Showing posts with label homework. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homework. Show all posts

Sunday, September 15, 2019

Indistractable by Nir Eyal



INDISTRACTABLE by Nir Eyal with Julie Li is subtitled “How to Control Your Attention and Choose your Life.” We all need this, right?  As I am typing, my phone is alerting me to a text and there are plenty of other distractions around, too. There is a certain irony in that Eyal is author of the internationally best-selling book titled Hooked: How to Build Habit-Forming Products, although he was primarily advocating for user friendly and easy to navigate products in that text. Having also lectured at Stanford’s Graduate School of Business, Eyal is obviously knowledge-able about the blending of technology, psychology, and business. In INDISTRACTABLE he advocates using four key strategies and addresses issues related to productivity, our habits/values and triggers, both internal and external. The structure of the book is very helpful – each of the roughly three dozen chapters has a boxed “remember this” section, plus, there is a summary list of chapter takeaways as well as templates for a scheduling tool and distraction tracker and notes. Eyal is a marketer at heart, too; he provides diagrams, acknowledges the many contributors who helped crowd-edit the book, and includes a book discussion guide. Portions of this text could be shared and discussed in advisory and would likely be of interest to Psych students (e.g., when exploring motivation or instant gratification), but Eyal’s writing is often geared to older tech users as evidenced by sections on stakeholders at work, email, and company culture, for example. Readers can also find additional resources, download materials, and get updates from NirAndFar.com/Indistractable.

Friday, October 2, 2015

Beyond Measure by Vicki Abeles



You have probably seen or at least heard about the documentary film Race to Nowhere which Vicki Abeles created a few years ago in 2010.  This week she will be sharing more thoughts in a new book, called Beyond Measure, which will accompany her new film of the same name. Once again, she is asking us to examine the educational system in this country, with particular focus on the excessive amount of homework, striving for perfection, and the emotional and physical costs involved. 

To me, the book Beyond Measure takes a long time to lay out the issues although it does rely effectively on both anecdote and research to document concerns about children’s health and the many pressures they face.  It is not until the last chapter that Abeles begins to really outline some ideas for change. These very specific actions include suggested steps to be taken at home and at school. Beyond Measure, like Race to Nowhere, deserves a read and subsequent conversation involving students, parents, teachers and policy makers. 


Here is a quick trailer: