429 Matching Annotations
  1. Mar 2022
    1. LEARNING PRINCIPLE #7: OVERLEARNING

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    2. LEARNING PRINCIPLE #6: PROCESS DEEPLY TO RETAIN MORE

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    3. LEARNING PRINCIPLE #5: SPACE YOUR PRACTICE OUT

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    4. LEARNING PRINCIPLE #4: QUICKER, DEEPER, MORE ACCURATE FEEDBACK CYCLES

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    5. LEARNING PRINCIPLE #3: LEARN ACTIVELY

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    6. LEARNING PRINCIPLE #2: TRAIN FOCUS AND PRODUCTIVITY

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    7. LEARNING PRINCIPLE #1: DESIGN YOUR PROJECT WELL.

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    8. LEARNING PRINCIPLES THAT WORK

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    9. what you learn. Ultralearners don’t passively absorb edu-cation, they create it.

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    10. Self-education. Even if you’re in school, a self-education mindset puts you in the driver’s seat, controlling how and

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    11. WHY ULTRALEARNING?

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    1. Step 1: Create a segment within your list of subscribers who have not

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    2. your subscriber has not taken action. This is typically at the end of a sales sequence when it’s clear that your subscriber has yet to buy.

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    3. The question “Why do you hate me?” is meant to increase the open rate of this particular email, but it’s the purpose of this email and the copy within that matter most. Ryan explains that this email is meant to get a direct reply so that you can understand, in the exact language of your subscriber, why

      .c1

    4. Step 1: Ask a question on a social media platform (or blog post) that has a specific answer. For example, if you’re in the health industry, you could ask: Which is healthier, spinach or kale? And why?

      Should you read books on the best selling list and why?

    5. Survey-Centric Emails

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    6. If your student shares a specific strategy that you shared, link to the page on your site where that strategy is referenced. If it worked for your student, your subscribers will be curious to learn more about what you taught them.

      I could link to my video on Readwise or building a second brain. Try and share a direct quote or website of the persons journey you are sharing when doing this.

    7. The Student Teacher email focuses on a success story from someone in your audience and specifically highlights one of their strategies for success.

      I could talk about my mom's success story using Readwise and watching my YouTube videos to revamp her reading process.

    8. If in an autoresponder series: In this email, you’re opening up a bit and talking about a particular struggle you’ve had in the past. As a result, you become even more relatable. Because of this, I’d recommend including a CTA that asks people to follow you on one social channel that you’re active on so they can get to know you even more as a real world human.

      I could link my YouTube channel at the bottom of this. Or my Twitter

    9. If you have advanced email marketing features that allow you to segment and tag your subscribers, depending on the free resource, you could tag people who click on this link as being interested in whatever that free resource is about.

      I could have the free recourse be a entire list of some of my favorite books, podcasts, and articles ranked and ordered under themes that I think they should read.

    10. share too many, they aren’t a sweet surprise anymore. Plus, you run the risk of training your audience to only expect free material from you, which can backfire when you promote your products or paid products you’re affiliated with.

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    11. Free resources are okay to share throughout your autoresponder series. But I wouldn’t recommend sharing more than one every ninety days. When you

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    12. Value-Driven Emails

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    13. 5 Universal Rules for 99.99999% of All Emails You Send

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    Annotators

    1. acquisition of knowledge but seeking direct application of knowledge, moving them from subject-centered to problem-centered learning.

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    2. In summary, andragogy is based on several crucial assumptions about the nature and characteristics of adult learners. These assumptions are different from those that form the theory of pedagogy, which explains how children learn. Adult learning theory suggests that as an individual matures, they become less dependent on instructors and more capable of self-directed learning. It maintains that adults amass a large number of life experiences, which form their strongest connections for their learning goals, and their readiness to learn is increasingly oriented toward tasks associated with immediate life roles. Adults also experience a change in the perception of time, no longer establishing long-term goals through the

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    3. CONCLUSION

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    4. Critical Incident Questionnaires (CIQ). Professors must teach course content, but the delivery of that content is what determines a student’s understanding and engagement. Critical reflection of content has value and importance when teaching adult learners. When classroom material is not presented in a way that aligns with student learners’ preferences, students may become frustrated and disengage in learning.

      The organization and steps you present information in are just as important as the information itself.

    5. As students go through the Voices projects, they select a voice other than their own and assume responsibility as advocates for their voices for the entire semester. A series of reflections lead the adult learners to a perspective other than their own and provides them with a rich understanding of the perspec-tives of others, challenging them to become vulnerable and examining their own thoughts and actions they may not have previously acknowledged.

      Does this mean they roleplay as having a personality or "voice" different from their own?

    6. TEACHING METHODS AND STRATEGIES

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    7. Katsinas and Moecek (2002) noted that while many college students are well prepared for using technology, there is a large segment of the college student population, namely the non-traditional stu-dents who are first-generation college students, that have very little experience with technology. Thus, the use and integration of technology, then, becomes a detriment to persistence to adult learners who enroll in degree programs online to accommodate their work and families lives.

      Some adult leaners don't know how to use technology very well. This needs to be taken into account when designing lesson plans.

    8. CHALLENGES IN TEACHING NON-TRADITIONAL STUDENTS

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    9. Motivation

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    10. The adult learner needs to know the utility and value of certain information before they can readily master it. The adult learner may need to be told or led to discover why certain knowledge is worth learning.

