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Effective Learning Requires Two-Way Trust

 
Author: Charles Bonasera

We can learn from those who came before us and who have experienced what it is we yet need to learn. As important as what is to be learned might be, perhaps the greater import needs to be placed on the teacher and on the relationship between the teacher and the student. That relationship can mean the difference between the learning being facilitated or its being hampered. The relationship is based not just in an intellectual grasp of the pieces that constitute the learning but an emotional grasp as well. The relationship is not just based in the imparting of facts and methods but a sense of trust and confidence both on the part of the teacher as well as the student.

Although it might sound strange that the teacher needs to trust the studentit is trust in the students ability to learn, to ask questions, to be willing to make mistakes, to put forth whatever effort it might take in order for the learning to take place. The teachers trust goes to the point of placing as much emphasis on how the student might arrive at a conclusion or answer as is placed on the answers themselves. This trust is a magical element that might best be described by the readers remembrance of their favorite teacher or professor. Contained in that memory is the sense of knowing that the confidence the teacher had in the student enabled a sense of what little children are able to bring to learning new things.

A child who hasnt been exposed to adult fear and doubt experiences neither. An adult might say Ill try while a child will say I can do that! The yearning to learn on the part of a child is an insatiable need that is never-endingsomething which adults may have forgotten in the pressures of dealing with the vicissitudes of life. But adults can regain that same sense they once had as a child which may have been stifled along the way. Realizing that the process of learning simply has basic steps associated with it and that each step will bring us to an end result can bring a good deal of confidence when we might feel overwhelmed or confused. It can become the difference between trying and doing it.

Author Bio:

Charles Bonasera

Charles M. Bonasera had been a practicing psychotherapist since 1962 and has served as a Consultant, Mediator, Author and Workshop Presenter since 2003. Based on years of extensive research he became a Stress Management expert and founded/ directed the Stress Management Center which evaluated and treated stress-related problems. As President of Personal Identity Controls, he developed and produced a number of interactive materials on various stress-related topics to enable people to take greater control their lives.Charles produced the CD/workbook entitled ?Guide To A Life Management Process? which helps people recognize and manage their stress more effectively. His Workshops and consultations with businesses, corporations and schools, stresses the recognition that our greatest resource is people and treating them with dignity and respect promotes productivity. His role as a keynote speaker mixes his professional wisdom with practical solutions and a sense of humor.

Based on his previous experience as an evaluator of learning disabilities, he began rendering Workshops to school districts in 1995. His goal was to help educators recognize the importance of incorporating principles of mental health in the classroom. His Workshop and Consulting roles dealt with issues such as anger and stress management, developing reasonable expectations, belligerent behavior, case study workshops, parent-teacher relationships, reducing anxiety to facilitate the learning process, problem solving techniques and the practical components of healthy, happy relationships. Many of these same topics were incorporated into general audience workshops as well.

Charles? methods center around helping people develop ?alternative ways to happiness.? His problem-solving techniques are practical and interactive enabling people to make their own choices in their own individual style and time-frame.. His approach clearly embodies the philosophy that ?the greatest learning we experience is when we don?t know we?re learning and are having fun? and that learning is both an intellectual and emotional process.

You can search for this article using: inspiration, words of inspiration, divine inspiration, spiritual inspiration, inspiration in grief
 
 
 

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