Archive for June, 2009

30th Jun 2009

GED Study Tip: Take Note!

Getting ready for the GED? Whether you’re attending local classes, taking an online GED course or managing a self-study program at home, you’ll want to ensure that your study time is effective.

Make a Note! Here’s one surefire study tip that has proven successful for adults working toward the General Education Development credential, the ‘diploma’ awarded for passing the GED Test.

Take Notes

For many GED students and adult learners, taking notes seems boring or tedious, or they can’t see the relevance of taking notes. Perhaps they have an abundance of GED study materials and don’t feel a need to add more to the pile. And for some GED students, taking notes is new –- they’re reluctant because they’ve never done it, or never learned the skill.

Taking notes is easy — it’s highly effective and ensures learning when it’s a three-part process. And taking notes is a critical way to shift new information that’s learned from the brain’s short-term memory bank to the brain’s knowledge vault.

1. Initially, many people feel like they’re copying or jotting material just for the sake of it. It’s difficult for them to see how taking notes helps them learn. And it may seem like a mindless activity. Still, it’s important –- just write down information as you move through material on your own, or during GED classes. The act of taking notes engages you with the study material beyond just hearing information, reading or seeing it.

Just as note-taking improves with practice, so does learning. As notes are taken more frequently and regularly, students begin to recognize key information and main points more easily and more often. Note-taking becomes more logical since the act of taking notes engages the logical processing of the brain. When the logical brain becomes engaged, the learning process is activated and information is better retained.

2. The second part of taking notes is organizing them; do it soon after taking them. How do you organize notes? Put them in logical order –- or an order that makes the most sense to you. Highlight, circle or underline important information. As notes are reviewed and organized, the information from the notes is refreshed in the mind and organized mentally. Again, the logical brain is engaged.

3. You reinforce this part of the learning process by processing your notes again. Fill in any missing information. Make a list of the key words from your notes. List any problems you’re having with the material, or identify sections in your notes where the material seems unclear. Make an outline of the information so that you see the relationship of ideas and facts to each other. Make another list or outline that includes all the information you feel you’ve really learned. Determine how you can use this new knowledge in real-life situations. Now, review sections or the list that identified unclear information and you’ll probably discover that it’s clearer.

Taking notes is neither an art nor a science. But the learning process is both. Learning isn’t really about remembering, and knowledge isn’t about memorization. Real learning and real knowledge are about activating, using and engaging higher brain processes, which is exactly what happens during the three-step process of taking notes.

At GED test time, taking notes will prove to be an excellent skill to have learned. Processing information logically, and identifying key words and main ideas are major parts of the GED test. So taking notes is an important skill and practice for study time and test time.

More Resources

For additional GED study tips, test information and free resources on the GED test, including financial aid and student support, visit passged.com/ www.PassGED.com. The website also provides links to federal agencies and nonprofits that serve GED students, instructors and workforce development programs. For a list of official GED testing sites and administrative contacts, visit passged.com/test_state.php#1 Test Sites.

Leonard Williams, an e-learning instructor with passged.com/online_courses.php passged.com/online_courses.php, is also a curriculum specialist who focuses on research and development, implementation and assessment of best-practice learning solutions for adult learners and people with educational challenges. Leonard’s email is mailto:LeonardWilliams@passGED.com LeonardWilliams@passGED.com He invites feedback and questions from GED students and instructors.

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30th Jun 2009

All About Anna Salleh’s Beat Up, And Questions She Should Have Asked Associate Professor Jack Heinem

In a previous post Pundit discussed a journalistic beat-up. Pundit didn’t have time then to do justice to the scale of the beat-up. Here is an attempt to correct that failing.

The beat-up involves ABC journalist Anna Salleh re-broadcasting fears Associate Prof. Jack Heinemann has been spreading about a new GM maize called LY038.

Maize variety LYO38 which has high lysine levels, and was developed for the animal feed market. It has recently been evaluated by Australia’s Gene Technology Regulator OGTR.

Many readers will know lysine is an essential nutrient that is quite low in most other maize varieties, generally reducing the quality of maize as a source of protein and causing much malnutrition world wide. Lysine is a component of proteins.

Jack says OGTR have got it wrong.

Here are the questions Anna should have asked Jack.

Question 1.
Isn’t it true, Jack, that an existing maize variety called QPM has similar levels of lysine to the new GM LY038 maize you raise safety doubts about with your assumption that high lysine levels in maize is hazardous. (go to the the end of this post for the evidence on this).

The “QPM” maize was developed with huge effort by the Mexico-based International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) to improve nutrition in poorer maize eating communities world-wide. CIMMYT got The World Food Prize for the effort (see below) and rightly so. QPM means quality protein.

Question 2.
Is it therefore not true Jack that the hazard speculation you are spreading about LY038 also applies to an existing high lysine maize eaten by poor people world-wide?

QPM maize has been widely used this last 6 years or more, and Jack’s fears imply it is harmful.

Question 3.
Are you saying, Jack that QPM is a misleading acronym?

Question 4.
Since Jack, you also raising fears about QPM maize which provides better food and nutrition in poor communities world-wide, shouldn’t you put up or shut up?

And a question for Anna: Aren’t you morally bound to run this corrective story at ABC news?

David Tribe is an expert in molecular genetics, biochemistry (genetic engineering), and infectious diseases. To read more about David, go to gmopundit.blogspot.com gmopundit.blogspot.com.

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