Thursday, July 8, 2010

From 0 to 296 in three days... amazing!

Yupp, I can't believe this myself! We're on rank 296 right now, over 500 votes in three days or so, and having a rank of 200 or higher on 7/12/2010 means a $20,000 grant!
Please, if you read this and haven't voted, or know of people who would vote for our vocabulary tutoring campaign, this is the link:
http://bit.ly/learnthatword
It just takes a few seconds!

Posted via email from LearnThat's Blog

Vote! Share with your friends! We can do this!

Wow, we are impressed by how many responded to our email call for help. We're at close to 300 votes, but will need about three times as much to win a grant.
If you haven't voted yet, please click on http://bit.ly/learnthatword and give us a click... if you did vote, please considering sending the link to your friends and family, or repost on Facebook!

By the way: We hear from a lot of people who click the "like" button and then are confused about what to do next. When you click that, often a "verification required" link pops up that you need to click next and enter the captcha. That's the last step before voting... Thank you!!

Posted via email from LearnThat's Blog

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Word Cup... last rounds!

The last round of the Word Cup tryouts are upon us.
Please check out the schedule at www.wordcupcafe.org and try out!
If you qualified for the semifinals, please make sure the take the quiz before August 1st, or your invitation will expire.
Good luck!

Posted via email from LearnThat's Blog

The race is on... please vote for us @ Chase Community Giving

Our nonprofit has entered the race to win a Chase Community grant, and we need your help! The grants are given to the top 200 nonprofits based on votes.

We heard about this just recently, and still need about 800 votes before 7/12 to make it, we've done great so far... but we need to get many more votes.
Can you help us out by voting for our Vocabulary Junction campaign, making free tutoring available to third graders nationwide? Please also repost this on facebook, via email, in forums/networks, etc.
As a thank you for taking time to vote, we will credit 10 learning credits to you.
In the near future, when www.LearnThatWord.org replaces www.eSpindle.org, users will only pay for measured learning results, and 10 credits represent about a month of free tutoring!


Here's how it works:

1 - Click on this link: http://bit.ly/learnthatword. (You have to be logged into your Facebook account)

2 - Click on the get started link:

3 - On the next screen, approve that Chase can connect with you and get access to your public Facebook info (they will list your name and profile images after you vote).

4 - On the following screen, click "like" by clicking on the highlighted button (you can "unlike" Chase at any time). Click on the verification required link and fill in the captcha.


4 - Click "vote for this charity"... Thank you!! Send an email to support@eSpindle.org with your Facebook name and your eSpindle username, and we'll credit your account.

5 - Please share this info with your friends and everyone who cares about education: Facebook, emails, forums, networks. http://bit.ly/learnthatword... this is urgent!!

Let's start closing the Vocabulary Divide that causes so many elementary students to struggle. We still need about 800 votes before 7/12... just a little miracle that should be well possible with a little help of our friends!

Thank you for your support!!

Posted via email from LearnThat's Blog

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Click here to set a title.

I just heard from one of our members. He's heading for the National Spelling Bee finals in Washington D.C. in early June and very excited.

Over the last few years, our site has become a major hub for these amazing mental athletes, since we are the only comprehensive and fully managed spelling program to help them manage their ambitious goal.

We also offer a forum for spelling bee contestants: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/eSpindle_SB/

This particular child just emailed me saying "I am using your website as my personal coach. It is such an amazing program!" He has studied over 17,000 words with LearnThatWord so far... what an amazing achievement! There are only two members who have studied more -- you can see the highest scoring users by moving your mouse over the blue round "1" icon on the home page or next to the quiz.

I was wishing him good luck, but then thought how inappropriate the term seemed compared with his level of preparedness. Luck is so often looked at as something random. However, contrary to popular folk myth, luck very rarely just drops on people. Instead, it follows a formula.

l = p x o

Luck = Preparedness x Opportunity

Of course, this child may encounter one of the few words he has not yet studied or that his brain has forgotten under the onslaught of vocabulary data. He may be making a mistake. But he has taken every step to minimize the likeliness of that by making sure he is prepared to the highest degree.

And from what I can see of his character so far, I'm sure that even if he hears the bell and not the questions of the media this year, he's likely to be back next year.

