June 13, 2020: Difference between revisions

From Gerald R. Lucas
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[[File:20200610-memes 08.jpg|thumb]]
[[File:20200610-memes 08.jpg|thumb]]
I posted this a [[June 11, 2020|couple of days ago]] with my meme checkin, but I like it, so I wanted to copy it here. They call these “How to Work Better,” but I renamed it above.
I like these guidelines. They couple easily be a twenty-first-century replacement for that outdated [https://ffrf.org/component/k2/item/23730-what-s-wrong-with-the-ten-commandments other list of ten]. They call this list “How to Work Better,” but I renamed it above.


# Do one thing at a time
# Do one thing at a time

Revision as of 13:16, 15 June 2020

How to Live Better covid-19: day 92 | US: GA | info | act

20200610-memes 08.jpg

I like these guidelines. They couple easily be a twenty-first-century replacement for that outdated other list of ten. They call this list “How to Work Better,” but I renamed it above.

  1. Do one thing at a time
  2. Know the problem
  3. Learn to listen
  4. Learn to ask questions
  5. Distinguish sense from nonsense
  6. Accept change as inevitable
  7. Admit mistakes
  8. Say it simple
  9. Be calm
  10. Smile

I have no wish to appropriate these from Black Lives Matter, and they should clearly be read in that vein first. Yet, as an educator, I think these should be the goals of higher education, especially number five. I think that education involves making us more engaged and compassionate and informed citizens—this is crucial for the survival of democracy. If Norman Mailer is correct and that

We all have the responsibly to educate ourselves to be better humans, especially those of us who are melanin-challenged.

Reference

  1. Mailer, Norman (2003). Why Are We at War?. New York: Random House. p. 71.