Tuesday, September 30, 2008

And Then Some News

And Then Some NewsThursday’s essay, “On Being a Writer — An Irresistible Compulsion,” is a personal essay that focuses on writing and, specifically, my writing career.

Share your And Then Some Story about writing. For how many years have you been involved in writing? How successful are you or were you? Can you tell us where your impulse to write originated? When it comes to other people wanting to be writers, what would be YOUR message to them? Can you share your tips, stories, or suggestions regarding writing? We would love to hear your story. Do you have a friend, a family member, a neighbor, or someone you just know from a distance who is or has been a writer? Can you tell his or her story? Feel free to use a pseudonym for the person’ real name.


Click here to share your And Then Some story


Thursday's And Then Some Essay preview
On Being a Writer — An Irresistible Compulsion
by Richard L. Weaver II

Excerpt:

What many who aspire to be writers may not realize is that writing is often lonely and isolating. Writing is hungry for both time and emotional energy when some might rather be using both in other ways. There are days when you would like a life, when you would rather stop and find something else to do, or when you just want to throw your hands up in frustration and say, “I give up, that’s it, no more!”


And Then Some Works - see you THURSDAY!!

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Hidden benefits of college

by Richard L. Weaver II

Financial rewards, increased knowledge, and social contacts may be some of the obvious benefits of getting a college education, but there are numerous benefits that are not so obvious and which may, indeed, be overlooked when students and parents make their decisions about either going to college or not. For many, it is these benefits that make the cost, time commitment, and energy worthwhile. I call these the hidden benefits of a college education.

Often, students who enter college do so with a specific idea about what they want to study, and what they want to be when their education is complete. There is nothing wrong with this kind of focus, and, for many, it offers precisely the direction they need to make the most of their college education. When I said, above, “there is nothing wrong with this kind of focus,” perhaps I should add, “if you maintain an open mind and flexibility.”

There is so much more to college life than classes, subject disciplines, and majors. I will label this “so much more”: exposure. Many students think they know exactly what courses provide, instructors dispense, and experiences deliver and, yet, it is the hidden benefits that often surprise — even astonish. “I had no idea,” is a common statement made by those who have entered the ivy walls with an open mind and flexibility.

The “exposure” comes from other classes — outside of one’s major — often, the required courses themselves. The “exposure” comes from the different instructors and how they choose to present their material, explore various approaches, and challenge their students. The “exposure” comes, too, from how students interpret, assimilate, and absorb the information. It is this unique juxtaposition of subject matter, presentation, and interpretation that cannot be predicted and, yet, can yield such incredible results.

When the focus of college is on awareness and the introduction of new ideas and new insights, one cannot escape being fascinated — even captivated . That’s where the open mind and flexibility come in. Instructors do not ask that students accept — unless it is on a temporary (for class purposes) basis — but they do want them to listen, concentrate, and consider. It is not about indoctrination, although some people may see it that way — as much as it is about weighing and considering. It is the development of good thinking, reasoning, and decision-making skills. And to develop these in the best manner means giving students something worthwhile, different, and challenging to think about. It means helping them break out from their limited and personal, often traditional, stereotypical, commonplace, and rigid kinds of thinking and reacting. It means getting them out of the boxes they may not even know they are in and getting them to investigate new boxes they didn’t even know existed. This promotes tolerance and open-mindedness.

Another hidden benefit of a college education is communication, whether it be written, spoken, or nonverbal. College offers opportunities to record reactions, write papers, and prepare reports. At times, some of these “opportunities” seem to be busy work on the way to getting a degree. And yet, confirmed in many studies that have been completed, accurate, effective communication is one of the greatest weaknesses in the workplace. Every opportunity to record one’s thoughts and reactions in writing should be grasped as another chance to formulate thoughts, shape ideas, and structure impressions. To have trained, knowledgeable, authorities assisting students to better express themselves should be accepted as a rare and unique gift designed to make them more effective.

