Saturday, January 19, 2013

Part Seven in a Nutshell


By Dale Cameigie

SIX WAYS TO PREVENT FATIGUE AND WORRY AND KEEP YOUR ENERGY AND SPIRITS HIGH

RULE 1: Rest before you get tired

RULE 2: Learn to relax at your work

RULE 3: Learn to relax at home

RULE 4: Apply these four good working habits:
a.      Clear your desk of all papers except those relating to the immediate problem at hand.
b.      Do things in the order of their importance
c.       When you face a problem, solve it then and there if you have the facts necessary to make a decision.
d.      Learn to organize, deputize, and supervise.

RULE 5: To prevent worry and fatigue, put enthusiasm into your work.

RULE 6: Remember, no one was ever killed by lack of sleep. It is worrying about insomnia that does the damage – not the insomnia.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

資深教育顧問的忠告

美國資深教育顧問 Fiske 先生教人入名牌大學,但他的最後忠告是:


"Contrary to what many people would have you believe, deciding which college to attend is not the most important decision you will ever make. Not even close. Though it makes sense to choose a college carefully, the really important stuff goes on after you enroll.

Abraham Lincoln was once riding through New Jersey on a train that passed by Rutgers College. He looked out the window and remarked. “One of my greatest regrets of my life is that I did noaat receive a college education.” The real value of college lies in what it does for you as a person – in expanding your horizons, challenging your beliefs, honing your skills, and exposing you to the broadest possible cross section of people and ideas.

Today’s world is competitive, and many high school students seem to believe that only students from certain “name” colleges will be successful. The fact is, there are plenty of students who didn’t go to Prestige U. – for whatever reason – who will rise just as high and reach just as far as any who did. When the story of your lifetime is told, the name of your college will be little more than a footnote. Success will come because of who you are, not what college you attended."

“The Fiske Guide To Getting Into the Right College” P.207-208