounds "alright" to 😬 many of us ~星马兩地的人


🤓 *Another Good One: Phrasal Verb with "Turn"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g1WvQsHIQV4&t=60


* A Word of Caution  😏  温馨提示 
1. 请“谨慎挑选”适合的看看+学习 😇 ”尽信书 不如无书“
2. Pls don't sign-up for anything "unnecessary" 😌


Wednesday, 22 April 2020

当 地球日 撞上 COVID19

Earth Day 2020 地球日 "50 years Anniversary"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7I0sFyDKKBA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XBrnnByieL4

Official Theme Song 2020: "Carry You Home"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9M9KotK1gYM
Singer: James Blunt

Climate change is real. With every new crisis happening, we realize that we are pushing us and our planet one step closer to disaster. A disaster of unprecedented scale. We are depleting our natural resources, our wildlife, and forests. 2019 witnessed one of the biggest forest fires in Amazon and Australia. We lost hectares of forests and almost a billion wild animals. The situation is critical and calls for our utmost focus. Together we can reverse climate change only if we act NOW. This is our only home and now is the time to act.

No Time To Waste Feeding everyone in a sustainable way is a global challenge. It also depends on the actions of people like you and I. With nearly 8 billion people on Earth, individual actions add up.

More: https://sck862.blogspot.com/2019/04/earth-day.html


Wednesday, 8 April 2020

Papa Teach Me: "Get"

In English, the word 🧐 ‘get’ has actually so many meanings and is so frequently used. Let's 🤓 watch and learn  with Aly Williams from Papa Teach Me.

1. The many meanings of "Get"
https://youtu.be/3CBg_z4rfZY?t=82
*先跳过前面的短片(很好笑哦!)Let’s skip the “funny” intro first, you may 😁 replay from the beginning later.



2. This lesson https://youtu.be/AsspZcwurwg is about 🙄 Phrasal verbs with the word "get". We have get around, get off, get by, get on / along, get over, get through, get up, and lots more… and 😖 some of these have multiple meanings…!



More Notes on Aly Williams
https://fce.pl/aly-williams-about-fluency-tips-for-studying-english/


Wednesday, 1 April 2020

It's April Fools!


Britons have suggested April Fools' Day pranks should be cancelled amid the coronavirus outbreak as they warned people to avoid being 'insensitive'.


April Fools’ Day is a day to be silly and pull friendly jokes and pranks. It’s been around, and is part of the Western culture, for a long time.

Here’s how it works: you do something silly or funny, and then you say, “April Fools!” The point is to laugh and have fun. Having fun being silly but be kind and respectful to everyone else. Always remember that!



"Ouch!"  😭  This is the joke of April Fools' Day 2020.  😂  Due to COVID-19, we may have lost some freedom temporarily, but don't lose our humour.  😜


Friday, 7 June 2019

What You Believe Affects What You Achieve

Growth Mindset vs Fixed Mindset 
Revisiting Carol Dweck’s fascinating work on the growth mindset.
By Bill Gates | December 07, 2015

Even as my glasses have gotten smaller and hopefully cooler over the years, I am still a proud member of Nerd Nation. As such, I read a lot of books—usually more than 50 a year. Many of the books I review on Gates Notes are recent releases, because I figure people are generally more interested in hearing about newer works. But I also like to revisit older books that feel especially important or relevant. Mindset: The New Psychology of Success (2006), by the Stanford psychologist Dr. Carol Dweck, is one of those books.

Mindset first came to my attention a few years ago in a fascinating invention session on education with my friend Nathan Myhrvold, similar to the sessions Malcolm Gladwell described in his article “In the Air: Who says big ideas are rare?” Dweck’s research had a big impact on our thinking that day. And in the years since, Dweck and her research have helped my foundation colleagues and me understand more about the attitudes and habits that allow some students to persevere in school despite big challenges.

