Der folgende Beitrag wurde total dreist aus diesem Blog geklaut.
In welche Richtung fährt der Bus im Bild unten? Nach links oder nach rechts?

Du kannst dich nicht entscheiden? Schau dir das Bild noch mal sorgfältig an!
Du weißt es immer noch nicht? Vorschulkindern wurde das gleiche Bild gezeigt und genau die gleiche Frage gestellt.
90% von ihnen gaben die richtige Antwort…
…die erfährst du hier.
If someone ever was about to ask me which game I would recommend for educational purposes I would without hesitation send him there.
In my opinion there is no better example for a game which a) teaches you something and b) is fun to play. What I’m talking about?
The Typing of the Dead!
And there’s zombies too!

OMG! Look at those weapons!

[Quote] There Was Too Much Memorization
Sad to say, students have been victims of a cruel hoax. You’ve been told ever since grade school that memorization isn’t important. Well, it is important, and our system wastes the years when it is easiest to learn new skills.
Memorization is not the antithesis of creativity; it is absolutely indispensable to creativity. Creative insights come at odd and unpredictable moments, not when you have all the references spread out on the table in front of you. You can’t possibly hope to have creative insights unless you have memorized all the relevant information. And you can’t hope to have really creative insights unless you have memorized a vast amount of information, because you have no way of knowing what might turn out to be useful.
Rote memorization is a choice. If you remember facts and concepts as part of an integrated whole that expands your intellectual horizons, it won’t be rote. If you merely remember things to get through the next exam, it will be rote, and a whole lot less interesting, too. But that is solely your choice.
It is absolutely astonishing how many people cannot picture memorization in any other terms than “rote memorization,” - even after reading the paragraph just above. [Quote]
Sounds valid to me. Everything else in “Top Ten No Sympathy Lines” has to be taken with a grain of salt but is an interesting read on how to study.
[via Terpsichoros]
…heute wurde ein durch mein soziales Umfeld geprägter Fehler aufgeklärt. Jahrelang haben Leute davon gesprochen, dass sie die Korrekturen für ihre Druckwerke als Errata herausbringen.
Jetzt habe ich erst durch den guten alten Duden gelernt, dass das nicht etwa ein schickes Fremdwort für “Berichtigung” ist, sondern schlicht Druckfehler oder Versehen heißt.
Toll.
As some of you may have noticed, I’m writing my thesis right now. I do that nearly every at a library, where I already aquired a seat which I refer to as ‘mine’. From there I have a very triptych like view across the street which I like to share:

In a few minutes I will be gone for the annual meeting of the people of iBuG. There I’ll give a talk about my thesis.
No, I’m not anxious.
Jeck’s eye twitches…
Whish me luck.
Edited on Aug 3rd 2005, 10:50 by jeck
I just cancelled my WoW-Account cause with a deadline in three months and still much writing to do I just can’t justify anything which has remotely to do with leisure time let alone paying for diversion from THE TASK.
…dass es der das Konklave heißt?
Edited on Apr 30th 2005, 13:03 by jeck
Yay! The paper “Why not bomb them today? - Das politische Wirken John von Neumanns” 46halbe and I wrote was linked by wreck tide. It’s good to know that other people find our stuff interesting.
In related news: I mirrored the site 46halbe made. A pdf will be available soon.
Today was the last lecture of ‘history of computing’. And again the prof gave an example of his vast knowledge: In one sentence he made a connection between GNU/Linux, anarchy/communism and the Spanish civil war. And it even makes sense…
In the supermarket I had a flashing of precognitive perception. While emptying my shopping cart I suddenly knew that when I’m finished there’ll be a man who would want to get my cart without realising that he has to pass the entrance before getting one. Well, what should I say. As I was finished packing, there was a man who…
Edited on Feb 16th 2005, 06:33 by jeck
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