Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Storytelling Tips -Brian Sturm, University of South Carolina

Dr. Brian Sturm is a storyteller and storyteller-trainer.

This is an excellent 45 minute long video on "Storytelling Theory and Practice" from Brian Sturm at the Univeristy of South Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Tying together all the facts, putting information into a sequence, adding characters, and structuring a story are some of the topics. Professor Brian Sturm presents storytelling as a way of organizing information, conveying emotions and building community. He talks about how effective storytelling brings about an altered state of consciousness and suggests 16 ‘portals’:

  • novelty
  • expectations
  • personal preferences
  • comfort (physical)
  • familiarity
  • teller’s ability
  • rhythm
  • comfort (emotional)
  • occupation/training
  • humour
  • recency
  • teller’s involvement
  • telling style
  • rapport with teller
  • story content
  • memories

Three stories are told to illustrate the theoretical model: Truth and Story; What happens when you really listen; and The stone cutter. Storytelling ethics and the need for trust and truth are discussed. He does a nice job of merging theory and practice — making the case for why educators, businesses and others can benefit from understanding the art of storytelling.

Enjoy.



Thursday, August 23, 2012

Outliers - The 10,000-hour Rule


One of the most interesting parts of Malcolm Gladwell’s fantastic book Outliers is his discussion of the “10,000-hour rule,” which posits that it takes about 10,000 hours of dedicated practice to truly master a skill, be it playing the violin, computer programming, or skateboarding.

Gladwell covers several tantalizing examples, from the Beatles to Bill Gates, and argues that the biggest factor in their success is not innate talent or blind luck, but rather dedication to their chosen craft. It’s an empowering message, and one that suggests that almost anyone can succeed if they put in the time (could those saccharine posters be right?).

Of course, privilege and luck can greatly ease the way, but there’s little substitute for 10,000 hours of work.

This infographic, created for the blog Zintro by Nowsourcing, takes a closer look at practice and the 10,000-hour rule.


Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Innovative Way to Learn Korean Language


I was told that the Korean language is one of the easiest language to learn. For those who are interested to learn Korean, here is good news for you:

New York-based designer Si-Yeon Min has developed an engaging way for kids (and adults alike) to learn the Korean language. The very first hands-on Korean language game of its kind, Korable Block is made up of four wooden blocks that are hand-printed with the Korean alphabet characters. Combine the blocks to create over 120 single-syllable words including numbers, days of the week, food, body parts and more.

Min, a Korean native, developed Korable Block for his son. With a background in design and architecture, he wanted to find a new and interesting way his son could learn his native language. Interestingly, however, Korable Block has received a great response from non-Korean speakers, as well. As Min tells us, "People perceive it as a creative and imaginative toy that makes learning fun."

What's been the best compliment he's received so far? Min says it was this: “Among the toys and games designed by architects, a few stand out—Rubik's cube, Sudoku, and the Korable Block.”


Happy learning !!

Monday, August 20, 2012

Memory and Learning

How does one accelerate one's learning capability?

I am learning a new language now .... Mandarin, and have been on it since July 2012. I'm sure I would not be the last to say that it is a challenging language to learn.

I have been doing some research to help me accelerate my learning process. And I come to discover this important basic fact:

There is no learning without memory.


Most psychologists now agree that there are at least two memories: short term memory and long term memory.

The short-term memory is, effectively, a temporary storage device. When you are reading a sentence, it is your short term memory that retains the words at the beginning of the sentence for long -enough to make sense of the whole sentence. Then it is the meaning, rather than the individual words, that is transferred into your long term memory. The long term memory is the permanent storage system from which recall can be made.

Unless an item is rehearsed, it is lost out of the short term memory, and does not enter the long term memory. Hence the importance of rehearsal and review in any learning.

There are actually three distinct aspects to memorising something.

The three 'R's' of memory, are Registration, Retention and Recall.

You have to:
(1) Become aware of new facts and make an active effort to transfer them to long term memory. That is Registration or as psychologists term it `encoding'.

(2) Store these facts in your long term memory and

(3) Be able to recall the facts when you need them.

It can be concluded that, without rehearsal of a new fact in the short term memory, it would not get transferred to the long term memory.

