k8

fantastic.

Sunday, March 25, 2007

learning

You know, being a teacher has taught me a lot about the ways we learn. Children with Autism usually have certain learning strengths and weaknesses. Most of my kids are visual learners - they have strong visualization and visual memory skills and very poor auditory processing skills. That's why I use text, charts, and pictures to teach concepts, instead of just presenting them orally. The more I discover about how my students learn, the more aware I'm made of my own learning strengths and weaknesses.

For example:

I do much better interpreting and working with words than I do with actual images. For example, it takes me much less time to read a list of words than it does for me to name pictures of those same words. I internalized the english language so thoroughly when I learned it that I now rely on it to process everything. I have to feed all images through my language system and apply labels to them before I can process them. It's interesting that I work like this (and probably a large number of people do) because it's obviously not how I was born. I have no idea how I processed images before I had language... I can't even imagine doing it.

Unlike my kids, I have very poor visualization and visual memory skills. I would be the worst crime witness ever. As I've discussed with many of you, I cannot remember color, I have to memorize it. I know that a stop sign is red because I *know* it, not because I see the red color in my head when I remember a stop sign. I also cannot really visualize details or anything besides basic, blurry images. What I remember when I remember an event are the actions, sounds, moods, and feelings. The pictures of people in my mind are rough approximations... an outline with straight or curly hair.

Because I have such poor visualization skills, I have a particularly hard time translating text into space. Examples: visualizing the descriptions of people and settings in novels... I kind of just glaze over those parts. Or following the directions to a board game. Unless the directions are accompanied by handy dandy 123 pictures, I can't focus on the directions and figure out what I'm supposed to do unless I concentrate really really hard. This is also why I always hated doing labs in science class in high school.

I am good at spatial reasoning (looking at cutout papers and knowing what shapes they'll form, reading and following maps). I am also good at conceptual memory (if that's even a term). I won't remember what anything looked like, but I'll remember the concept being discussed. I do well in history because I remember events and what they meant, and can place them generally on a map of time I keep in my head, even if I don't remember specific dates or names. I learn best through examples. Explain to me how something works or how to do something by giving me a specific example of the concept in action. From that, I can extrapolate how to apply that concept to pretty much any situation. If someone doesn't give me an example, I create one for myself and use that as my memory marker. That's my best study strategy.

It's helpful that I know all of this about myself now, although I wish I'd realized it while I was still going through school. I might have been able to organize my learning in a more useful way. If I go back to school, I wonder if it'll help.

How about you? How do you learn, oh you 3, maybe 4 people who read my blog?

k8

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

i wish i had showtime...

This is going to be amazing.

Saturday, March 17, 2007

obsessive

So, I was recently instructed to check out an episode of The Show with ZeFrank. This small, innocent-seeming event has led to the downfall of my productiveness, usefulness, and awayfromthecomputerness. Unfortunately, today happens to be the last day of this show ever. And I just found it! So I'm working my way through the archives and I'm up to August 1st. My head is going to explode. Brain is going to leak out my eyes. If you'd like to be like me, you should start here: The Beginning. Danielle, I think you'd like this.

Before this happened, I actually was having a really productive week. On Monday I stayed late at work, went grocery shopping, AND did and submitted my taxes. AWESOME! I just started losing steam from that point on, and every day I've been a little more useless. Today I have failed to change out of pajamas, move, or clean. But I do have a cat on me.

I was trying to have deep thoughts earlier, but then I decided to let ZeFrank think, so I don't have to. Poop! Little Duckies!

k8

Sunday, March 11, 2007

The Final Countdown...

Let's see...

1. So, I went to my first bridal shower, and while I was there, everyone at my table discussed how much more "meaningful" dogs were than cats. How sure, you "like" your cats and all, until you get a dog, and then you kind of forget about them. How dogs are so much more worthy of thousand-dollar-surgeries than cats. Now, although dogs are smelly and dumb, I can see how someone *might* feel this way if they started off with a particularly lame cat. However, I do not feel that this sentiment can apply to my extra-special cats. This is not bias, this is scientific fact. MY CATS CAN BEAT YOUR DOG UP IN BOTH THE CUTENESS AND COOLNESS COMPETITION CATEGORIES! Stuff THAT in your pipe and smoke it.

Um... I apparently feel a little defensive on this issue?

2. Cobb visited Connor this weekend. We got Indian food from Punjabi Dhaba as recommended by a coworker, and it was very tasty. It's finally happened. I feel I can confidently say now that I enjoy Indian food. Woot! I have conquered every genre! Well, every genre that I've tried.

3. Cobb brought with him Season 2 of Arrested Development. We watched way too many episodes of this. Dave, you will be happy to know that I like it an awful lot :-) I guess I just needed to get past the first episode. It's continuity-crazy, which I enjoy. Kind of like Scrubs, and Newsradio.

4. I trained on a new kid at work, and I already love him to death. He's going to be a huge challenge, and he's super smart. I'm really looking forward to it, but I'm nervous too.

5. I've got a cold, full-fledged. I've been really lucky this winter, so I guess I can't complain, but I'm going to anyway. Waaaah.

k8

Sunday, March 04, 2007

cefquinome and other fun stuff

I wish I could tell you to write a letter to the FDA asking them not to approve cefquinome in cattle, but it looks like the comments period is over. Darn. Sorry, but when you get an infection and it's resistant to all treatment, don't say we weren't warned...

Hmmmm... what else have I learned on the inter-nets recently? Ann Coulter is really not nice. Fox News is really not funny. Cell phone companies are totally holding back on us. Not being nice to war vets is not cool.

Besides all that "news" stuff, life is good. Connor and I met Laura for dinner at Chez Henri on Wednesday, where we got delicious Cuban sandwiches (with plantain chips and salsa and a chocolate/chipotle cake for dessert). On Friday, I had a snow day, but no snow, just rain. That was pretty awesome. Connor and I deeply considered going to see Reno 911: Miami this weekend, but laziness won out and we stayed home like bums and watched a DVD (The Inside Man).

Dani has a wedding date, which is very exciting, so at some point this spring or summer we have to pick out bridesmaids dresses. I would like to lose weight for this, and I've decided my first line of attack will be daily DDR. I might need to get a new game, though, because I'm a LITTLE sick of all the songs on Ultramix 2.

Peace.
k8