One of the best presentations I have ever seen. Actually I watched it multiple times, and tried to follow the advices as well. I implemented the structured to-do list some months ago, and it seems to work fine. At least makes me think how important the respective tasks are.
Here is the video on Youtube:
There are some other blog posts with similar topic. I am sure that there is a lot more in this topic out there, so if you know about something, just comment below.
I was browsing the Youtube today. I wrote "learn" to the search to see what comes up... After 2 clicks I got to the video below. This is what I have learned :)
Not too much, I know, but at least there is some result for the two minutes I invested into it.
I have some time now to browse the net. Just remembered one of my delicious bookmarks of a guy at Stanford university giving a lecture on a "sort of introductory course on programming". This particular video interesting not only because of the content (I am also a "sort of " programmer), but also because of the lecturer.
I usually don't look at the comments on Youtube, but in this case it is also worthwile. Majority of the people are praising the lecturer, some of them even express the wish to go to Stanford. An other quote from a commenter: " I wish my teachers was like him :(
i'm in highschool and my teachers are
like serious 80% of the time and angry 20% of the time."
So here is my point:
The personality and the mood of the teacher matters at least as much as the wise things s/he want to tell. I am not saying that every student has to laugh through all classes, but a well placed joke or an occasional smile could help a lot.
Sidenote: If you are interested in programming you might want to check out the game Light-Bot 2.0. It teaches programming basics in a fun way.
My name is Gabor Meszaros, a researcher and sometimes lecturer at University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna, Austria - also known as BOKU. My field of study is quantitative genetics and software development (although I am more an animal breeder that a software engineer). I am also very interested in agricultural development issues. I would like to contribute to this topic linking my two (three) interests, with an ultimate goal to find synergy between development issues and the technical possibilities of the 21st century.