Here is Dweck’s thesis: Our genes influence our intelligence and talents, but these qualities are not fixed at birth. If you mistakenly believe that your capabilities derive from DNA and destiny, rather than practice and perseverance, then you operate with what Dweck calls a “fixed mindset” rather than a “growth mindset.” Our parents and teachers exert a big influence on which mindset we adopt—and that mindset, in turn, has a profound impact on how we learn and which paths we take in life.   

In experiment after experiment, Dweck has shown that the fixed mindset is a huge psychological roadblock—regardless of whether you feel you were blessed with talent or not. If you have the fixed mindset and believe you were blessed with raw talent, you tend to spend a lot of time trying to validate your “gift” rather than cultivating it. To protect your self-identity as someone who’s super smart or gifted, you often steer clear of tough challenges that might jeopardize that identity. Here’s how Dweck puts it: “From the point of view of the fixed mindset, effort is only for people with deficiencies…. If you’re considered a genius, a talent, or a natural—then you have a lot to lose. Effort can reduce you.”

If you have the fixed mindset and believe you lost the genetic lottery, you also have little incentive to work hard. Why bother putting in a lot of effort to learn a difficult concept if you’ve convinced yourself that you’re lousy at it and nothing is going to alter that basic equation? When I was visiting with community college students in Arizona, one young man said to me, “I’m one of the people who’s not good at math.” It kills me when I hear that kind of thing. I think about how different things might have been if he had been told consistently “you’re very capable of learning this stuff.”

In contrast, people with the growth mindset believe that basic qualities, including intelligence, can be strengthened like muscles. It’s not that they believe that anyone can become the next Albert Einstein or Michael Jordan if they just work hard enough on their physics homework or fadeaway jumpers. Instead, in Dweck’s words “they believe a person’s true potential is unknown (and unknowable); that it’s impossible to foresee what can be accomplished with years of passion, toil, and training.” As a result, they have every incentive to take on tough challenges and seek out opportunities to improve.

One of the reasons I loved Mindset is because it’s solutions-oriented. In the book’s final chapter, Dweck describes the workshop she and her colleagues have developed to shift students from a fixed to a growth mindset. These workshops demonstrate that “just learning about the growth mindset can cause a big shift in the way people think about themselves and their lives.”

My only criticism of the book is that Dweck slightly oversimplifies for her general audience. Contrary to the impression that Dweck creates here (but probably not in her academic papers), most of us are not purely fixed-mindset people or growth-mindset people. We’re both. When I was reading the book, I realized that I have approached some things with a growth mindset (like bridge) while other things in a fixed mindset (like basketball).

The greatest virtue of the book is that you can’t help but ask yourself things like, “Which areas have I always looked at through a fixed-mindset lens?” and “In what ways am I sending the wrong message to my children about mindset and effort?” Thanks to Dweck’s skillful coaching, you’re almost guaranteed to approach these tough questions with a growth mindset.

Read More:
1. https://medium.com/@rmbolton/mindset-the-new-psychology-of-success-by-carol-s-dweck-ph-d-c57686a310e1

2. http://sourcesofinsight.com/10-big-ideas-from-mindset-the-new-psychology-of-success

Thursday, 9 May 2019

TED Talks on YouTube

1. TED Founder | Can't Stop Learning!

2. John Green | Learning Everything Online

3. Tony Robbins | Why We Do What We Do

4. Tai Lopez: Why I read a book a day and why you should too

5. Josh Kaufman: The first 20 hours of learning anything

6. Eli Pariser: What Facebook And Google are hiding from the world

7. Luis von Ahn: Massive-scale online collaboration

8. Elizabeth Gilbert: Success, failure and the drive to keep creating


Scientific Discoveries, History & the Oceans:-

1. How simple ideas lead to scientific discoveries

2. Russell Foster: Why do we sleep?

3. David Christian: The history of our world in 18 minutes

4. Robert Ballard: On exploring the oceans

5. David Gallo: Looking deep into the ocean

6. Andrew Wheeler: How a grain of sand rewrote our ocean's history


And many more  。。。