The authors of the report by researchers at the University of Texas at Austin note that certain types of function words are known to say different things about a person. They note that "high rates of pronoun use have been associated with greater focus on one's self or on one's social world, auxiliary verb use has been associated with a narrative language style, article use has been associated with concrete and formal writing, and preposition and conjunction use has been associated with cognitive complexity."
That is, function words allow us to assess how people are thinking more than what they are thinking about."
Using articles and prepositions were both correlated to higher grades. But using lots of auxiliary verbs, impersonal pronouns, personal pronouns, adverbs and negations were negatively correlated.
“Admissions offices are looking for people who exhibit intellectual maturity, for students who are able to go beyond the immediate personal narrative,” David Beaver, one of the study's coauthors, told USA Today. “When I was very young, my great aunt was fond of saying that when washing, clean the back of your hands, and the fronts will take care of themselves. Likewise, students should not worry about function words. If you focus on expressing interesting ideas, the function words will take care of themselves."
But it all may be for naught, if Mitchell Stevens is right. Stevens spent 18 months embedded in the admissions office of a prominent liberal arts college. His conclusion? Essays almost never have any impact on admissions.
Read more at http://national.deseretnews.com/article/3554/You-can-learn-more-about-how-a-person-thinks-by-looking-at-this.html#m6kpG1AUZaSF1Qdl.99
This blog is a place for me to store gems that I don't have another spot for at the moment.
Saturday, October 31, 2015
Learning, getting a break, and thinking about it
Finns are dead serious about recess. Not only are the breaks required, but kids are required to go outside in all kinds of weather. Even in the deep Finnish winter, Walker said, unless the thermometer dips to an unholy level, elementary student kids are required to bundle up and go out. Administrators lock the doors to keep them out.
The breaks are short, of course. In the winter, by the time the kids get coats on and out the door, they may only have 10 minutes outside. “This isn’t deep play,” Walker said. The goal is to simply clear the mind and wiggle the limbs long enough to renew focus.
Read more at http://national.deseretnews.com/article/2100/Why-has-US-academic-success-dropped-The-answer-may-be-on-the-playground.html#2kyKMH03DCHRZS0A.99
There is another article somewhere about the fact that after we have gone through an intensive learning (like an hour or two, or maybe even less) we will retain better if we have silence for a while rather than running right out to something else.
I can even see that pause being valuable between meaningful sentences or paragraphs of information told by an instructor or speaker.
Device and Personal Info Security
About lost phones, stolen phones, personal identity, minimizing damage.
This entry will need to be cleaned up and I will never make it perfect, business or technology wise.
It's just info people should know.
here are two apps you should put on your phone, and you would be in better shape. Both free. "Where's My Droid", and "Lookout Security and Antivirus". There is no reason on earth not to do so. You can immediately track it on your computer, get it to take picture of its environment (front or back), scream bloody murder, cut its service without needing customer service.
Finally y'all need to know that the big four have collaborated on a stolen phone database; registering the EMEI, so if someone tries to activate it on another service, it is flagged to carrier it is being activated on that it was stolen. Your records with your carrier will have the EMEI, but it's a good idea for you to personally record it. No other phone on earth has that EMEI.
I don't quite have all the detail on that database, but I watched the traffic about its implementation two or three years ago; I worked for one of the big four in documentation.,
Go down to the section titled "Theft Protection" on the following page, and read the detail on Lookout. It works! A guy picked up my phone and disappeared into a medical clinic, and I had it scream at him
.https://www.lookout.com/android
About the stolen phone EMEI database, just put the following into google search: "imei stolen phone database" And you get lots of pages all good. You should ensure that Verizon put it into that database.
You need that EMEI and the app, in case it is NOT a good Samaritan. Actually, by putting info that is close to "personal identifiable" on something that might get stolen is getting closer to identity theft. In the reverse method, if you dial up the phone number of the cell phone, and an honest person has it, you are in good shape.
I am very likely to be able to find out who you are and where you live if I have your phone number. Your email may help also. The more they can bring together - facebook too - can be a good start towards starting an account in your name, etc. It does happen.
A lookout" feature I didn't mention is that it will notify you with where it thinks it is just before the battery goes dead.
Find my Phone, as phil bartram said, is a good finder. Seems to be dozens of apps to do vertually the same thing. In fact, Google seems to have built that directly into their system;
I google-searched "Find My Phone", it asked for my Google login, and within seconds, it mapped to my house. I don't know the full range of features that various of the apps have. I do know that Lookout has a good range of features.
I just think that the cell phone sellers should make awareness of those things as fore-front as info on how to install the battery, or something that basic.
This entry will need to be cleaned up and I will never make it perfect, business or technology wise.
It's just info people should know.
here are two apps you should put on your phone, and you would be in better shape. Both free. "Where's My Droid", and "Lookout Security and Antivirus". There is no reason on earth not to do so. You can immediately track it on your computer, get it to take picture of its environment (front or back), scream bloody murder, cut its service without needing customer service.
Finally y'all need to know that the big four have collaborated on a stolen phone database; registering the EMEI, so if someone tries to activate it on another service, it is flagged to carrier it is being activated on that it was stolen. Your records with your carrier will have the EMEI, but it's a good idea for you to personally record it. No other phone on earth has that EMEI.
I don't quite have all the detail on that database, but I watched the traffic about its implementation two or three years ago; I worked for one of the big four in documentation.,
Go down to the section titled "Theft Protection" on the following page, and read the detail on Lookout. It works! A guy picked up my phone and disappeared into a medical clinic, and I had it scream at him
.https://www.lookout.com/android
About the stolen phone EMEI database, just put the following into google search: "imei stolen phone database" And you get lots of pages all good. You should ensure that Verizon put it into that database.
You need that EMEI and the app, in case it is NOT a good Samaritan. Actually, by putting info that is close to "personal identifiable" on something that might get stolen is getting closer to identity theft. In the reverse method, if you dial up the phone number of the cell phone, and an honest person has it, you are in good shape.
I am very likely to be able to find out who you are and where you live if I have your phone number. Your email may help also. The more they can bring together - facebook too - can be a good start towards starting an account in your name, etc. It does happen.
A lookout" feature I didn't mention is that it will notify you with where it thinks it is just before the battery goes dead.
Find my Phone, as phil bartram said, is a good finder. Seems to be dozens of apps to do vertually the same thing. In fact, Google seems to have built that directly into their system;
I google-searched "Find My Phone", it asked for my Google login, and within seconds, it mapped to my house. I don't know the full range of features that various of the apps have. I do know that Lookout has a good range of features.
I just think that the cell phone sellers should make awareness of those things as fore-front as info on how to install the battery, or something that basic.
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