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Showing posts from January, 2018

A Penny for Your Thoughts

As the second week of the spring semester came to a close here at Saint Michael's College, I had the pleasure of taking on an interesting task during one of my work study shifts. I'm fortunate enough to work as the Undergraduate Office Assistant for the college's Education Department. Members of the Ed. Department, both students and teachers alike, are always busy managing different projects and assignments. One project from before my time at the college-- a small section of the department's corridor displaying different math skills by arranging pennies into sample problems on the wall-- has survived the test of time (save a few pennies or so).          Preparing for the coming Admissions Open houses, I was asked to replace any of the pennies that had fallen off of the wall, as well as any explanatory signs that had been torn or otherwise damaged. While I was going through the different math problems to see where pennies were missing, I discovered a few t

A TED Talk on Failure

While I know there are scarier things in the world, I consider failure to be among my top fears. Especially as a college student, there are several factors in the higher education world that eliminate the option of failure altogether: scholarships, graduate school, future employment, honors societies, the ability to participate in extracurricular activities, and the scariest numbers under 5 (that is, the G.P.A.) just to name a few. However, the TED Talk presented by Astro Teller on "The unexpected benefit of celebrating failure" sheds some light on the shadowy doom no ones wants to talk about. Highlighting the secret to the successes of his company, X (formerly Google X), Teller offers insight on the benefits of failure. His project teams are encouraged to think big, tackle the largest obstacles to their ideas head-on, and abandon (essentially, fail) their projects when the obstacles become impractical to overcome. Employees are rewarded for failing projects that just ar

Welcome!

Source: http://www.perjakarta.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/welcome1.jpg Hello, and welcome to my blog! My name is Allison, and I am currently studying Secondary Education and American Studies in preparation for a grades 5-12 Social Studies teacher's license. For as long as I can remember, I have wanted to teach. Originally, I started my higher education as an Elementary Education major, but I quickly fell in love with the middle and high school grades after a series of school visits to surrounding secondary schools. I can't say the change was a total surprise-- I was a teacher's assistant in a history class during my senior year of high school and loved every second of it. Confident in my choice to pursue Secondary Education, along with my passion for history of all kinds, I look forward to continuing my journey to professional education. With this blog as my medium, I plan to document my experiences, respond to prompts from my Education professors, and develop a