      Adult learners often care more about the why of learning something than children as they are naturally less curious

    11. ADULT LEARNERS

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    12. Higher education continues to see a changing student population, with adult learners returning to college with the intention of acquiring credentials through a college degree, decreasing the number of students who fit the traditional 18 to 22-year-old profile, attend full-time, and live on campus (Barr, 2016).

      Colleges are starting to see increased numbers of adults returning outside of the normal college age group

    13. INTRODUCTION

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    14. Active Learning Strategies for Teaching Adult Learners

      Title of the paper

    Annotators

    1. Ben Huebsch (quoted by Berlin 1999, 255). At the end of the story, Dr. B. has aflashback, and the narrator calms him down:

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    2. Why is this so important? The rejection of fiction and fictional characters isjust the other side of the coin of the reluctance of postmodern theorists toconcentrate on the single case and on narration. Fictional texts can help trauma-tised people: Homer, who is a truly venerable author, is proof that everybody iscapable of writing about traumatic events without knowing the theory.

      Many people believe non fiction texts dealing with trauma are the only literary option to help those with traumatic experiences. Not true. Fiction texts can be fantastic as well and even can be written by those who don't know the theories of trauma.

    3. A flashback is a »plötzliches intensives Wahrnehmen von Trauma-Bestandteilen mit Wiedererlebensqualität« (Huber 2003, 69).7 Somebody is trig-gered by a fragmented detail and lives through an old situation as vividly as if itwere a real situation.

      A flashback is some one triggering an old situation or feeling and reliving it as if it was happening again.

    4. The reaction is natural, the disturbance is overwhelming. That is why traumatherapists try not to blame the victim: The victim is not sick. The victim did theright thing. And the later reactions (intrusions, lost memories, flashbacks, night-mares, hyperarousal, reenactment) are normal reactions, too.

      Trauma is not a disease as it's supposed to protect us from experiencing another traumatic event. It's our body trying to avoid doing something which might harm us.

    5. The alternatives are fight or flight. If it is impossible to fight or flee (you are tooweak or the opponent is too powerful), freezing might be a good solution. Free-zing in no-fight-no-flight-situations may help you to survive.

      Freezing is a good alternative to fight or flight in some situations.

    6. PTSD is not a trauma, but a PTSD canoccur after a trauma, it can occur depending on the very person and its resources.Only the after-effects are problematical.

      PTSD and trauma are different

    Annotators

    1. In concluding, it is worth taking a passing glance at yet another attempt to›re-invent‹ the chess board. Over the first five years of the 1920s, the Viennesecomposer Arnold Schönberg worked in his spare time on developing a newform of chess. One of the designs he came up with is strikingly similar toDuchamp’s pocket chess. Yet Schönberg took his experimentation one stepfurther: for his »Koalitions- und Bündnis-Schach«, he changed the rules ofthe game altogether (see Image 3).

      Many people are enjoying redesigning the chess board so they can bring back the version of chess they know and loved before it was corrupted.

    2. Hesse puts his finger on a problem within modern society, but like Zweig, hefeels uncomfortable with the alternative he proposes himself. As in theSchachnovelle, there is a strong anxiety that while the popular form of thegame has become corrupted by chance, its more refined practice has becometoo academic and removed from the world.

      Both Hesse and Sweig feel while the more popular form of chess has been corrupted by chance, its more refined practice has become too academic and removed from the world.

    3. The figures of the narrator and his friend Dr. B. appear to counterbalancethe image of chess dominated entirely by ›Stofftrieb‹, as personified in Czen-tovic and McConnor. B. is a man of learning – he is a doctor and comes froma distinguished family of academics. He promises an approach that comesmuch closer to the chess-ideal outlined by the narrator at the beginning ofthe novel.

      Dr. B seems to reflect the part of chess more idealized by the narrator at the beginning of the book.

    4. Chess, the narrator suggests, is really something much more culturally sophis-ticated than a mere ›game‹ – like Heinse and Schiller, he envisions it as amediator between the physical and spiritual worlds.

      Chess is the mediator between the spiritual and physical worlds

    Annotators

    1. Videos (e.g., Knox, 1986, pp. 118-120) are used to present information in an interesting way and/or to include more credible, famous, or entertaining resources.

      I can use my videos on reading routines during workshops to present information in a more fun manner.

    2. Group surveys (e.g., Angelo & Cross, 1993, pp. 255-316) are a way to provide participants with topic-relevant information about the group itself.

      I can pool the surveys of participants coming for the reading workshop and find out which books or reasons for stopping reading are most common among participants.

    3. Icebreakers (e.g., Berry & Kaufman, 1994; Dahmer, 1992; Pfeiffer, 1990, p. 10) are brief interactive exercises that encourage and prepare participants for interpersonal learning during a workshop. Icebreakers may be unrelated to the topic and simply used to “break the ice.” If an icebreaker is directly related to the workshop topic, it has the added benefit of being a “motivation grabber.”

      I can have participants go around the room, share their name, and talk about their past experience with reading. What did they read and why did they end up stopping.

    4. Do you want to provide the context or have participants create it?

      Participants create the context by carving out times in their calendar to read.

    5. Do you want to use scripts, handouts, worksheets?

      I can have participants fill out times and find an accountability reading buddy in the workshop. These buddies would get each others texts and talk with each other about things they have been reading. They would hold each other accountable for reading every single day.