Model of Memory


Information which is not rehearsed in the short term memory is rapidly forgotten. This is because the short term memory is the part of the memory that does the encoding, or registration, and the better the encoding the stronger the ultimate memory.

Hence, to learn something well, there is no short cut ... you need to rehearse or review. The more you do that, the better the information will stay in your long term memory. And that applies to my learning of Mandarin. I carry my Mandarin flashcards with me wherever I go and review them as often as possible when there is any slack time. 



Happy learning !!
 

Sunday, August 19, 2012

The Lady (2011) - Story of Aung San Suu Kyi and her husband, Michael Aris in Full HD

The Lady is one movie which I missed in the cinemas. I  have been trying to search for it and watch it free online or perhaps a free download from any of the movie portals. I am fortunate to find it on youtube and it is given at the end of the page.

The Lady is the extraordinary story of Aung San Suu Kyi and her husband, Michael Aris. It is also the epic story of the peaceful quest of the woman who is at the core of Burma's democracy movement. Despite distance, long separations, and a dangerously hostile regime, their love endures until the very end. A story of devotion and human understanding set against a backdrop of political turmoil that continues today. The Lady was written over a period of three years by Rebecca Frayn. Interviews with key figures in Aung San Suu Kyi's entourage enabled her to reconstruct for the first time the true story of Burma's national heroine.


Michelle Yeoh is superb as Suu Kyi, daughter of modern Burma’s founder Aung San, an Oxford academic, wife of British Tibetan scholar Michael Aris (well handled by David Thewlis, who also plays his own twin), and mother raising two young sons in their English home.

She finds herself thrust into politics when she returns to Burma to care for her ailing mother and discovers a nation struggling beneath a brutal military regime and is persuaded by supporters to stay to found the National League for Democracy, taking on a crazy general who relies on soothsayers to tell him how to run the country.

The story covers all these bases efficiently in telling Suu Kyi’s tale, focusing on the period from 1988 to 1999.  The Lady is little more than a history lesson — although a beautifully presented one — wrapped in the pink gloss of a G-rated potboiler evidenced in Suu Kyi’s and Michael’s storybook romance.

We never get to the heart of the matter: why did she feel so compelled to choose country over family? And why did husband Michael so easily accept her decision?

Glimpses of the enormous price Suu Kyi is forced to pay comes as Michael faces a cancer diagnosis and she weighs the agony of losing her husband against the knowledge the Burmese government would never let her back into the country she is determined to liberate if she went home to England.

Yeoh is inspiring as the serene Suu Kyi, a thin figure for whom an always-present ring of orchids in her hair could weigh her down. If only she showed us the nature of her strength as well. Watch an interview with her here.

Below are some beautiful scenes from the movie. Enjoy!












The movie above is mostly in English. There are however some segments where Burmese is spoken but no English sub-titles are displayed. You may wish to separately download the sub-titles in English from here.

Alternatively, you can also watch the movie here. ENJOY!!




Wednesday, August 15, 2012

How I Learn Mandarin with Free Online Resources

I have been trying to learn Mandarin on several occasions years ago without much success. It was due mainly to my lack of perseverance and discipline. In my younger days, I studied English as first language and Malay language as second. There was little opportunity then to learn Mandarin and most of my lessons in this language was taught by my parents. Hence I do have some basic knowledge of Mandarin and since I live in Singapore where Mandarin is widely spoken by a large portion of the population, I am actually fairly well immerse in it.

Yes, I do have some advantage in that sense and I can speak a smattering of Mandarin but not able to conduct a proper conversation with it. I now have decided that it is still not too late to learn it for good once and for all and be able to better appreciate the language and culture of more than 1.3 billion people who know Mandarin.

Take a look at this or the video below, do not be surprised that so many foreigners are learning Mandarin and they are becoming very good at it. So don't be left behind because it is the language of the future.


So what is the best way to start to learn Mandarin. My research has shown that there is a more efficient way of learning this supposedly difficult language which has more than 10,000 characters. You have probably hear about the 80/20 Rule.  It states that 80% of the results in any endeavor come from 20% of the input, material, or effort.

