Great (self) Education
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Education occurs when students
set out to educate themselves and follow through.
This happens when
great teaching is present-- either in mentors or classics, or both.
The
roles of students and teachers are clearly identified in the quotation
above.
Students educate themselves through the following process:
1. Observe others and identify a desired trait or skill to be acquired.
2. Walk and smile: try and have mini-successes.
3. Totter and look alarmed: run into difficulties and get worried.
4. Fall and cry: fail and feel bad.
5. Start over again.
As students go through this process over and over--trying, succeeding and failing, trying again-- they become educated.
All effective learning in any subject follows this format.
The student
must be the primary educator because the student will only learn, can only learn, what he chooses to learn.
Teachers teach, and when they
do it well, students educate.
This is at the center of all learning and
is the key to success in any and every educational endeavor.
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Featured Resource |
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From the Introduction:
For centuries, philosophers have
contemplated the meaning of Life. One convenient metaphor is that Life
is a school, a never-ending series of lessons in the art of being Human.
By this measure, all learning is worthwhile; the knowledge gained in
the school of "hard knocks" is just as valuable as that gained from
brick-and-mortar institutions.
Of course, we can avoid the "knocks" for
ourselves by choosing to discover the truths revealed in the trials of
others. The core of such self-education is a good dose of classics.
However, even a constant
diet of Great Books is useless if we do not study in a way that helps us
to properly digest their Ideas!
Readers may be divided into four classes:
- Sponges, who absorb all that they read and return it in nearly the same state, only a little dirtied.
- Sand-glasses, who retain nothing and are content to get through a book for the sake of getting through the time.
- Strain-bags, who retain merely the dregs of what they read.
- Mogul diamonds, equally rare and valuable, who profit by what they read, and enable others to profit by it also.
~Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Product Description
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Getting Started
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by Rachel DeMille
You know, some people hear the principles of Leadership Education (TJEd "tee-jay-ed") articulated just once and think, "Right! That makes perfect sense!"
They are ready to just go for it.
If
this describes you, getting started is pretty simple: Make a list of
your personal classics, and pick one.
You know, the one you've been
waiting for just the right time to read?
Give yourself permission to
make your own education a priority, carry that book around with you, and
get through it--or should I say, get it through you.
CONNECT WITH US
Oliver DeMille:
Rachel DeMille:
TJEd:
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