    6. Will you utilize questionnaires or other instruments?

      I could ask learners to write down their past experiences with reading before coming to the workshop. What did they read in the past? Why did they stop? How did the reading make them feel? What do they think is so good about reading?

    7. Do you want to be the main presenter of the information or should the process be more interactive and interpersonal, with participants providing information as well?

      I could have participants pool their worries about reading in the past and some common reasons they stopped. These concerns would likely be answered in the videos I show during the workshop.

    8. Are there different ways to present the information, such as via videos, overheads, handouts, and so on?

      I can use YouTube videos in my lesson plans and workshops as a way to articulate what I am trying to say in a much more cohesive and inteligent manner. After all, these videos were made by me over long periods of time. Much better than if I just said it out loud.

    9. Designing Assimilating and Conceptualizing Activities

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    10. Designing Reflecting-on-Experience Activities

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    11. At the beginning of the last chapter, workshop design was conceptually divided into two sequential tasks—creating an overall structure for the workshop and designing specific learning activities. These two processes were compared to building a house and then filling it with useful furnishings. The design of particular activities that will meet the goals and objectives of the workshop is the topic of this chapter.

      Designing a workshop is like constructing a house. You create the foundation of what will be learned and then put in the furnishings which are the individual learning activities which will lead to these learnings.

    12. Workshops: Designing and Facilitating Experiential Learning

      Title of article

  2. Feb 2022
    1. Practice is a better predictor of chess skill than intel-ligence, even among children with limited experience.This seems to be particularly true for highly skilled youngchess players as in our study the association of chess skillwith intelligence in this group was at best nonexistent andat worst negative.

      Practice definitely correlates with chess skill but intelligence at best seems to have no correlation and at worst is actively bad.

    2. that chess practice should not influence intelligence.

      .c2 Intelligence in children may cause them to be more attracted to playing chess but it won't necessarily make you more intelligent.

    3. While one can imagine thatintelligence can cause practice because more intelligentchildren may be more interested in an intellectualendeavour such as chess, one can be relatively sure

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    4. Reasons for the lack of association betweenintelligence and chess skil

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    5. General intelligence and visuo-spatial abilities inchess —negative evidence

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    6. alculatingvariations/moves, that is imagining potential movesand representing future developments, has been thoughtto be one of, if not the main factor of chess skill

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    7. General intelligence and visuo-spatial abilities inchess —positive evidence

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    Annotators

    1. Part of the reason for “I know, but...” is that people learn from experience, which is a great thing (we wouldn’t want to live in a world where people didn’t), but it can cause some problems. The elephant in particular can be far more influ-enced by experience than by abstract knowledge.

      One example of this is texting while driving. Some one that gets into an accident while texting will be much less likely to do it again than someone who texts with no problem.

    2. Designing for behavior

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    3. Motivation to Do

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    4. 8

      .h1 This is chapter 8 of Dirksen called "Design for Motivation."

    1. Instead of hearing from the same students who always get the answers right, you can ask questions of your two lowest students, two mid-level students and then two of the highest-level students. If they all answer cor-rectly, it’s probably time to move on.

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    2. I write up my agenda on the board before each class. The agenda shows you have a plan for the class. For some students, especially skeptical ones, this is crucial to reducing anxiety and persuading them to come along with you.

      I notice with our education 2210 how much more fun it is to go through the lesson when we know what is going on the entire time.

    3. How to Run Your Class

      .h1 Title of the chapter 6

    Annotators

    1. Correcting Others’ English

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    2. In Meetings

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    3. Any time you slip something slangy into a conversation, just restate it in other words right afterwards.

      If you accidently use a slang word you can just rephrase it right after to help the non native speaker.

    4. Speaking and Presenting

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    5. Taming the steamroller: how to communicate compassionately with non-native English speakers

      Title of article

    Annotators

    1. ummary• M

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    2. emorization: tHe blunt force solution

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    3. ePetition anD memoryW

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    4. storytelling

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    5. tyPes of memoryS

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    6. eal vs. PerceiveD knowleDge

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    7. You want the information encoding to align with assessment and use.If someone is just going to need to recognize the right answer, then recognition activities are good ways to learn and practice. If someone needs to recall some-thing unprompted, then they will need to learn and practice by recalling, not just by recognizing.

      This is why multiple choice questions are often not the way to go because they make people recognize answers rather than recall them. In real life they will probably have to recall them so it only makes sense.

    8. n-context learning

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    9. long-term memory, or is it in your closet?

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    10. ort-term or working memory

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    11. mPlications for learning Design

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    12. If things are unpredictable, they can be harder to habituate to.

      For example the traffic at an intersection

    13. sensory memory

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    Annotators

    1. CONCLUSION

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    2. This need not be the case.

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    3. A state without citizens would not have any value; however,once a state is composed of individuals and begins to exercise collec-tive rationality in its engagement with other states, it becomes capableof bearing moral obligations.

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    4. This conclusion bears scrutiny.149 If astate lacks the agency necessary to realize a life plan, it is unclear howa state has enough agency to exercise supposedly self-interested be-havior on the world stage. Implicit in the notion of self-interestedbehavior, consistent with the Prisoner's Dilemma, is the notion of arational agent with enough foresight to have long-term interests(through subsequent iterations of the game). If the possibility of astate's life plan is rejected, then so is the entire applicability of thegame theory methodology to international law and international rela-tions; one would effectively have to throw out the baby with thebathwater.

