student
From balancing your course load to forging relationships with classmates to extracurricular involvement, these are the tried and true methods to nail your career as a student.
Different Learning Styles
Visual learning is about seeing stuff. As a clairvoyant, I get to see a lot of different things in my dreams, visions or seeing auras in general. Auditory learners like to listen to tape-recorded lectures as one learning strategy that they can have. Verbal writing or speeches is another type of learning style. Physical learning involves using touch and your body to process information. Logical people use logic to reason about things, as well as systems. Social learning implies you learn in groups or with other people, solitary learners like me prefer to sit alone with books or using self-study methods.
By Iria Vasquez-Paez6 years ago in Education
A Student's Guide to Being Stress Free
Stress that's caused from education and studying is often neglected by adults who underestimate the pressures that young people now go through. When I was younger, there was no one to give me advice or to even take me seriously when I suffered from stress early into my schooling. However, moving to university and being on my own enabled me to find the best, and stress-free, ways to live and study. Here are six things I do to ensure that I remain stress free at university...
By 6 years ago in Education
The "No Child Left Behind" Law
Who came up with this law? Sometimes, a child should be held back a grade because of slow learning or having issues with learning. I know a girl who her mother wanted her to be held back, but the school wouldn't because of this law. The sad thing is the girl is now a teenager at seventeen and cannot tell time on a standard clock, nor can she count money or change back.
By Brandi Payne6 years ago in Education
Realization
From birth, we have things instilled in us. These are ideas, concepts, and beliefs that we've had since we can remember. Because they were instilled in us, we never had any contradicting thoughts towards them. But now we're getting older. We're growing and so is our awareness. Through that awareness, we're realizing that we have to unlearn a lot of what we were taught at a young age. One of which is school. School always gave off this feeling that we weren't shit without it. We look at people funny if they dropped out or didn't have good grades. How we went about school has always played a significant role in how we were perceived. But here's the thing: none of that shit is real. it's fake. School is absolutely not the end all, be all. As a matter of fact, school fucking sucks.
By Trai Greer6 years ago in Education
Why I Am an Education Pusher
They say knowledge is power. I couldn't agree more. I am 16, I've just done my GCSEs (UK exams taken by students at the end of their final year of secondary), I came out with good results 7s, 8s, 9s (As, A*s, A**s) and now I am able to study the subjects I want to at A Level.
By Erin Catriona6 years ago in Education
"I Hate School!" Our Kids' Cry for Change
How many times have you had to drag your kids to school, convince them today will be better, or yell at them to get their homework done before they play? Were you like that as a kid? Why do you think school is such a horror story for kids?
By Journey Scribe6 years ago in Education
Architecture School: What You Should Know... In Advance
Starting at architecture school is quite an otherworldly experience. You happen to study interesting projects, develop a wide range of skills, and grow as a creative professional. Nevertheless, it can be pretty hard if you are a novice to this because it is a very specific yet ambiguous field and most of the pre-university education does not really cover its fundamentals. Things can get even more complicated if you are an international student studying abroad. I have moved to my second year of architecture school in the UK and would like to share my experience for those who are interested and possibly uninformed about the course. I will mainly cover the article with studio culture, design process, and tools, and skills needed for an architecture student. So, here we go...
By Alex Mapplethorpe6 years ago in Education
I Recommend NOT Being Disabled If You Want to Be Treated Fairly in Class
Let's state the obvious for a moment: school is hard enough for students to endure. Whether it’s because of homework, extracurricular activities, or other kids just being stupid kids, school becomes a burden for young people. For others, however, it’s harder in ways that the “normal crowd” couldn’t really even comprehend. Learning disabilities affect close to ten percent of students in public schools, and as someone who was born with anxiety, Asperger’s, and ADD, I can safely say that graduating from college will be harder for me than someone without any of that, and it’s even harder with administrators that claim to decide what’s better for the student when in reality, it’s easier paperwork for the school. On top of that, there are teachers that just don’t seem to get it after all of this time.
By Emma Knickerbocker6 years ago in Education
Senior Year
I started my senior year of high school a few weeks ago. I feel bad for already marking this year as one that I’m going to struggle in, but it’s too late now I guess. I’ve already accepted that it’ll be a year of loneliness. A year of sitting at lunch alone, staying at home during the last homecoming dance and prom, crying in the bathroom during the passing periods in between classes, eating too much food, gaining weight, and wondering why God hated me enough to make me the loneliest person to ever exist and also the most dramatic. But that’s not really the point of this piece today.
By Alexis Cecilia6 years ago in Education