| When it's Good to be Wrong |
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by Oliver DeMille
Like
everyone, I sometimes make mistakes. Sometimes I'm wrong. Sometimes I
make a rash decision or a careless comment. And like everyone, I
suppose, my kids are pretty clear on the fact that I'm fallible.
And I'm okay with that.
Not
that I'm indifferent or casual about getting it right; but when
mentoring within the context of Leadership Education, there comes a time
when being wrong can be really, really right.
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Featured Resource |
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Of all
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Week in History is not
only a great value, but a time saver and a worry eliminator.
This Week in
History:
- Relieves fear, stress and burnout
- Energizes your kidschool
- Fills in the gaps
- Cultivates cultural literacy
- Facilitates state or provincial compliance
- Correlates resources for co-ops, classrooms and family
learning
- Harnesses the power of technology in a classical
leadership education
- Harmonizes with Unschooling, Charlotte Mason,
Montessori, Trivium/Quadrivium, IEW, eclectic, etc.
- Delivers new ideas and areas of learning to you and
your child
- Instigates discussions and projects that expand wisdom
and understanding
- Connects the subject areas-from music to math, from
geography to world religions, from hobbies to science projects, etc.
- Motivates
you and your students to greater excellence
- Delivers Face to Face with Greatness
- Empowers you to mentor your students in the classics
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Enlivens the 7 Keys of Great Teaching
- Activates Phases of Learning
...so you can "Inspire, not Require"
Check
these out and you'll see what I mean:
[Click on a date to view a sample of This Week in
History]
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What is TJEd?
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Every person has inner genius. Thomas
Jefferson Education consists of
helping each student discover, develop and polish his or her genius.
This is the essence and very definition of great education.
There are really only three kinds of
education, and they are best
understood from the student's perspective. Students get a good education
for one of three reasons:
- they are forced to study long, hard and effectively (the "Stick")
- they are convinced or manipulated to study long, hard and effectively (the "Carrot")
- they love to study long, hard and effectively (the "Love Affair")
If the first two are "good," the latter is truly "great."
The Stick, the Carrot, or the Love Affair: these are the three types
of education; and the love affair is by far the most effective.
Just click the link below, and amazon.com will share their profits with TJEd, at no cost to you.
Thanks so much for your support! | |