      To have self interests the states much have a sort of life plan set in place.

    5. The Moral Obligation of Groups

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    6. Bargaining Power

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    7. Can the same thing be said about states? Are they committed torationality as a value? The question is best pursued from the oppositedirection: how could we deny that states are committed to rationalityas a norm? States have interests and pursue collective projects on theinternational stage in order to maximize those interests.1 2 6 Thoseprojects involve rationality over time and necessarily require basicprinciples of rationality such as the transitive ordering of preferencesand fidelity to the principle of noncontradiction.127 The only relevantdifference between states and individuals is the lack of phenomeno-logical unity among the former.12 8 While each individual typically en-joys a unified phenomenological point of view, states are composed ofmany individuals, each of whom represents their own unified phe-nomenological point of view.1 29 But the lack of phenomenologicalunity of the state does not prevent it from exercising rational agency.

      While states are much larger than the individual they can still have rationality as a value embedded in their government and national laws.

    8. Rationality: Normative, Not Descriptive

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    9. INTRODUCTION

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    10. SELF-INTEREST AND NORM

      .h2 self interest and normativity

    11. Gauthier, drawing partially on the work of Bratman and others,points out that the answer is not so simple. 0 8 Even if defection at anygiven moment is rationally beneficial, this is not the right comparison.Pursuing the strategy of rational choice at each cardinal time pointmay turn out to be less effective than choosing an overall strategy orplan that is rationally justified and then sticking to it.

      While at one time point it may make sense to break from the plans that are set by a nation, it is often better to stick to a long term plan causing the argument posed by Posner to be devalued.

    12. Compliance and the Rationality of Plans

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    13. Constrained Maximizers and International Law

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    14. Although the best possible out-come for a given player is defection in the face of compliance by allother competitors in the game, this outcome is also the outcome pre-ferred by one's competitors. If all competitors defect, the resultingpayoff is extremely low, effectively throwing the game back into a stateof nature where no one complies with any moral constraints, thus pro-ducing the worst possible outcome. The rational solution to the gametherefore requires acceptance of the objectively second-best (but, ra-tionally, only possible) outcome: acceptance of reciprocal moral con-straints on behavior.

      There are only two options in the game of the prisoners dilemma in international law. Either international laws hold almost no ground and states ignore them, or they comply in reciprocal moral constraint and mostly comply: The second option is most definitely better than the first.

    15. of social contract theory that harnessed the power of game theory toexplain why rational actors would agree to a system that constrainedtheir behavior.6 0 Morals By Agreement provided, for the first time, afully realized model of rational self-interested individuals agreeing toa social contract of morality.

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    16. In 1986, the moral philosopherDavid Gauthier published Morals By Agreement, a novel interpretation

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    17. Law and Self-Interest

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    18. Bilateral Agreements

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    19. Multilateral Agreements

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    20. The whole point of international law is to create a structure wherebythe cost of shifting strategy away from compliance becomes higherthan it would be without legal regulation in that particular area. As aresult, each state in the Nash Equilibrium decides to comply with thelegal norm in question.

      Consider a bilateral treaty between state A and B. One state might decide that the treaty is no longer beneficial for them and want to leave but because of Nash Equilibrium they will stay. If they left, every other state will be less willing to sign agreements and trust them as they didn't change their strategy. Thus International law causes it to be in the best interest of the state to stay.

    21. is indeed in his or her best interest, then the players fall out of NashEquilibrium.3

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    22. If one player decides that a shift in strategy (i.e., breach)

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    23. THE PRISONER's DILEMMA AND NASH EQUILIBRIUM

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    24. Game theory has been a mainstay in the international relations literature forseveral decades, but its appearance in the international law literature is of afar more recent vintage. Recent accounts have harnessed game theory's al-leged lessons in service of a new brand of "realism" about international law.These skeptical accounts conclude that international law loses its normativeforce because states that 'follow" international law merely are participants ina Prisoner's Dilemma seeking to achieve self-interested outcomes. Suchclaims are not just vastly exaggerated; they represent a profound misunder-standing about the significance of game theory.

      The authors of this article believe that skeptics calling out international laws priming nations to participate in prisoner dilemmas are grossly exaggerated.

    25. counts conclude that international law loses its normative force be-cause states that "follow" international law are simply participants in aPrisoner's Dilemma seeking to achieve self-interested outcomes.

      .c2 Some new accounts conclude that states will only follow international law to better prime them to ask for their own self interests. This essentialy makes participation a prisoners dillema.

    26. Recent accountshave harnessed alleged lessons learned from game theory in service ofa new brand of realism about international law.8 These skeptical ac-

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    27. some scholars concluded that compliance with international legalnorms was internalized as a value that formed one part of a nation'sself-interest. 6 In other words, fidelity to national values included, in-ter alia, compliance with international law, because some countriesview participation in the global legal order (or fidelity to its underly-ing norms) as an essential part of their identity and constitutive com-mitments.7 Therefore, compliance with international law was anational interest to be included with other more egoistic national val-ues.

      Some scholars concluded that compliance with international laws was internalized as individual values which made the compliance more of a national interest than just an international one.

