Saturday 26 April 2008

Rt conference launched!

FIRST LATINAMERICAN BILINGUAL CONFERENCE OF NEUROLINGUISTIC PROGRAMMING IN EDUCATION/
PRIMER CONGRESO LATINOAMERICANO BILINGÜE
DE PROGRAMACIÓN NEUROLINGÜÍSTICA
EN EDUCACIÓN


The difference that makes the difference!

AUGUST 8-9 2008

Buenos Aires

This conference also marks the tenth birthday of RT Resourceful Teaching, training teachers in NLP

In this unique event for Latin America, we will be offering a range of sessions showing how NLP can be applied effectively to a wide variety of situations and teaching contexts. In both English and Spanish. You will go home with practical ideas and the experience ‘in the muscle’!

Friday 8 August 18.00
Welcome ceremony with Laura Szmuch, Jamie Duncan and special invited guests
First Plenary
Birthday party!


Saturday 9 August 9.00 – 17.00
Plenary sessions
A wide selection of workshops and displays relating to the use of NLP in teaching and learning.

NB: There will be sessions and plenaries in both English and Spanish

Topics include:
NLP and teacher development
NLP to reach all students
Learning styles
Effective communication
Multisensory storytelling
Levels of learning
Conflict resolution
Classroom management
Mental maps
Learning to learn
and others



Certificates of Attendance will be issued.


For enrolment details contact: rtconference@gmail.com or jamie@resourcefulteaching.com.ar

Sunday 13 April 2008

Smelling to learn?

Want a better memory? Stop and smell the roses
By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor, Reuters

People who want to learn things might do better by simply stopping to smell the roses, researchers reported on Thursday.
German researchers found they could use odors to re-activate new memories in the brains of people while they slept -- and the volunteers remembered better later.
Writing in the journal Science, they said their study showed that memories are indeed consolidated during sleep, and show that smells and perhaps other stimuli can reinforce brain learning pathways.
Jan Born of the University of Lubeck in Germany and colleagues had 74 volunteers learn to play games similar to the game of "Concentration" in which they must find matched pairs of objects or cards by turning only one over at a time.
While doing this task, some of the volunteers inhaled the scent of roses. The volunteers then agreed to sleep inside an MRI tube. Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to "watch" their brains while they slept.
At various stages during sleep, Born's team wafted in the same scent of roses.
The volunteers were tested again the next day on what they had learned. "After the odor night, participants remembered 97.2 percent of the card pairs they had learned before sleep," the researchers wrote.
But they only remembered 86 percent of the pairs if they did not get the rose smell while sleeping.
And the stage of sleep was important too, the researchers said in a finding that will add to the debate over whether people "learn" in their sleep the way some animals have been shown to.
Research has shown, for example, that rats learning a new maze will rehearse their movements during sleep, and that songbirds rehearse their songs.
Born's team said the scent improved learning when it was administered during slow-wave sleep, but had no effect during rapid eye movement or REM sleep.
The MRI showed that the hippocampus, the part of the brain associated with learning new things, was activated when the odor was wafted over the volunteers during slow wave sleep.

This article came from Reuters

http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSN0835573820070309?pageNumber=2&virtualBrandChannel=0&sp=true

Friday 11 April 2008

CALL FOR PAPERS

RESOURCEFUL TEACHING

10TH ANNIVERSARY CONFERENCE
AUGUST 8-9 2008

First Latin American Conference in NLP for Education

CALL FOR PAPERS


To celebrate our tenth birthday, we have decided to hold a conference to mark the moment and to show the public what we have all achieved applying NLP to our work in Education.

We are therefore launching a Call for Papers for those who would like to participate by submitting a proposal for a workshop at the conference.


Sessions can be given in English or in Spanish as we intend to make this a bilingual event reaching out as well to the teaching community. Each workshop will be of one hour and there may be the possibility of repeating them.

Requirements for presenters:
Holds a recognized certificate as a Practitioner in NLP or have completed a Practitioner training with us.
To present in English, you must be a graduate of a recognized Teachers College or be a native speaker.

First step: Send us an abstract of 200 words explaining
a) what you wish to present
b) describing how it represents the application of NLP to Education
c) cite any relevant academic sources relevant to the presentation
d) indicate in general terms how you will go about the presentation


Deadline for papers 10 May 2008
Send to: jamiearg@gmail.com
lauraszmuch@gmail.com

Jamie and Laura
April 2008

Wednesday 9 April 2008

More students...Resourceful Teaching Tenth Anniversary!!!!!










