Tuesday, November 21, 2023
Sunday, October 29, 2023
Podcast 2 of 3 Creating a Program - Mem-ExSpan, memspan's
Sunday, October 15, 2023
The Erratic Tik - Tok Brain Embraces Entertainment
To continue my ongoing discussion of “Solid learning factors”, including focus, many articles today discuss concerns about the current 1-minute Tik Tok brain instilling erratic focus for our young people.
Poor focus interferes with listening integration sorely needed for sequencing, learning, retaining and applying new material.
Historical Impact:
Subsequently, it stands to reason, that speaking, looping, puppet faces might provoke staring, leading to focus.
Professor Brown becomes a local “hit" for a few people, so decided to hike to the New York Stage with a backpack of puppets.
Although it took him awhile to travel such a distance, he was well
received on local city small vaudeville stages, making some income to feed his
family. They have been surviving on buttermilk and popcorn in rural
1923 - 1955 “Doc”
Brown’s two sons, Fay and Foy E, are soon carving wooden faces like their
father had done earlier. They perform for local
1935 – 1955 Roughly
in the same time frame, Ventriloquism was becoming a hit comedy act for night
club entertainment on the East and West coast areas. Many tried to perform in
The final outcome of the “Peers and Puppets” experiment was
that team students’ TIED with the puppetry methods. Both groups focused on a
peer role model and the teaching cloth puppet. All win-wins.
Jan meets with Foy, in 1972, purchases two ventriloquist dummies, and soon is applying puppetry comedy routines for advertising with her three children as musical and speaking performers. It becomes a summer activity for the three children, who are musical.
Saturday, September 23, 2023
Banging Your Head Against the Wall
Sometimes it feels like we are “banging our heads against a wall” when people are not listening to us. They often ask questions just explained.
Unfortunately, many can only focus and follow one step holistically at a time, and cannot detect issues within the entire sequential procedure. Slow in procedural thought, “one unit at a time-piecemeal”, they become over-whelmed with step-wise instructions.
This unpredictable mind set creates a flow of errors that is both time-consuming and costly to reformulate properly.
Today’s work projects often employ three to five individuals, at high cost inefficiency, to accomplish a simple procedure.
The following alarming story was recently related to me by a hospital book-keeper, as an incorrect coding entry had been taking a year of our involvement to resolve the accounting/mis-coded issue.
Without productive efficiency, projects fail with faulty detail. All work operations are a series of ordered details to be completed correctly, systematically, with full accountability.
Any work chain with too many links can break down to error laden inefficiency.
Actual Medical Scenarios:
Inversely, there were several people at the Medicare side to conduct the same, expensive, time laden, data entry chain link process to finally correct the claim.
Then the doctor confronted with the dire results, requiring
immediate surgery, lucky for me with my high listening-auditory-coding
capability, I recognized the problem immediately, and confronted her with
“these photos are not my newly filmed records”.
Of course, the doctor double checked my file, was embarrassed, and apologized, as I have nearly perfect eyesight.
Obviously, I could have gone through unnecessary eye surgery, not to mention, the time involvement, and the anxiety-stress incurred.
Subsequently, this circumstance could have been avoided by pre-testing the listening capability of future technician applicants.
Erland, J. K. (February 1986, 1989).Contrapuntal thinking
and the definition of sweeping thinking).