    Annotators

    1. Put another way, subjects sleeping normally lost most of their weight as fat, while subjects sleeping poorly lost most of their weight as lean mass (including muscle). And all of this was from just one hour of sleep less per night, five days per week!

      .c2 Holy Fuck

    2. Brace yourself for the results: Although there were no significant differences in total weight lost, there was an enormous difference in where that weight was lost from (that is, whether weight was lost from fat or muscle). For the subjects that slept normally, 83 percent of weight loss was lost as fat. For the subjects that were sleep restricted, this completely flipped: approximately 85 percent of weight loss was lost as fat-free mass!

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    3. CHAPTER 14

      .h2 Sleep and stress: the dark horse of body recomposition.

    4. eat fatty fish once or twice a week.

      .c2

    5. The supplements in this tier (multivitamins and fish oil) are unique as their effectiveness will depend much more on your overall diet. Similar to how protein powder would not be needed if you can hit your protein target with whole foods, these supplements would likely be unnecessary if you already have a diverse diet filled with lots of fruits and vegetables and

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    6. list.

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    7. Caffeine has a large body of evidence supporting its use for cognitive function, increasing strength, prolonging fatigue, maximizing acute fat oxidation, sparing glycogen and much more (25,73). These benefits are why you find it at the number three spot on our supplement

      .c1

    8. Looking at the cellular level, ATP (adenosine triphosphate) breaks down to form ADP (adenosine diphosphate), a phosphate molecule and energy that can be used by our muscles. By supplementing creatine, we are able to increase phosphocreatine stores, allowing our bodies to rapidly replenish that lost phosphate molecule, meaning more ATP and ultimately more usable energy for quickly contracting muscles.

      future aidan come and take picture of the\ phosphocreatine system shown right here.

    9. WHICH SUPPLEMENTS SHOULD YOU CONSIDER TAKING?

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    10. CHAPTER 13

      .h2 Settling the supplement dilema

    Annotators

    1. Create a national or state-based system in which personalized learning advisors help elementary and middle school students and families explore the variety of learning opportunities available to them—in school, online and community based—that they may not otherwise know about or have access to.

      This way, parents wouldn't be solely responsible for the kids education but rather have helpers spread awareness on the different learning opportunities open to students.

    2. A Call to Action

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    3. Ashoka has learned from its Fellows that empathy is a foundational capacity that children must develop to prepare them to then master other critical skills of teamwork, leadership and change-making. With the guidance of these fellows, we have been searching for Changemaker Schools across the United States that cultivate students as empathic leaders who can work in teams to solve shared problems. However, schools are not the only institutions that must support these skills in students. In order for all children to master these changemaker skills, museums must play a critical role in transforming the youth years.

      Empathy is one of the most critical skills to develop in children at an early age. This is because it helps students want to become changemakers and work on hard problems in teams.

    4. Every Child a Changemaker

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    5. The TED conference has served over a billion videos since 2006, the year they started a small experiment to put videos online. They tried it, it seemed to work, so they tried some more, and now they have delivered a billion videos. The TED team didn’t do anything that a museum couldn’t have done—no aspect of TED’s strategy, tactics or operations requires huge teams or huge budgets, and even the TED motto, “Ideas worth spreading,” is hauntingly museumesque. But their vision, their sense of their role—their responsibility, their obligation—in the world of the 21st century is clear, as is their understanding of scale.

      Michael is explaining why we need to be able to scale with museums if they will have any effect one education to come. Just like TED did with their amazingly simple process that made it easy to scale.

    6. Museums in an Age of Scale

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    7. of us in America, and that blew me away. Every single place I went, they wanted to know how we do what we do. That is the good news that I bring to you today from overseas. There are other things to emulate in other systems, but what we have here in this country is one thing that they don’t have, and that’s the ability to create incuba-tional space where we say, What do you want to know? How do you want to learn it? How do we know that you’ve gotten it? When will we be done?

      .c2 Of course, not all schools in America are like this but we have the freedom to have some classrooms and teachers emulate this type of questioning in their classroom. In other countries like in Asia, this is simply not possible. I would love to have my students even if I am in high school fill out a questionnaire which asses what they would like to get out of the class and what their favorite things are to do outside of class. I would like to ask them when they feel like time just drifts away and when they feel like nothing else matters.

    8. Have you been in an American classroom lately? It’s a noisy place; it’s a beautiful, chaotic, stimulating array. It’s wonderful, and in classrooms elsewhere in the world that just doesn’t exist. They wanted to know how we foster that chaos. How did we do what we do? They were envious of all

      .c1

    9. Lessons from a National Education

      .h3 Lessons from a national education leader's journey

    10. Currently I am organizing students across the United States to form a cohesive task force called “We the Students.” We are working on a National Student Bill of Rights, informed by what I hope will be thousands of fellow students and kids to clearly define the rights learners should have in the education system we desire. We will then transform this document into the foundation for a new certification process for schools, museums, libraries, etc., that shifts where value is placed in our system to where it should be: helping all children fulfill their passions and be the masters of their education.

      He is trying to involve the students themselves more into the change that is happening in schools.

    11. as they say, are cheap. What we need most of all is pragmatic incentive to change. We need to shift where the system dictates money should go, even if it is only a small shift at first. Admittedly I am discussing more “cheap” ideas here, but for my part, small as it is, I am working to solidify some of these ideas.