A whole year of celebrations with our students....
Ten years learning and growing together..





Tuesday 8 April 2008

Please watch this!!!!

Neuroanatomist Jill Bolte Taylor had an opportunity few brain scientists would wish for: One morning, she realized she was having a massive stroke. As it happened -- as she felt her brain functions slip away one by one, speech, movement, understanding -- she studied and remembered every moment. This is a powerful story about how our brains define us and connect us to the world and to one another.

http://www.ted.com/talks/view/id/229


I really recommend you to watch this...

Laura

Monday 7 April 2008

Who are we?


Resourceful Teaching was founded by Laura Szmuch and Jamie Duncan. We are Master Practitioners and Trainers in NLP. Laura is a graduate of the Instituto Superior del Profesorado "Dr. Joaquín V. González" and works as a teacher of English as a Foreign Language in her studio in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Jamie Duncan is lecturer in Language III at the I.N.S.P.T of the Universidad Tecnológica Nacional in Buenos Aires and works with students of all ages.

At one point in our careers we felt the need to go further in understanding the learning process. In particular, we paid attention to some important aspects in teaching which were not generally covered, like the delicate chemistry produced by the communication between teacher and student. We began to play with this intuitively and change things in our teaching and we started to read a lot about NLP. We wondered what would happen if we took all these marvellous ideas and technology and used them in education. We realised we had a lot to learn and that there was an amazing world to which we had only just gained entry, so we decided to take a course and learn about it properly.

As we were both very enthusiastic about applying what we had been learning to our classes, we began to try things out, take notes, read, and get books from the US, the UK and New Zealand that were not available here. Above all, we shared everything we were discovering. Individually, we started giving some workshops to friends and colleagues, until the day, when as we were about to finish the Master Practitioner, we organised a study group together. From this group, there were requests or almost 'demands' from our colleagues who wanted something deeper and more structured than just a workshop, to be given in English and dedicated to education and language teaching. At this point we were completing the Trainer training and we realised that we had all the material and ideas in our heads. What was needed was to put it in order and form a course.
And our first Practitioner Certificate course in Education started.


The wonderful thing about working with teachers is that we see almost instant results. They tend to have a phenomenal drive and come to us interested in acquiring techniques to help their students learn more easily. Little by little, however, they realise that they are also helping themselves immensely. They become more open and more complete as people and discover that they have resources available to resolve conflicts and communicate more effectively. They see that they possess an enormous treasure in the form of their academic knowledge and training but that however rich this intellectual knowledge may be, it is still not quite enough. Therefore, they acquire tools to transmit learning, not just from the mental perspective. It is incredible to see the difference in their classes when they learn to use their bodies, their voices, aspects of non-verbal and unconscious communication and to value their intuition. They improve their communication with their students, parents of students, colleagues, heads and other staff in a remarkable fashion. And this is because their communication reveals a different point of view, one which has been nourished by NLP.


What most excites us is that they approach us as 'professionals', committed to their work and then they discover themselves as 'people'. They realise that they need to devote time and space to themselves and to the
organisation and planning of their lives and careers in a wider perspective. Teachers normally live in a whirlwind of classes, preparation, marking, exams and different groups and undoubtedly this is a situation in which it is easy to lose oneself. The changes that we witness in teachers have to do with finding themselves again and reacquainting
themselves with their subject, their pupils and their lives. Apart from dramatic improvements in their classrooms, they tell us of important changes in their families and with their partners, of new jobs or growth in their institutes, of more useful free time which emerges from better organisation and clear objectives. They also tell of better physical
health and we insist a lot on this point as teachers need strong and flexible bodies, loads of energy and to eat well. Teachers need to set an example for students.


...............................................................................................................................................................



When people complain about the crisis in education, we consider that it is a good idea to teach those who teach. When those who are part of the teaching-learning process know where they are going, what their beliefs and values are and how to find their mission, the crisis becomes a path of opportunities. The huge changes that we are experiencing in the world are an excellent challenge and the better prepared we are and the greater our self-knowledge and our personal and spiritual development, the more chances we have for continued learning and growth in all aspects of our life.


