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Showing posts from May, 2021

Tips From Alla Volodina To Improve The Teaching As Well As Learning Experience

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  Alla Volodina  is an educational expert who has years of experience in teaching accounts and finance at some of the best institutes. She is committed to helping other fellow teachers improve the quality of their teaching and as such has started a website where she writes about various tips and techniques which can be adopted by teachers for this purpose. Alla Volodina Writes Various Actinic Teaching Techniques Topics like how to motivate teachers, discussion of some interesting tips on teaching accounts, hoe to transition your study habit to cope up with the university and others are discussed by her in her website. Categorized under three headings namely motivation, study skills and teaching; she discusses various simple yet very effective topics which will help both the teaching experience of the teachers as well as the learning experience of the students. One of her articles which discusses with students some tips on how to transition their study habits while entering the...

Alla Volodina York University - 10 Phrases Great Speakers Never Say

  While it’s really hard to immediately win over a crowd, it’s really easy for a speaker to lose the room within the first few minutes of a presentation. To make sure you don’t lose your audience, here’s  Boris Veldhuijzen van Zanten , serial entrepreneur and founder of  TwitterCounter  and  The Next Web , with ten things you should never say during your presentations: 1. “I’m jet-lagged/tired/hungover.” Not sure where this comes from, but one in five presentations at any conference starts with an excuse: “They only invited me yesterday,” or, “I’m really tired from my trip,” or some other lame excuse the audience really doesn’t want to hear. We, the audience, just want to see you give it your best. If you feel like crap and can’t give it your best, maybe you should have cancelled. Take a pill, drink an espresso and kill it! 2. “Can you hear me? Yes you can!” This is how many people start their talks. They tap a microphone three times, shout, “Can you all hear me...

Alla Volodina’s Pick Of The Week

  Here is an interesting article that Alla Volodina suggests to take a look at as it walks through the impacts of handwriting on your ability to learn.  How Handwriting Trains The Brain By  GWENDOLYN BOUNDS Ask preschooler Zane Pike to write his name or the alphabet, then watch this 4-year-old’s stubborn side kick in. He spurns practice at school and tosses aside workbooks at home. But Angie Pike, Zane’s mom, persists, believing that handwriting is a building block to learning. She’s right. Using advanced tools such as magnetic resonance imaging, researchers are finding that writing by hand is more than just a way to communicate. The practice helps with learning letters and shapes, can improve idea composition and expression, and may aid fine motor-skill development. It’s not just children who benefit. Adults studying new symbols, such as Chinese characters, might enhance recognition by writing the characters by hand, researchers say. Some physicians say handwriting could...

Alla Volodina - Transitioning your Study Habits as you Enter University

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  It’s not unusual to feel nervous about your first mid-term or exam at the university level.  Many students are surprised that the level of effort required to achieve top marks in high school often translate into poor grades in university. In university, your schedule may vary widely depending on the day. You may start early in the mornings on Mondays and Wednesdays, but have night classes on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Whatever your schedule, it is essential to be strategic in planning your study time.  If you have a two hour gap between classes, use this time to study on campus. It will be easier to do it during the day than at night where there are more social events. Increased independence is one of the perks of being in university, but many students find it difficult to keep up-to-date with readings and assignments. Many professors will not test you every class, but simply expect that you’re keeping current with the expectations laid out in the syllabus.  Skipping ...

How We Can Motivate Teachers? – Motivation For Teaching

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  Like other educational experts   Alla Volodina   also believes that teachers are the key in any educational system. It is very important to have good teachers, if we want to encourage our students for creative learning and better study skills. However, with constant working, teachers and get tired and can lose their interest in teaching. They teach students but forget to guide them about how to learn to study. In this situation, it is very important to motive teachers. Alla Volodina is discussing some important points how to motivate business and accounting teachers teaching at the high school level. Keeping up with business news and educational trends A good principle understands that how important it is to have motivated teachers. Teaching the same material several years in a row can be tiring. That is why, teachers should be encouraged to regularly update their knowledge and keep up with current business news. This will keep the teachers interested in the subject mat...