      .c2 We can't just talk about change but rather much shift where the money is going. If we don't have the recourses to make change happen than talking about it will do nothing.

    12. Many, if not most, people want to see a shift in education towards a learner-focused system. But wanting change and changing are two very distinct things—especially when we talk at the institutional level. Ideas,

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    13. A Student Bill of Rights

      .h3

    14. This harkens back to 17th-century English coffeehouses, where people came almost every day to learn the latest gossip and news about what was going on in the town. These coffeehouses were extraordinary places for innovation, collaboration and, most important, the mingling of people with different ideas and from different fields. In today’s society, we are so detached from one another that most of us don’t even know our next-door neighbors. Most of us don’t talk to people in our community or neighborhood unless there’s an absolute need to do so. There’s huge potential for cities and communities to address this detachment, and I think museums, libraries, makerspaces and community centers are going to be a part of the solution.

      Part of the appeal of libraries and museums is that they harbor a greater sense of community

    15. After I came back from India, I moved from Bethpage, New York, to Syosset, New York—going from a middle-class school district to one that’s very wealthy and compet-itive, where a lot of kids are admitted into Ivy League institutions. Once I got into that school, it was a disaster. Many of the problems that I had been reading about were unfolding before my eyes. Kids were stressed out, very competitive, cheating and uninterested in anything beyond getting into college.

      Being at Cornell it's insane how many students don't seem passionate about what they are learning because they focused all their attention on that godforsaken number of a grade. You need to be doing the class or learning it for a reason other than to get a good grade.

    16. One Size Does Not Fit All

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    17. Taking It National and Global: A Value-Driven, Project-Based Learning and Innovative Credit-Earning Model

      .h3

    18. We know that kids spend only 14 percent of their time in school. And we understand that learning doesn’t start and stop at the school door. In Pittsburgh we’re focusing on principles of connected learning that link academic achievement, social networks and personal interests with smart mentors to spur young people to learn anytime, anywhere.

      I believe it's vastly more helpful to teach students to love learning and innovation in part in schools so that they will spend more time doing self-directed learning projects outside of school. I am learning so much largey due to the fact that I purposefully learn by myself for hours every single day.

    19. A City-Level Approach to Remake

      .h3 A city level approach to remake learning

    20. critically, to communicate and collaborate, and to develop a problem-solving mindset that they can apply in any scenario.

      .c2

    21. To offer an explicit digital tool to K–12 educators, The Henry Ford created a game-changing digital curriculum, Innovation 101, which is designed to inspire the next generation of innovators and thinkers with stories of today’s innovators, told in their own words and juxtaposed with stories of legendary innovators. The curriculum seamlessly integrates 21st-century skills development in the methodology of instruction. Each lesson allows learners to reflect on real-life stories of innovators, to think creatively and

      .c1

    22. aligned with the Next Generation Science Standards.

      .c2

    23. In close collaboration with education partners, The Henry Ford used the “co- creation” approach and launched over 220 new and paradigm-changing educational curricula and resources aimed at changing how teachers teach and students learn. The new resources not only support national and state standards in social studies but also in STEM, 21st-century skills, English language arts, and career and technical education. They are aligned with Common Core State Standards and are now being

      .c1

    24. Igniting a Learning Revolution with The Henry Ford’s Innovation Education Incubator

      .h3

    25. It’s ironic that even though everyone is talking about innovation being the most desirable 21st-century skill, educators and students are still held captive in the least innovative teaching and learning environments. Most museums are eager to align their educational offerings with the ever-evolving standards rather than advocate for change in the curriculum itself. It is time to ask: Is more really more, or should we make room in the existing curriculum for creativity and innovation? If this change happens, museums will fit into the education and learning equation seamlessly.

      The question is not how we can add museums to the already set in place educational structure, but how we can take some things away from formal education and use museums to fill in the holes.

    26. Time for a Perfect Storm!

      .h3

    27. Signal: New Hampshire Virtual Academy requires parents to assume a “learning coach” role. With students who enroll in the school full time, spending an average of four to six hours on schoolwork each day, parents are advised to plan for 80 percent direct partici-pation in the early grades, 50 percent in middle school and 10 percent in high school. It seems challenging for even a well-educated and highly motivated parent to carry out this learning coach role while working full time.

      We need systems set in place that can bring clarity to how to use the personilization systems and vast amount of choices that the internet gives for what to learn. We can't just give the job to the parents.

    28. Signal: Boston Day and Evening Academy shows how it is possible to remove constraints around learning for at-risk students and to make new design decisions appropriate to a particular situation. Its population of over-age and under-credited learners are organized into cohorts every 11 weeks based on their levels of mastery.

      I love the idea of putting people into cohorts based on their mastery and letting them learn at their own pace.

    29. Glimpses of the Future of Education

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    30. school time. These opportunities are built around the growing evidence that anywhere, anytime learning can reinforce and extend formal learning, resonate with learners who don’t thrive in the traditional classroom and prevent the “summer slide” that is partic-ularly damaging to low-income students.

      .c2 An example of a trend in the education sphere

    31. Inside-Out Urban Schools: The rise of after-school, summer and other expanded learning opportunities creates learning outside the traditional school building and

      .c1

    32. We see signs that the U.S. is nearing the end of an era in formal learning charac-terized by teachers, physical classrooms, age-cohorts and a core curriculum—what some people call the era of industrial-age learning. The signals presaging this transformation include the rapid increase in nontraditional forms of primary education such as homeschooling; near record dissat-isfaction with the existing K–12 education system; funding crises for schools at the state and local levels; growing gender imbalance in higher education; and prolifer-ation of digital content and digital delivery platforms designed to transform the nature of classroom learning.

      Digital content in particular is destroying the old notions of schooling. I myself am now in classrooms with people of all different ages and backgrounds on things like the PTYA.

    33. Setting the Stage

      .h3

    34. horizons are being opened by technological advances in communications, content sharing and cultural expectations regarding access, authority and personalization. A new era is beginning, characterized by new learning economies based on diverse methods of sharing and using educa-tional resources.

      .c2

    35. Simultaneously new

      .c1

    36. They came at the invitation of the American Alliance of Museums’ Center for the Future of Museums (CFM), and The Henry Ford, in response to forecasts from CFM and other futures organizations that America is on the cusp of transformational change in the educational system. The current structure has been destabilized by rising dissatis-faction with the formal educational system, the proliferation of nontraditional forms of primary education and funding crises at state and local levels.

      In What The Hell Is Going on, David Parrel describes the effect that technology and the internet is having on the formal education system that parrallels Henry Ford's system. It's all falling apart. Something new needs to take it's place.

    37. About This Convening

      .h3

    Annotators

    1. Just like the end of the term, the end of each class is the best time to rein-force what students are supposed to take home. Whether by summarizing the lesson or quizzing students to check for and deepen understanding, make the end of each class matter. If students spend the last few minutes packing up (or leaving early), call them on it. By saying – and showing – that the end is the most important part of class, you create an incentive for them to stay focused. And if you usually end class with administrative tasks like collecting homework, push that up a bit so that the end of class is open for a really strong close.

      I always tried to get out of class early which is something that I don't want to do anymore as I should want to be in class.

    2. End each class on a strong note.

      .h3

    3. Prepare a sub plan.

      .h3

    4. Many teachers collect homework at the end of class, grade it in a cur-sory fashion and hand it back a week or two later. Ten they wonder why students don’t try harder on it. Teir students recognize that the homework isn’t meaningful to the class or important to the teacher.

      We need shorter feedback loops if we expect students to use homework grades for revising future assignments.

    5. Homework is crucial.

      .h3

    6. Make your students write.

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    7. Ready, fre, aim.

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    8. Tell stories.

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    9. Don’t get too invested in what you design.

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    10. Develop a range of polished material to show of to potential employ-ers. Putting my ESL stories online has led to several jobs creating material that in no way resembled my original work. I’ve also gotten kind emails from teachers around the world who have successfully used these stories in their classrooms. It’s gratifying.

      It's like building a second brain. Being able to reuse old lesson plans or materials and revamping them is crucial

    11. Share your materials freely.

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    12. Make titles and headings short and descriptive. ✓ Have ample margins, ideally 1” on each side, for read-ability and note-taking. ✓ Put one line of blank space between paragraphs. ✓ Number everything for easy reference in class. (“Let’s go to section II, question 1.”) ✓ Number sections with Roman numerals; number questions with regular-type numerals. ✓ Include a few diagrams or pictures, as necessary. ✓ Label all diagrams and pictures, even if it seems obvious how they relate to the text. ✓ Cite your sources in your materials the same way you expect students to. ✓ Number your pages if it’s three pages or longer. ✓ Put your name and the class name in the footer, so students know it’s for your class. ✓ Save your handouts in DOC and PDF format.

      .c2

    13. Follow these steps to make your handouts uniform, useful and beautiful. ✓ Use a serif font (like Times New Roman) for better readability. ✓ Use a readable font size: 18-24pt for titles, 14-18pt for headings, 10-12pt for text. ✓ Use the same font or two (max) for all your hand-outs. (I like using a sans serif font like Arial for captions.) ✓ Write instructions at the top of every handout. Do you want students to read it for homework, answer the questions and return it to you next class, or keep it as a reference? ✓ If students will fll it out and return it to you, put “Name:________________” at the top.

      .c1

    14. Develop your own materials.

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    15. not be obvious to students.

      .c2

    16. End each class with three things. First, review the day’s lesson. Second, connect it to the homework. Tird, explain how the homework connects to what they’ll learn next class. Connections that seem obvious to you may

      .c1

    17. Pace and motivate within each lesson plan.

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    18. On the frst day of class my students always do an icebreaker activity where they introduce themselves to a partner and discuss a life experience that taught them something. (Tey will naturally choose something sig-nifcant.) Ten students introduce their partner and their partner’s learn-ing experience to the whole class. Most of the learning experiences students share will involve dis-comfort: a divorce, realizing their kids could run circles around them, a life-threatening motorcycle accident... After everyone fnishes, I draw a modifed version of the discomfort zone diagram on the board and talk about how, as we just saw, the most powerful learning happens when we are uncomfortable.

      I love how we did this in EDUC 2410. It was very uncomfortable for some students but clear that it made them open up more for the rest of the class. It also made it easy to make friends right away.

    19. Teach the discomfort zone.

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    20. Give ‘em a hook.

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    21. the survey tells you who your students are; the entry assess-ment, where they’re starting from.

