Posts Tagged ‘Education’

Movie Review: Pandora’s Box (1929)

Warning: Contains Spoilers

Many films of the German Expressionist era are stories of monsters and supernatural villains. Nosferatu, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, and The Golem are prime examples. Pandora’s Box (1929), more like Fritz Lang’s M, focuses directly on the evils that come from extreme human desire and uncontrolled behavior. Pandora’s Box is the story of Lulu, a young, beautiful prostitute and entertainer played by American actress Louise Brooks. The combination of Lulu’s naïve, narcissistic, and overtly sexual behavior results in intense suffering and multiple deaths, including her own.

Tags: Education, German Expressionism, German Expressionist Film, Movie Review, Weimar Cinema
Posted in Directing (Film, Video, TV), Editing (Film, Video, TV), Education (Film, Video, TV), Film Theory, History, Criticism, Film, Video, Television | No Comments »

Starting Over: the Necessity of Adult Literacy Programs

Oakland Bay Bridge by Oscar Gil FernándezI am a licensed clinical social worker who spent four years counseling in several forensic environments. These settings varied and included crisis counseling in the administrative segregation unit of a women’s prison, leading educational groups to men found incompetent to stand trial, and assessing sex offenders in the death chamber of a maximum-security state prison (it turns out prisons lack conference rooms!) I look back on that work and am still struck by the profound depth of desperation found within those walls.

The stories of those with whom I worked were unique to each, yet the threads of commonality became predictable before my assessments even started. If I had to whittle down the common denominators of our forensic population, I would say they are low socioeconomic status, minimal education, and a history of significant, heinous abuse. Additionally, and I’m sure of no surprise to you the reader, there exists a disproportionate representation of minorities in our prison system.

Tags: Adult Literacy, Education, Literacy, Reading, Social Work, Teaching, Writing
Posted in Education | No Comments »

The Purpose of Education: an Exercise for New and Expecting Parents

Photo by Miki YoshihitoThis spring, at the age of thirty-four, I went back to college to finish my undergraduate degree. I already had a decent career as a web developer and filmmaker, but given my age, and the fact that I’ll most likely have kids sometime in the next few years, I decided that if I ever wanted to go back to school, now was the time.

I spent most of my first semester studying education—the neuroscience of learning, different theories of learning styles, and assorted philosophies of education. As I sat down recently to write a paper on Horace Mann, one of the principle architects of the American public-school system, I had a realization: over the entire course of my grammar-school, middle-school, and high-school education, I had very little idea of why I was there.

Tags: Children, Education, learning, Parenting, Philosophy
Posted in Education | 1 Comment »

Making Sense of New Concepts in Technology and Media

Photo by William MurphyHave you ever thought you understood someone else’s instructions only to find out later that you needed to hear them again? Have you ever thought you grasped a concept only to find yourself struggling to explain it to someone else? Well, take heart. These experiences, while frustrating at times, are a natural part of the learning process.

As professionals in the world of technological media, we continually need to learn how to use new software, new video equipment, and new coding languages. But despite the fact that there are many ways to learn new skills, including one-on-one instruction, books and articles, and classroom lectures, we can never be sure how much we’ve learned until we engage in active testing.

Tags: brain function, Education, learning, media, technology
Posted in Education, Film, Video, Television, Web Development | 1 Comment »

Web Designers & Developers: Know Your Learning Style

Photo by Sue ClarkIn the field of web design, the opportunities to learn are endless. Whether Adobe releases a new Creative Suite or a new project means you need to learn a new programming language, you will always find reasons to expand your skill-set. The question is, how do you go about it?

You could go to a class, read an online tutorial, watch an instructional video, buy a user guide, experiment and teach yourself , or get one-on-one instruction from other professionals. Sometimes choosing a learning method is about money. After all, you can’t always afford to pay for a class. As you consider methods for learning a new skill, though, you should pay attention to the ways that different methods cater to your strengths and weaknesses as a learner. Do you learn better by reading or by listening? Do you learn better by considering and theorizing or by doing and redoing? Do you prefer to start with an overview or delve right into specific exercises?

Tags: Education, learning, learning styles, neuroscience, web design, Web Development
Posted in Design, Education, Web Development | No Comments »