© Laura Szmuch and Jamie Duncan, 2001

Resourceful Teaching


What is RT?
Photo: Jamie and Laura in Comodoro Rivadavia-2000

The vision of Resourceful Teaching is to see teachers growing and developing with wisdom, maximising their skills as communicators and models of excellence in their field through the application of Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP). These teachers are committed to using their talents and strengths in helping the world recognise the supreme importance of meaningful education as a birthright of all human beings.

The mission of RT is to provide a structure through which teachers have access to the skills and technology of NLP as applied to education. This includes high quality training and support, materials and information, contacts and networking. Our graduates are empowered with the awareness, choices, communication skills and facilitating beliefs and values to make a real difference in their teaching context.

The strategy of RT has been to create a Practitioner's Certificate and Master Practitioner's Certificate course completely orientated towards practising teachers. It is also to run workshops, shorter courses and other training for teachers. We offer consultancy and information to teachers and to educational institutes. We develop materials and literature applying NLP to the teaching and learning processes.

The structure of RT is to offer training and consultancy in Education in
the following ways:

* General Educational workshops
* Tailor-made on-site workshops responding to special needs of schools
or other educational institutions
* Practitioner Certificate in NLP for Education courses
* Master Practitioner Certificate in NLP for Education courses
* Consultancy upon request
* Electronic mail newsletter
* Free introductory talks
* Participation in major ELT events
* Ongoing access to instruction and trainers
* Networking and a forum for contact both within Argentina and
internationally.
© Laura Szmuch and Jamie Duncan, 2001

Introducing our friend: NLP


Introducing our friend: NLP

This article is for those of you who are new to the wonderful three letters.

Let us introduce them to you:

NLP stands for Neuro Linguistic Programming.
Photo:Laura In Corrientes a couple of years ago


This acronym reminds us of the fact that our mind and body are interconnected and that we are responsible for the models of the world we create.
NLP training has two areas of application:

1. How we communicate with others
2. How we communicate with ourselves

It also aims at revealing the underlying structure of excellence. It offers answers to the question of "how" to do things effectively, or rather, how successful people in different fields do what they do wonderfully. It analyses subjective experience, taking into account patterns of behaviour, capability, values, beliefs, mission in life and internal representations of reality.

It offers a learnable technology which can help us improve performance and communication, overcome limitations, achieve goals and confidence in different areas of our lives.

With training in NLP we learn how to get rapport with virtually anybody, how to become flexible in our communication, how to use language effectively. We learn how to deal with conflict on a win-win basis, how to tap our resources (such as confidence, competence, inner peace, motivation, health, abundance, etc.), how to discover our strategies (of excellence, creativity, good memory, etc.), how to work with our beliefs and other levels of growth and learning and how our brains code our subjective experience.

NLP is an eclectic body of thought which is a branch of the Cognitive Sciences and Cognitive Behavioural Psychology. It grew out of General Semantics (Korzybski), Transformational Grammar (Chomsky), Anthropology and Cybernetics (Bateson), Reframing (Watzlawick et al), Family Systems (Virginia Satir), GestaltTherapy(Perls), Medical Hypnosis (Erickson) and several related studies. Its founders were Richard Bandler (a mathematician) and John Grinder (a linguist) who, in the early 70s, set out to discover the "structure of excellence".


Who benefits from the practice of NLP?



Any person who wants to improve the way they live their lives and develop an understanding of how to maximize their potential. Any person who wants to explore new tools and models for communication and learning through high quality training and assessment.


Why have we decided to give birth to a course especially designed for teachers?


NLP has been successfully applied in different fields such as sales, business, medicine, mental health, law, sports and so on. We believe good teachers and good learning are the answer to many issues in the world we want to live in. Highly prepared teachers, skilful in communication techniques, with very clear beliefs and values, and who have very specific goals to make this world a better place to live in are at the most important leverage point in the quest for positive change.

Our dream is to see professional teachers who know that their role in our society is even more important than what we have been led to believe.

© Laura Szmuch and Jamie Duncan, 2001

How NLP training is organised

How NLP training is organised

The first NLP training was by means of workshops or seminars and this has remained one of the principal forms by which the model has been transmitted. The emphasis is always on “the activation of people’s existing unconscious competence” as Robert Dilts puts it and this implies that the training should have a strong practical component with the participants discovering, integrating and applying skills and techniques. This approach is congruent with the core purpose of NLP which is to model the excellence of others. A theoretical basis is given and part of this consists of reading to be done at home which can complement the activities in class.