      I love how we did this in our EDUC 2210 class

    22. Start with a survey and an entry assessment.

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    23. The frst day of class is the most important.

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    Annotators

    1. You can speed this process where appropriate with some simple, well-designed activities intended to help people improve their learning techni-ques, for instance explaining the importance of learning styles and askingpeople to identify their own preferences, explaining the Ladder of Compe-tence or introducing them to the MBTI. Using these tools increases thechances of learners being able to stand back from their learning and askthemselves what is going well, what is going less well, and what strategiesthey might use to build on strengths and overcome blocks. All of this willreduce the chances that they will project any frustration on to you, becauseunderstanding yourself and your own learning style is part of accepting thatyou are responsible for your own learning, not your tutor.

      I notice this with the students at Cornell. Many of them do the readings like shit because they think if they just read it they can check it off. When you are responsible for your own learning your realize that there is no point in doing the reading badly because it's your learning and not the instructors. After the course is over you will regret not trying harder because you will have forgotten everything.

    2. So if learning is about making connections and seeing patterns it becomespointless to devise teaching methods which are about transmitting facts. Thisdistinction is sometimes described as the difference between surface learningand deep learning. Surface learning is about remembering lists of data andcollections of facts. It is about memorizing and regurgitating uncritically.Deep learning is about connections, patterns and logic.

      Deep learning involves asking questions of why, how, and other things

    3. Modern cognitive psychology has suggested that our brainswork differently. Rather than proceeding as a linear process where facts areneatly stored, the human brain seems to work instead on the principle ofneural networks of association. We mentally arrange and store knowledge inclusters of related ideas known as semantic networks. When we learn some-thing new, we latch the new idea on to its nearest relative in an existingnetwork. Learning is thus about incorporating or modifying existing ideaswith new ones. It is essentially about recognizing patterns – in other words itis about problem-solving.

      Semantic networks are built through the process of elaboration which is connecting knowledge we are learning now with knowledge we have learned in the past.

    4. Five minutes of warm up exercises – gets people stretching andchanges the mood as well as being fun.I play a silly game called ‘Bat and Moth’ which involves peoplestanding in a group and chasing each other. It has no purpose otherthan to get people moving!I start my maths classes with five minutes of mental arithmetic – fastand fun.I ask people to describe what percentage of their attention I have.Answers vary from 20 per cent to 95 per cent. I then ask what needsto happen to get to at least 95 per cent. It’s fun and I get a lot ofuseful information too!

      I like the idea of asking them about the favorite thing that they learned over the past couple of weeks and how they plan to implement it into their lives.

    5. The more you can design learning so that people can work at their ownpace, the more effective it is likely to be. This is not because competition isideologically unsound, but because it doesn’t work. With adults this is espe-cially important. The older you are, the more likely you are to want tosacrifice speed for accuracy and the more likely you are to want informationbefore making a response.

      The PTYA course did an amazing job at this by letting us do the lectures at our own pace and only making homework a requirement.

    6. four bi-polar dimensions, known as Preferences. The theory is that althougheveryone can call on each of the eight preferences, we are all likely to have apreference for one side of each dimension. This is the dimension in which we arelikely to have developed skill. All preferences are assumed to be of equal value

      .c2 I went through the test myself and I am definitely a ISFJ Introversion, Sensing, Feeling, and Judging

      Here is a description of ISFJ:

      ISFJs, like ISTJs, like to learn through experience, hands-on practice, repetition, and memorization. They thrive in a highly-structured learning environment where the expectations are clear and the routine is consistent. They like sequential, step-by-step instructions and they like to know that their teachers respect and appreciate them. Regular affirmation by teachers and parents helps them to feel confident in their abilities. They retain details and facts very well and usually excel in reading apprehension, language arts, social studies, and anything with a practical application. They like to learn in a linear style and can get frustrated with teachers who bounce around a lot when they teach, or who skip over details. ISFJs like plenty of time to observe and think over the tasks and details of their lessons before interacting with a group. Even a few minutes after lectures will allow them some time to reflect and organize their thoughts before they are expected to join into a group activity or brainstorming session. They work best independently or in small groups, but can feel more hesitant in larger groups.

      According to the MBTI® Manual, ISFJs get better grades than the average student in high school, and they are rated by psychologists as one of two types least likely to have trouble in school. They are also the second most frequent type among education majors.

      In a survey I conducted about type and education preferences, ISFJs chose public school as their preferred environment for learning, but homeschooling followed close behind, with only two fewer votes. Private school had very few votes, and unschooling had no votes at all.

    7. The framework proposes that human personality can be explained along

      .c1

    8. There are thousands of other per-sonality questionnaires and approaches to human personality and some ofthem have much merit. However, my personal favourite is the MBTI for its all-round versatility and also for the seventy years of research that has made itthe classic it is today.

      This is known as the Myers Briggs Type Indicator and to get the full scope you will need to get a debrief with some one to discuss your results

    9. Personality and learning

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    10. Anything airy-fairy and theoretical;learning that makes too manyreferences to the past or the futureand avoids drawing attention toNOW.

      They dislike doing this

    11. Practical problem solving;experimentation; chance to vary andmodify other people’s ideas;immediacy; relevance to ‘the realworld’; enjoy bending rules andseeing what happens; learning thatanswers the question ‘How can Iapply this?’

      They like doing this

    Annotators