Thứ Tư, 1 tháng 11, 2017

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how Halloween started

why do we celebrate Halloween

how did halloween start

halloween facts

samhain

Halloween has its roots in the ancient pre-christian Celtic festival of Samhain

which was celebrated on the night of October 31st many dressed up as souls of

the dead and were understood to be protecting themselves from the spirits

by impersonating them many of us have fallen victim to a scary Halloween prank

or even played the nasty trickster ourselves from jumping out of bushes

dressed as zombies or spooking people in their sleep as ghosts the terrifying

list of possibilities is inless

you

you

For more infomation >> How did Halloween Start? Why Do We Celebrate Halloween Facts Revealed 🎃 - Duration: 1:07.

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Why Do We Hiccup? - Duration: 1:50.

In this video, you will learn why do we hiccup?

Please consider subscribing to this channel by clicking the subscribe button and clicking

bell icon to get notified when we upload new video.

Hiccups are noises that come from your diaphragm which is a dome-shaped muscle at the bottom

of your chest.

When you inhale, the diaphragm pulls down to help pull air into the lungs.

When you exhale, the diaphragm relaxes and air flows out of the lungs back out through

the nose and mouth.

But sometimes the diaphragm becomes irritated and when this happens, it pulls down in a

jerky way which makes you suck air into your throat suddenly.

When the air rushing in hits your voice box your vocal cords close suddenly and you are

left with a big hiccup.

Some ways that you can irritate the diaphragm are by eating too quickly or too much, an

irritation in the stomach or the throat, or feeling nervous or excited.

Usually hiccups last only for a few minutes but in some rare cases can last for days or

even months.

Some of the things you can do to get rid of hiccups are by holding your breath and counting

to 10 and another is by drinking a glass of water.

You can also try to put some sugar under your tongue, it might work.

So that is all about hiccups, why do we hiccup and how you can get rid of hiccups.

Thanks for watching this video, if you enjoyed this video, please do not forget to like and

subscribe to our channel.

Here are some of our other videos which you may find useful.

In this channel you will get information about various health and life related topics.

Wishing you good health in your life, bye.

For more infomation >> Why Do We Hiccup? - Duration: 1:50.

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Hope: Why We Invest All Our Energies into a Future We Can't Predict | Victoria McGeer - Duration: 3:11.

What is it about our way of inhabiting our own agency that makes us so directed towards

future states of affairs that we don't completely control whether or not they come about?

So these are things that may happen.

They're things that we can work towards, but we never have any guarantee that they

will happen.

And yet we invest a lot of our energy in that.

I've come to think of that as a very special and characteristic feature of our own human

agency, that we are structured in that way.

We just do not have very fulfilling or happy human lives if we're not directing our agency,

our energy towards those anticipated events, hoped for events.

When we think about human development we're a very atypical kind of species insofar as

when we're born, unlike most other species, we have very little self-standing capacity

to survive in the world.

We need other people.

We need our parents.

We need other caregivers to help us develop the kinds of skills or capacities we need

to be able to survive, to be able to flourish in our world.

So we rely on others to give us those skills, to teach us those skills, to enable us to

become fully fledged autonomous individuals.

And that process is a long drawn out one and it involves a certain important relationship

with our caregivers that they're able to structure our environment in such a way that

they bring us little by little into certain rather complex sorts of engagements with the

world, allowing us little by little to build up our capacities for linguistic engagement,

for the kind of skills we need to play with toys.

You know when you think about very early development and the way a mother may be interacting with

her child.

Showing the child how to handle a toy or something so the child now comes to be able to do it

for him or herself.

Those are very small acts but those are the way we build up all our skills through our

long protracted development.

And that's what psychologists have called parental scaffolding that we treat our infants

as if they're capable of doing things that they're not quite yet capable of but we're

structuring a world for them in which they're able to try and explore their limitations

and maybe be frustrated at times.

But slowly, little by little, learn how to do things for themselves that they couldn't

do initially.

For more infomation >> Hope: Why We Invest All Our Energies into a Future We Can't Predict | Victoria McGeer - Duration: 3:11.

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Why Do We Get Grades in School? - Duration: 8:13.

We all remember the dreaded end of semester Armageddon known as "report card day."

But why do we get letter grades in school at all?

So getting grades is a big part of the way we view education with A's equaling success

while F's represent the dreaded failure.

Students are taught early on that to get ahead in life, and be smart and successful, the

best foundation is getting perfect report cards in school.

Grades can help us get into advanced courses and competitive colleges, and certain exams

can grant us licenses to practice different trades and professions.

But outside of the nagging question about why we skipped over the E grade, have you

ever wondered: When were the first grades given and why?

Well if you want to blame someone, it appears that the first grades date back to Yale president

Ezra Stiles in 1785.

He wrote in his diary that there were 58 students present at his examination and that their

grades were "Twenty Optimi, sixteen second Optimi, 12 Inferiores (Boni), ten Pejores."

These are usually noted as the first college grades ever assigned.

In Yale's 1813-1839 "Record of Examinations" students' averages were noted in the book

by the Senior Tutor of the Class on a scale of 4, which may be responsible for the 4.0

scale commonly used today.

In 1817 the faculty reports from William and Mary College groups students into 4 categories

"No 1 the first in their respective classes, No 2 Orderly, correct, and attentive, No.

3 They have made very little improvement, No. 4 They have learnt little or nothing."

Ouch.

That's a major teacher burn.

But the four point scale wasn't really standardized throughout the 19th century.

Harvard tried a 100 point scale and a 20 point scale.

Yale later tried a 9 point scale.

So until 1850 it was normal for grades to vary in terms of number systems, and weight.

In US colleges professors used descriptive adjectives to assign value rather than relying

on the numbers alone.

But by 1883 there is a report on a Harvard professor giving a student a "B" grade,

which is when letters got incorporated into the act.

In 1886 Harvard Faculty Records show that professors began grouping students into 5

classes based on performance.

Similar 5 point systems spread to places like Yale, and Mount Holyoke, the latter of which

adopted the first letter grade system in 1897.

But a failing grade was marked as an "E" and not an "F".

Over time the E was dropped and the standard system across US colleges became 5 points

all represented by letters A, through D, and F. But the meanings of grades and the systems

for recording them often shifted in the late nineteenth and early 20th centuries

Ok so we've established that if we want somewhere to point the finger of blame for

why we received stressful grades in school, and why a less than stellar score on a 6th

grade pop quiz gave me heart palpitations, we can start with a bunch of 19th century

college professors.

But the more important questions is: why are we still getting grades in school today?

Those guys are dead.

So they're useful for determining class ranking, they help teachers group students

into categories, and they can also be instrumental in whether or not you can enter into certain

jobs.

But because I'm sure a lot of us are still suffering from post report card induced stress,

we have to ask the most pressing questions: do grades really matter?

And are they actually effective tools for helping students learn?

Well the answer to the first question "do grades really matter" is kind of complex

and has to be broken down a bit to get to the heart of it.

Because it seems that the importance of your grades depends on the path you decide to take.

Although we're taught that grades are the strongest predictor of success in life, this

isn't uniformly true.

The issue with grades is that they consider averages, which gives you the most usual outcome

but not the full picture.

An average doesn't consider the outliers, but rather the collective information from

a certain group.

History is actually filled with successful people who didn't finish college or even

high school: Magic Johnson, Anna Wintour, Steve Jobs, Richard Branson, and Oprah Winfrey

to name a few, and none of these people did too shabbily in the life success department.

Also having perfect grades in high school doesn't always predict future game changers.

Karen Arnold of Boston University conducted a study in which she followed 81 high school

valedictorians and salutatorians.

She found that the majority of them continued being successful at school later in life.

95% earned college degrees with an average GPA of 3.6, 60% went to graduate school, 90%

are in professional jobs, and 40% are in the highest tiers of those jobs.

This is because a high GPA reflects skills like being prompt, working really hard, following

directions and being well rounded.

All important skills for high level careers.

But Arnold found that although most of her former high school valedictorians and salutatorians

were "strong occupational achievers" none had entered into roles she would consider

"visionary" because the grades we receive in school are designed to reward conformity

and following the rules, rather than creative thinking or specialization.

For example if you're really great at history (shout out to our audience members) but you

still want to be ranked number 1, you eventually will have to put that history textbook on

the back burner to study other subjects and earn the coveted "A" in every field.

Having a high GPA is usually indicative of being a generalist, not a specialist.

Arnold posits that most people who become ground breakers are actually rewarded for

creative thinking, a unique specialization, and a focus on an intellectual passion, things

that don't always get rewarded with grades.

As a result a lot of people who become successful later in life often struggle in school.

But a 2002 study at the University of Michigan still found that 80 percent of students based

their self-worth on how well they were doing in school and students with lower grades reported

having lower self-esteem and health.