Effective Learning Method

We can adapt this principle and prioritize material based on its recorded likelihood and frequency of usage. To understand 95% of a language and become conversational fluent may require 3 months of applied learning; to reach the 98% threshold could require 10 years. There is a point of diminishing returns where, for most people, it makes more sense to acquire more languages (or other skills) vs. add a 1% improvement per 5 years.

According to the statistics, a knowledge of a given number of the most common Chinese characters should result in the following estimated understanding of the Chinese language:


At this stage, I am aiming to learn and master 1,000 characters first. 

Mandarin Online Lessons

It is of utmost important that you select the right material for learning Mandarin. If it is the wrong material, it does not matter how you study or if you study – practical fluency is impossible without the proper tools (material). I will share with you the main online sources which I am using to learn and hopefully master Mandarin. Most importantly, they have the breadth and depth of content to take one to the more advanced levels of Mandarin should the interest persists. Also, it is completely FREE!! 

But before that, one need to know the 4 basic tones in which Mandarin is spoken. This is the very essence of speaking the language - knowing the 4 tones. Watch the video below.


Resource 1: Chinese characters can be decomposed into components called radicals shown below. 


The most commonly accepted table of radicals for traditional Chinese characters consists of 214 entries (see Wikipedia for more detailed explanation). These 214 radicals were popularized back in the reign of Qing emperor Kangxi, who commissioned what is now known as the Kangxi Zidian, a character dictionary listing over 47,000 entries. Tables with fewer or greater number of radicals have been devised for simplified characters. Being able to recognize the common radicals helps in the learning and recognition of new characters. Check it out from this site. Be familiar with the common characters and how the strokes are written, there is no need to learn all of them. Here is another source.

Resource 2: Here is an online resource which provides the most common Chinese characters in order of frequency. Here you will find the most frequently used characters. There are 3,000 of them, more than enough for my needs. Apply the 80/20 principle, there's no need to know all 3,000 of them. As I've said, I'm aiming for 1,000 characters first.

Resource 3: Now, this is the most important online resource for me to learn Mandarin. Learning Mandarin video lessons provided by China State Television or CCTV is one of the best. The lessons are well prepared, professionally done, good quality and you learn from the source itself. Also there are many different lessons to cater for various objectives. For Beginners, there are : 
a) Growing up with Chinese
b) Easy Chinese (Aurora Carlson)
c) Survival Chinese
d) CRI Chinese Studio

I am going through the 'Growing up with Chinese' series of 100 videos. Now at lesson 14. 

Go through them yourself and take your pick. Let me show you what lesson 1 looks like. See video below.


Resource 4: Finally, I discover this Chinese-English and English-Chinese dictionary which helps me to remember the Chinese characters in a fun way. Try it out, it really makes learning Mandarin more fun.Type in the English word to search of a Chinese character or type in a romanised Mandarin word to get the Mandarin character.

Finally, a tip from a Chinese teacher to aid in memory - REVIEW, REVIEW, REVIEW. Please refer to this link for more useful tips to learn Mandarin.

To help with the review process, write the Chinese characters learnt on flashcards or a small pocket-size notebook. Write pronunciation and explanations on the other side. Carry it along with you wherever you go and when there is opportunity, do your review.

Setting goals - yes, you need to set a realistic goal. Say plan on learning 2 characters a day; which means in a year you would have learnt about 750 characters. According to the chart above, that means you would be able to understand more than 80% of what you read in a Chinese newspaper. Not too shabby huh.

I hope I have given enough resources here for you to start learning this beautiful language. Let me know how you progress. We are on the same journey together.

All the best!!

Monday, August 13, 2012

Closing Ceremony - London 2012 Olympic Games

Missed the Closing Ceremony. Watch it here !! Wonderful show....

The fireworks display was one of the highlights of a ceremony which included stunning performances by comedians, musicians, dancers and actors.
Monty Python star Eric Idle provided a moment of hilarity, appearing onstage to lead the crowd through a singalong rendition of Always Look on the Bright Side of Life.













Sunday, August 12, 2012

My Reading - The Iron Lady


Saw the movie, now reading this superbly researched book. - From Grocer's Daughter to Prime Minister.

3 key things she learnt from her father, a devout methodist - the habit of hard work, tireless community activity & a powerful moral sense. This rare moral sense was her greatest political strength in the muddy world of politics.

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