Oral communication is not totally different from written. Even though many students feel they are already talented speakers — after all, they have been talking since they were born — few are as effective as they think. Speech communication courses compel students to examine the basics of effective communication: skillful listening, adept use of words, useful methods for supporting opinions, adroit patterns for organizing thoughts, as well as powerful ways for expressing them.

There are hidden, underlying benefits of speech-communication courses as well. First, think about the breadth and depth of ideas exposed to because of the speeches of others. Second, think about the critiques, evaluations, and assessments. Imagine the opportunities students have not just for comparing their efforts with others, but for projecting (internally, of course) specific methods for self-improvement because of the work they see others present. There are an overwhelming array of possibilities for making great strides in their personal ability to grow, change, and develop.

There are nonverbal communication benefits of a college education as well. These can occur on a personal basis with friends, relationship partners, and other students as they interact on a daily and continuing basis. And it isn’t just their talking to others, but also it is the reactions they receive to what they project. They have unrestrained opportunities to test the way they communicate, make changes, and develop their repertoire of reactions and responses.

In the communication classroom, focus on nonverbal communication is a natural part of the evaluations and critiques students receive. For the shy, performance opportunities often serve to bring them out of their shells. For the more natural, it gives them a chance to perfect, hone, and polish their abilities — concentrated practice with critiques that offer suggestions for improvement and development.

Another important hidden benefit of a college education is growth in self-esteem. You could say, “But, that happens naturally outside the ivy walls,” and you are correct; however, when you are regularly challenged with new ideas, when you are often forced to think and solve problems, when your communication abilities are pressured to grow rapidly, and when you are surrounded by a compelling, nurturing, and encouraging environment precisely constructed to improve your self-esteem, you cannot escape development and maturity.

There are many other hidden benefits, of course, and the acquisition of words is certainly one of them. With increased vocabulary, it is easier to put your thoughts into words, to articulate your ideas and, even more important, to express precisely what you intend. When you hear about the benefits of college — increased financial rewards, knowledge, and social contacts — you seldom hear about the hidden benefits of exposure, communication, self-esteem, and vocabulary, but these may even be more important to your success, future life, and happiness.



“Multiplying college benefits for everybody,” is an essay written by Jay Matthews, a Washington Post Staff Writer. Matthews adds an important ingredient to those I’ve discussed in the essay and that is the effect a college education may have on other family members as well as the value of open-enrollment policies. Matthews writes an outstanding essay with important information.

Kathleen Porter has written an essay entitled “The Value of a college degree,” in which she presents the economic value first, and then discusses many of the other benefits. Porter supports her essay with 10 reputable references. This is another worthwhile essay.





Contact Richard L. Weaver II

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

And Then Some News

Old You Rules book cover
And Then Some NewsYou Rules!: All you need for Self Improvement is scheduled for release November 1st. The proof arrived and there are a few minor changes and it's on the way to becoming fantastic! Stay tuned...

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  2. What are the essentials for a healthy lifestyle?
  3. What methods can you use to get where you want to go?
  4. How can you best exercise your creativity?
  5. What can you do to maintain your program of self-improvement?
  6. How do you look to a positive future?
With the answers to these questions, the guidelines offered throughout this book, your commitment and self discipline... you can obtain anything you desire in life. Visit yourules.com and the start of a revolution.

Thursday’s essay, “Hidden benefits of college,” is another essay on education. I seem to be preoccupied with this topic, but having been involved in college life for most of my own, it makes some sense.

Share your And Then Some Story about benefits of a college education. For how many years have you been involved in college life? How successful are you or were you? Can you tell us how college has affected your life? When it comes to the hidden benefits of college, what would be YOUR message? Can you share your tips, stories, or suggestions regarding college? We would love to hear your story. Do you have a friend, a family member, a neighbor, or someone you just know from a distance who is or has been involved in college? Can you tell his or her story? Feel free to use a pseudonym for the person’ real name.


Click here to share your And Then Some story


Thursday's And Then Some Essay preview
Hidden benefits of college
by Richard L. Weaver II

Excerpt:

Financial rewards, increased knowledge, and social contacts may be some of the obvious benefits of getting a college education, but there are numerous benefits that are not so obvious and which may, indeed, be overlooked when students and parents make their decisions about either going to college or not. For many, it is these benefits that make the cost, time commitment, and energy worthwhile. I call these the hidden benefits of a college education.


And Then Some Works - see you THURSDAY!!

Thursday, September 18, 2008

The first anniversary of posted essays

by Richard L. Weaver II

This week is the first anniversary of the blog essays. This essay represents the completion of 52 posted essays. For me, it is both a celebration and a surprise. It is wonderful to know that that many essays have been written and posted. The surprise comes because the time went by so quickly. When I first began posting essays, I asked my son (my webmaster) two questions: Will it be possible to write one essay per week? And, if I find the burden too great, can we stop it at any time? The quick response to both questions was, “Yes.”

What was the initial reason for establishing the blog? Just over one year ago The (Toledo) Blade, because of the retirement of Tom Walton, the editor, discontinued the “Saturday Essay” feature that he had created to celebrate local writers, politicians, administrators, and anyone else who had ideas to share with the community. If you want to return and read the early correspondence I had with David Shutt, the new editorial director, go back to the blog dated September 15, 2007. For me, with 14 published essays, the “Saturday Essay” feature had become both an outlet and a source of entertainment and information, but it was no longer available.

The www.andthensomeworks.com blog was begun to continue the outlet for my writing. It was the idea of ANT, my son and webmaster, who has his own website at www.antworkstudio.com.

What happened as a result of the commitment and responsibility to write a weekly 1,000-word essay turned out to be a motivational element in my life. I have always harbored a clandestine desire to write a weekly newspaper column; however, I never really believed I could live up to the responsibility (nor did I really want to do so). But, during this period of time, I have kept track of the essays I have written. From August to December, 2007, I wrote about 29 essays. From January through July, 2008, I completed another 37 for a total of 66. Most of these have not been posted. Clearly, writing enough essays to fill the weekly blog spots was not a problem. Most of those posted were written prior to this period of time.

Because I have been involved in a number of other writing projects during this time — the ninth edition of my college textbook, Communicating Effectively, the first edition of my book, Public Speaking Rules!, and the first edition of the new essay book, You Rules! — I had to put aside a number of topics that I would have liked to write essays about but didn’t have the time.
In addition to these writing projects, I assembled another book entitled, Self-motivation, optimism, encouragement rules: Daily reminders for outstanding living. The title abbreviated spells out SMOERs, and it will be published in spring, 2009 — smokin’ hot!

There are several explanations for and results of my current writing situation. First, until I completed my teaching career, I never thought of myself as a writer, but, instead, a teacher with an additional interest in writing — maybe even a writing hobby. Things have changed, and I can now properly describe myself as a professional writer. But, the change was slow in coming, and to this day I am not totally comfortable with the title “writer.”

Second, I like what F. Scott Fitzgerald said about writing: “You don’t write because you want to say something; you write because you’ve got something to say.” For close to 30 years of teaching, I have been talking and writing about what I thought were consequential ideas. I have never claimed total originality, and I have always tried to give credit where credit was due, but retirement from teaching has opened an opportunity to concretize years and years of instruction.

Third, writing evokes writing. It cannot be denied. It is like an ongoing emotional release, and that catharsis frees me just as a shower cleanses and purifies. Ideas rebound unceasingly until I find time to refine, polish, perfect, and record them. Once recorded — even at times in unfinished form — I am released from their interminable persistence, their unrelenting nagging. This essay is a good example. I began writing it one day before Memorial Day (05-25-08) during a church service, and when I began writing it I had no clear subject nor direction, but the process of creation took over, and the writing became almost automatic.

Fourth, as Laurence Sterne, an author, wrote in 1760, “Writing, when properly managed, (as you may be sure I think mine is) is but a different name for conversation.” One of the persistent comments I have received over the years from students reading my textbooks is, “It sounds like you are carrying on a conversation with me.” The point here is simply that I enjoy conversing with readers, and if they believe there is a connection between author and reader — even if they do not agree with the ideas — I feel I have been successful.

