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The practice test trap
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Why relying too heavily on practice tests can have an adverse effect on your actual test performance.As I wrote in my last entry, taking practice tests is the best way to study. However, there is one major pitfall that all avid practice test takers must avoid; we'll call it the "one trick pony syndrome." The point of practice tests is to ensure that you can apply what you learned in class to paper, to ensure that you aren't the guy with a 50-inch vertical who can't make a shot to save his life. The point is not to bond yourself to the practice test to the point where switching numbers will result in temporary brain paralysis. Many students will run through the teacher-provided practice test five, ten or even twenty times as their only form of ...
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1737 |
bio_man |
7 years ago |
An ancient status symbol in China
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Started in Imperial China in the 10 th or 11 th century, upper-class court dancers would wrap their feet to make them permanently smaller. Although this made it difficult for a woman to walk, small feet indicated that a woman’s husband did not need his wife’s labor. To make the feet even smaller, sometimes the baby’s feet were broken and wrapped tightly. Some baby’s toes were cut off! Footbinding was banned by the Chinese government in 1911, but continued to be practiced in some places for several decades, as shown in the picture above. ...
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5395 |
bio_man |
7 years ago |
Practice makes perfect
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Why practice tests should be the first and last step in the studying process.I'm sure you've all seen the bumper stickers or posters that read, "I'd rather be fishing." If I were to stick one of these on my car I'd supplant fishing with coding. You might choose "singing," "eating" or "grooming my chia pet." Regardless of what activity you'd rather be doing, it's pretty safe to say that activity isn't studying. Whether or not you consciously ask yourself before hitting the books, the paramount question when studying is "How can I maximize the time I spend doing this?" Or, in other words, it's all about efficiency, baby. In my humble opinion it all starts and ends with the practice test. When you sit down to study, you have a good idea of where ...
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1807 |
bio_man |
8 years ago |
Swaddled infants are 1/3 more likely to die from SIDS
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Infant swaddling, an old practice that has recently gained popularity in the United States, may be linked to increased risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). A new review of 760 SIDS cases in the journal Pediatrics found that infants who were swaddled - wrapped in light cloth with only the head exposed - were about a third more likely to die from SIDS. The risk was higher among infants sleeping on their stomachs or sides, positions already known to be more dangerous for sleeping babies. SIDS risk among swaddled infants was also higher for children older than 6 months, suggesting that swaddling should be stopped when babies are able to start rolling over. The researchers cautioned that these results should be taken with a grain of salt ...
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1826 |
duddy |
8 years ago |
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