A sequence of intensive training exists for those who wish to acquire a more complete range of NLP skills.
The first level of training is the Practitioner Training. It involves between 130 and 150 hours of direct training in the form of practical activities and guided practice. This level gives students acquaintance with the methodology and many of the techniques comprising NLP.

At the following level, the Master Practitioner Training, participants blend the intellectual and the experiential. They learn to embody the spirit of NLP, discover yet more techniques and acquire the ability to model an excellence as completely as possible. This training also lasts about 150 hours.

A third level is that of Trainer Training focusing on the capacities and role of the NLP Trainer and there is a fourth level which is the Master Trainer Training.

No one single body certifies NLP Training although there are some principal certifying organisations to which most of the major schools belong. These are: International NLP, the Society of NLP and ANLP (UK). These societies establish guidelines as to course length and content and their certificates give international recognition to those who satisfactorily complete the assessment procedures. Certificates issued by these societies are statements of skill, attesting to the ability of the student to apply NLP techniques appropriately and with due care and attention. In addition, a school or trainer will usually supply a certificate of attendance for completing the required hours of attendance and participation on the course. As yet, the appearance of “official” NLP degrees and diplomas backed by Ministries of Education has been sporadic. NLP Training is increasing at a tertiary level and a number of tertiary training bodies in the world have been given official recognition for their courses. This development is still relatively new and the acceptance of NLP as a course at this level is in its infancy. More common is the inclusion of NLP training as an element in courses run by professional bodies such as those organised by therapists, coaches, sports trainers and business administrators.

Sunday 6 April 2008

Getting to know you and getting personal questions!

At this time of the year we have new students and new classes. Usually, we try to find out about our students and in the course of this we discover that some of the questions we ask them are perhaps avoided and some of the questions we are asked by them may seem overtly personal or irrelevant. Why is this so? Well, we are all unique and what fascinates one person may not be the least bit interesting to others. Some people filter life through what is happening to other people and others perceive life through facts, information and things that may have little to do with personal aspects.

Some experts say that teachers should reveal little about themselves, especially in the first term, to ensure the distance between students and teacher but that may impede the development of rapport with a class that responds well to exchanges of personal information. In other situations, teachers may be reticent to talk about themselves to groups that may use this information in not so positive ways in the future.

I always bear in mind that I can reveal what I like about myself and that if a group wants more ‘personal’ information, I can choose what to give them. If I open up the lesson to free questioning, I have to be prepared to get any questions and know which I am willing to answer and which I will pass on. Being clear in my own mind beforehand avoids any sense of me appearing on the defensive if I get asked anything I don’t choose to answer.

I also personally make it a rule never to ask anything in public I wouldn’t be prepared to answer and to be attentive to body language when asking things in public. You can usually see very quickly if someone is comfortable with a topic and if they are not, it is time to pull it back to something more general or to change the subject.

What do you do?

Jamie

Wednesday 2 April 2008

Keeping your English Alive for teachers!


6 sessions of language discovery and practice held in small groups and designed to give you lots of opportunities to use and develop your English in a fun way.

Fridays 18.30 – 20.30

Versailles, Capital Federal




Friday 11 April - Charge your glasses!


Ready for a cocktail party of words? Many vocabulary items do not fall into easily taught lexical sets, yet provide richness in the language of native speakers. In this session, set in the context of a party, you will be work with a wide variety of words, terms and expressions used in natural spoken and written English, which are quite possibly heard in social scenes.

Friday 9 May – A rich tapestry of words


Do you or your students lack ideas or words to express their thoughts? Experience new multisensory techniques to help enrich their vocabulary and experience with activities.

Friday 13 June – Culture and language go hand in hand


An awareness of culture and history is a great means of helping memory and language usage. Let’s explore and share our cultural knowledge through some short texts and visual cues.


Friday 15 August – Fish and chips, fush and chips or feesh and cheeps?


One of the joys of English is the question of pronunciation. With more versions of English becoming widely used in the media and in exams and coursebooks, it is important to be clear about what you hear and how you pronounce words so as to avoid misunderstandings.

Friday 12 September – Absolutely, positively postmodern!


What are the clichés and set phrases that native speakers are using these days? Do we know what they actually mean? How do they help conversation flow?

Friday 10 October – Creative Writing for you


Writing creatively is an excellent way to expand and develop our language and a means of expressing ourselves. In this session we will practice a variety of great ideas you can use for your own pleasure or in class.


For more information or enrolment please contact lauraszmuch@gmail.com