Luck is not blind. She only has serious trouble seeing clearly. Get up and try to stand right in front of her by striving to increase your preparedness and opportunities wherever you can. Don't give up. Every action you take to either increase your preparedness or your opportunity will seriously increase your chances of being tagged by "luck."

 

Posted via web from LearnThat's Blog

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Learning Style De-Bunk

The newsletter from the Dana Foundation is always highly interesting. Today's news stream debunked the "fancy myth" of learning styles and that somehow somewhat somebody could actually made sense out of all that hype and turn it into results.

Here a quote from the article:


What are you calling a learning style?

“There’s not much to this notion of learning styles,” said Daniel Willingham, of the University of Virginia, and no evidence that categorizing children by such terms as “visual, auditory, or kinesthetic learners,” for example, helps them learn.

The notion that we can categorize people by how they prefer to learn has seeped into popular culture; 90 percent of the undergraduates in Willingham’s classes raise their hands when he asks them if they know what their learning style is. But research has not proved the categories are useful.

For example, in one study researchers divided children into “auditory learners" and “visual learners,” and then gave them an “auditory task” and a “visual task,” expecting the auditory learners to ace the first and the visual learners to ace the second. They got the opposite results.

“In many of these studies, the original classifications don’t always work,” he said; one person might be classified a “serialist learner” one day, but would meet the standard for its opposite, a “holistic learner,” the next. “The theories at hand aren’t effective,” Willingham said; perhaps another learning theory will appear that is, but he doesn’t see one on the horizon.

His talk had the tables buzzing; many teachers and administrators said they at least consider learning styles when they design curricula or make lesson plans. Willingham said relying solely on such a perspective might lead to less-effective teaching, but he does promote the idea of “changing-up,” using a range of different modes in the lesson.

Posted via web from LearnThat's Blog

Monday, May 10, 2010

The trouble with "free"

The boat is rocking at Wikipedia.
The media is upset that images deemed child pornographic were allowed to persist on the site.
The Wikimedia team is upset because Jimmy went in and deleted them without lengthy consensus discussions.

Wikipedia is a great resource in many regards, but this conflict highlights the problem of free--not only are you bound to be surprised by content that is of low quality or worse, but the article also mentions that Fox News stepped out, calling major donors to Wikimedia and complaining about the offensive material.

Depending on donations entirely, this "free" site depends on funding like everyone else on this planet.

Without consistent sustainability build in and substential maintenance costs, could the site tumble if the "big bad wolf" blows the house down?

Or would a situation like that cause people to rethink the glitzy appeal of "free"?

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/10104946.stm

Posted via web from LearnThat's Blog

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Building Literacy One Word at a Time

With spring and a flavor of change in the air, we at eSpindle Learning are feverishly at work, making major changes to our website. By end of May, www.espindle.org will re-launch as http://www.LearnThatWord.org. Instead of the membership model we will launch an innovative concept that allows users to only pay for results! Only if you had trouble with a word and we successfully taught it to you will you pay a few pennies.

This will make LearnThatWord accessible to a much wider audience and more affordable.

We are also planning two major campaigns to celebrate our continued growth:

Come August, we will launch Vocabulary Junction, a campaign to make free tutoring available to third graders throughout the nation. If we find some extra sponsorship support, we may even be able to include 2nd graders and other countries. You can find our partner invitation here: http://www.espindle.org/proposal_o.swf.

Please contact us if you have ideas or would like to get involved!!

We are also actively looking for ways to make free tutoring available to other literacy organizations.

If you represent a nonprofit serving an audience that needs LearnThatWord support, feel free to contact us.

 

Posted via web from LearnThat's Blog

Monday, February 22, 2010

Children's under-achievement associated with poor working memory

A large study involving 3,000 students has shown that in about 10% of children problems with academic achievement were due to a lack of working memory capacity. http://www.physorg.com/news123404466.html

While the article laments that teachers often fail to assess memory deficiencies as the source for academic failure, it does not mention that memory is a brain function that can be easily exercised or left to deteriorate further, if not challenged.

Chances are we see this high number of memory deficiency because these kids grow up in a vague in-the-moment state of consumption that does not challenge them to take ownership of knowledge and invest energy into memorizing.

When we memorize, our brain is forming pathways that allow for knowledge to be stored. The more we learn (and as part of that process, memorize), the more sophisticated and powerful our brains become, allowing consequential steps of learning, creativity and understanding to happen with ease.

As a species, we are new to the information age, with all its on-demand conveniences. It's really just been a decade or two that a large percentage of mankind is benefiting from the digital data-flow provided by computers and the Internet. Faced with such overwhelming accessibility of data, the first conclusion of many is that it is no longer necessary to memorize anything.

Why burden your brain with information that you can look up with a few clicks?

This study, however, sheds some light on why memory-building and memorized content is no less important today than it has ever been. Our brains need a solid framework to make sense of our world and accomplish higher order learning.

To be able to "connect the dots" successfully, you have to know where the dots are, they have to be on your mental map. Computers provide a great backdrop and resource, but they can't replace a diminished capacity to think due to lack of memory and memorized knowledge.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

It's not about how much you do, it's about how well you do it

The Chronicle of Higher Education published an article called
Divided Attention a few days ago.

The amount of information in our life has grown so much so quickly that most of us multitask to varying degrees. And there is some satisfaction to that, the feeling that you "get a lot done" at the same time.

The article highlights research that proves that doing more is not at all equal to performing well, or even satisfactory, and that attention and working-memory capacity is still what separates the true achievers from the busy bees.

Great read.

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Live word translations in 37 languages

We recently launched a new feature allowing eSpindle users to set their native language and receive live translations of the word to be learned. The additional information is available on demand, so as to not distract from the otherwise English immersion environment of the quiz.

Members who use eSpindle to learn English as a foreign language love it!

You can choose from 15 different languages, including those with non-Latin scripts, like Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Arabic, etc.
To activate the feature, simply select the language by going to you > preferences.
Then you'll see the translation of the word every time you mouse over the "bubble" icon in the quiz.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Root word madness

It's quite common when I introduce eSpindle to the educational community (not parents, not students, but educators, administrators, and publishers) that it is rejected with a brusque -- "but eSpindle requires knowing how to spell the word!"

It blows my mind every time, but people actually highlight that as a flaw of the program.

>>We don't teach spelling, why do you make it a requirement?

>>Well... because if you don't know the spelling, you don't really know the word, do you now?

>>But that is memorization!! Are you saying you want students to MEMORIZE content?

>>Memory is not a four letter word. Every kind of learning - playing an instrument, learning to ride a bicycle, cooking, academics - is 5% "aha!" and 95% memorization.

>>That's dark 19th century pedagogy! We want our kids to explore! Experience! Learn smarter, not harder! They don't have to learn at all, actually, just know how to consume information effectively... be creative, critical thinkers... tech-savvy...

And so it happens that although eSpindle is the most advanced and high-powered vocabulary and spelling practice program in the world, most people actually find us in the search engines because we also provide the most extensive listing of root words and suffixes on the Web.

Root words are being taunted as the holy grail of orthography and verbal prowess right now.

Admittedly, studying root words and etymology is very interesting, and I could spend hours exploring "what's in a word" (if I only had the time). Delightfully, there are a few words where you can systematically decode meaning from knowing root words (most books I know herald "orthography" as an example).

Then there are a few thousand more where you can derive some bits of understanding if you know root words. That's it, folks!

The fact is, to say it bluntly, that the root word frenzy to a large degree is linguistic smart-alecking that is not useful to somebody struggling with a limited vocabulary or someone learning English.

Our brains (unless we're dyslexic) build their vocabulary knowledge by storing mental orthographic images (MOI) and sound impressions for each word... it is a pattern-based process that relies on -- yes! -- memorization. Almost exclusively at that. It helps when the word is presented in interesting context, but learning words is still mostly memorization in action.

We're currently making lists for the word archive at eSpindle Learning, and we ran hundreds of queries in our database to draw out words as examples for the various root words.

The result: Most of the words that display the root word sequence actually do not fit the common teaching for that root word. In some lists, one can see a proportion of three misleading words to one conforming word. We were initially going to clear the "not-working" words out, but will likely keep them in.

Students should understand that root word knowledge is great, yet really just a grain of salt in the big pot of word soup. It's not what language is made of. Language, to the largest part, is not a verbal Lego set, where words are the sum of their components. But it does add some fun to know root meanings.

Let's take for example some random suffixes: "-ware" - "things of the same type or material". We got silverware, earthenware, software, hardware... and aware? unaware?
Next suffix. "Wise" - "in what manner or direction": Clockwise, lengthwise, otherwise, likewise... unwise? Plus, if as in these (and many other) cases there are indeed just four words where the root word meaning applies, why not simply teach the words and let the brain figure out the pattern, as it will naturally do?

The smart mind is lead to strange and wondrous lands by root word study... the labyrinth of the English language that resists standardization, rules, "smart learning." It will slip and slide and fall - get tangled in contradictions and oddities, and end up with as many questions as answers.

We get emails from students constantly asking in despair -- what's the root words of "ought"? Of "weird"? If "pre" as in "prejudice" means "before"... why does "present," the word that means "now," have the prefix that indicates "before"?

If I was a modern-day student, I would get started on questions like these and get lost for hours of verbal wonder and philosophizing, and would flunk all those "smart-teaching" root word classes.

The fear to "just teach" and the ban on anything that resembles memorization that has become prevalent in the educational community is disastrous if you're a student who either has a lot of catching up to do, or who just doesn't memorize words automatically/subconsciously.

These ideologies that strut around displaying modern and liberal attitudes are actually the opposite: Ignorant of current realities and elitist.

How much longer do we have to look at ridiculous drop-out rates and every decreasing literacy levels, before we will start to set aside ideology? The research is in that a 4th grader who does not operate at grade-level literacy level is doomed to fall more and more behind. So, what will we do with this knowledge now?

It's not a matter of phonics (which teach sounds, not words, and are heavily overrated), it's not a matter of rules (that don't work) and root words (that are a linguistic hobby, not a solution).

The problem is that if you don't have a chance to build a large vocabulary in your early years and within your extended family, you need a teacher teaching you these words. You need follow-up that makes sure these words make it into long term memory, and you need as much targeted instruction as it takes to help you catch up.

Let's end this on the positive note.

Research has not only shown that our academic crisis is largely a verbal, a literacy crisis.

Research has also shown that students can build their vocabulary at drastic speed if provided with targeted, meaningful study tools. We also hear this from our members: Provided with effective tools, the gap can be bridged quickly!

Ditch the ideologies!

Memorizing is not bad.
Spelling is not a problem, unless you don't teach it.
It's not rocket science. It just needs a bit of practice.
It's really not a big deal, unless it's ignored.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

A grand grant

Just came back from a few delightful days at Yosemite National Park. With the fall air crisp and clear, and both the sunny days and full-moon nights sharing their light with the magnificent surroundings, grandeur was everywhere.
What is the difference between something grand and something big?
Something truly grand will not make you feel small, but instead inspire and empower you.

Just like Google did recently when they gave us a generous Google grant to promote Word Cup.
Google has been helping many non-profits get the word out about their work and the causes they serve. To be chosen for a grant has been really inspiring and has helped our event a lot.
It's been a grand grant indeed!

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

A Picture says it all... many pictures = an awesome learning tool!

We now have over 7,000 large color photographs enhancing our eSpindle resources.
What bliss! It is so much easier to understand and memorize words with the right visual support.

Our volunteers are still combing through Flickr in search of more images, and we anticipate that once we're done we'll have 12,000 images supporting our program.

If you haven't eSpindled lately, register for a free trial and see how it works!

A New Word Cup, More Powerful Than Ever

Friday will see the launch of Word Cup as part of the LitCam Live! Forum at the Frankfurt Book Fair. (12:00, Hall 4.2)

Word Cup is designed to harness the power of the Web to make good, maybe even amazing, things happen. Our goal is to grow the event into the largest literacy fundraiser on the Web.

With some generous support from Google and Amazon Web Services and great media partners like BetterWorldBooks, AromaLand and Helium.com, we're on our way...

People who participated in the last Word Cup will notice some profound differences - for one, Word Cup is now completely free!
Secondly, there are substantial prizes to be won. That is, if you support the Word Cup fund with a few dollars yourself.

Being a supporter qualifies you for lots of extra "Word Cup 2.0" prizes; plus, you'll help the Word Cup Literacy Fund grow. Come check out Word Cup's four literacy projects!