So that brings us to the next question: do grades really help students learn?

Although grades have long been considered the standard approach in education, some experts

are turning away from letter based systems.

One of the biggest critics of the fixation on grades in schools is education expert Alfie

Kohn.

Kohn notes: "The research quite clearly shows that kids

who are graded – and have been encouraged to try to improve their grades – tend to

lose interest in the learning itself, avoid challenging tasks whenever possible (in order

to maximize the chance of getting an A), and think less deeply than kids who aren't graded…That's

why the best teachers and schools replace grades (and grade-like reports) with narrative

reports – qualitative accounts of student performance – or, better yet, conferences

with students and parents."

Teachers also report that grading is becoming increasingly stressful, as grade inflation

puts added pressure on them to deliver the grades that students want and parents expect.

Some educators are moving away from letter and number based grading to standards based

grading.

In 2013 Kentucky implemented a system where students received 2 report cards: one with

the traditional letter grades, and another with a individualized breakdown of what students

had learned and the students' progress in school.

Virginia's Fairfax County implemented a similar process in their elementary schools

in the 2012-2013 school year.

Parents reported finding the new system initially confusing, but ultimately more helpful in

assessing their child's growth and progress in school.

And classrooms around the world, including public schools, private schools, and educational

initiatives funded by nonprofits, are looking to incorporate new methods in the classroom

that place less emphasis on memorization and focus more on innovation and how students

can retain new knowledge.

So even though grades are the oldest way of doing things, they may not be the best for

measuring students' long term success.

So how does this all add up?

It seems grades do have some weight in determining student outcomes because we've based so

many systems around it, but this can vary a lot based on the individual.

While grades are extremely important in certain trajectories, like going to college, attending

graduate school, or entering into certain professions, they ultimately aren't the

only determining factor of success.

And although we've accepted them as the marker of a good student, a perfect GPA doesn't

always represent things like creativity, ingenuity, and intellectual passions.

Which is why more school systems and educators are looking for ways to measure student progress

outside of letters and percentages.

So what do you think?

Have any other theories about how grades became so entrenched in our education system?

Drop all your comments and questions down below (we swear we won't ask you to share

your old report cards) and we'll see you next week!

For more infomation >> Why Do We Get Grades in School? - Duration: 8:13.

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Why Do We Have Candy On Halloween ?! - Duration: 1:07.

It is said that they all died to one! They couldn't stand a chance against this Reaper

For more infomation >> Why Do We Have Candy On Halloween ?! - Duration: 1:07.

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Why I do what I do - Inner Leadership - Outer Change - Duration: 1:58.

For more infomation >> Why I do what I do - Inner Leadership - Outer Change - Duration: 1:58.

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Christ Centered Conversations: "Why Do I?" - Duration: 2:51.

Today I'll be talking about not just one article in particular, but this entire series that

we are going to look at also.

He's going to look at.

Yes.

And basically this series is the "Why Do I" series.

And for me, the rationale, or at least the thought behind this entire series was to actually

really explore my faith (Our faith) and not just, yes, our faith.

But also explore the intricacies of the faith.

Sometimes I feel like we have a lot of preconceived notions that we've haven't really thought

about and once we talk about it, we realise "eh, I'm not too sure about why certain things

are done this way".

Like, why is it the Eucharist is done in such a manner.

Why was it that the Church is still called a Holy Church even though we know of historical

facts of corrupt popes, of buying indulgences.

Sometimes when we get posed questions about it by our other friends whom might not be Catholics,

we get stumped at times because we've haven't really thought about it; we've just accepted

it wholesale.

And I think Socrates once said that "the unexamined life is not worth living" and I think even

with Ignatian spirituality -- the whole idea of examining your life, examining where God

was in your life in that day, also becomes -- for me at least -- the foundation of why I wanted

to do this series of the "Why Do I?".

If we don't even understand our faith and we're not accepting of our faith in all its

entirety, not just the parts that we like, the parts where Jesus gives us the nice happy

truths but also the parts where we sometimes struggle with, the areas the aspects of faith

that sometimes we ourselves don't really hold fully.

And if we don't look at it, explore it, then I think that we end up being like a Pharisee,

in a sense.

We accept the laws that are comfortable and useful and convenient for us and we ignore

the parts that we don't want to think about.

And so, hopefully, it'd engage y'all and I hope you enjoy the series and I hope

you get something out of it.

Bye!

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