Fifth, and this may be the most important point of all, when your focus is on writing, your mind becomes attuned and focused — engaged in selective attention. When you hear a new idea, read a unique thought, or generate a special view, opinion, or feeling, you tend to bounce it off the interior walls of your brain, look at it from a variety of angles, examine it over time, allow it to percolate, and determine if it merits a full-blown essay. It is the evolutionary nature of that idea that is finally transcribed and preserved, and even that idea changes over time. It is the sheer joy of generating ideas and having an opportunity to produce and share them in written form.

Sixth, any and all ideas are grist for the thoughtful mind. When you realize that ideas come from anywhere and everywhere, you never know when or from where the evocation will occur. Life takes on greater excitement, and circumstances sometimes tease and provoke the thoughtful mind. So many times, I come up with thoughts that need greater clarification or stronger support. In many cases, they end up lying dormant and unused like leftover food from a hearty, satisfying meal. More often, however, they provoke and stimulate other unthought about ideas which begin the process all over again.

The first anniversary — and this essay — has caused me to reflect. So many ideas, so little time! It is as if a habit has been formed, the roots of which dig deeply into the soil of my teaching and writing of the past — rich soil that simply needs sunlight, water, ample fertilization, and time to grow and ripen.

The answer to the opening question, “Can I even do it?” has been clarified, and the results are displayed for all to see and judge. I hope you have received some pleasure from these essays; I can tell you for certain, I have. As long as that pleasure continues, there will be more essays.



“Meaning of your anniversary” can be found at the website, The Gleeze!, http://gleez.com/articles/did-you-know/meaning-of-your-anniversary, and here not only is the symbolic representation for each year of marriage noted, but the author also discusses appropriate gifts. I thought the suggestion for the first anniversary (paper) of pouring your heart out in a love letter is an appropriate suggestion. I may write a love letter to my blog readers; it’s a nice thought.

Speaking of writing a love letter to my blog readers (which my essay may be considered! — well, maybe not!) there is a website, Romanceforeveryone, http://www.romanceforeveryone.com/love-letters/ where there are samples of 24 different “romantic love letters to my sweetheart” written by Timothy Mahar. Now, you don’t have to even be creative in constructing your own! These are incredibly romantic, nicely constructed, sweet, and endearing.





Contact Richard L. Weaver II

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

And Then Some News

And Then Some News
Now available: "Search Inside" And Then Some Book 1 at Amazon.com!

"Search Inside" is a feature from Amazon.com that lets you look at actual book pages. Be a more informed consumer before your purchase. It's easy... just click the book or the link above and when you arrive at Amazon.com, then click on the book.

Not enough information? Check out And Then Some Book 1 at andthensomeworks.com where you will find more information including excerpts and full chapters.


Thursday’s essay, “The first anniversary of posted essays,” is an essay of celebration. As of this week, I have completed writing 52 posted essays.

Share your And Then Some Story about writing. How long have you been a writer? How successful are you or were you? Can you tell us how writing has affected your life? When it comes to the importance of writing, what would be YOUR message? Can you share your tips, stories, or suggestions regarding writing? We would love to hear your story. Do you have a friend, a family member, a neighbor, or someone you just know from a distance who is a writer? Can you tell his or her story? Feel free to use a pseudonym for the person’ real name.


Click here to share your And Then Some story


Thursday's And Then Some Essay preview
The first anniversary of posted essays
by Richard L. Weaver II

Excerpt:

What was the initial reason for establishing the blog? Just over one year ago The (Toledo) Blade, because of the retirement of Tom Walton, the editor, discontinued the “Saturday Essay” feature that he had created to celebrate local writers, politicians, administrators, and anyone else who had ideas to share with the community. If you want to return and read the early correspondence I had with David Shutt, the new editorial director, click the link to the blog post dated September 15, 2007. For me, with 14 published essays, the “Saturday Essay” feature had become both an outlet and a source of entertainment and information, but it was no longer available.


And Then Some Works - see you THURSDAY!!

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Get a College Education!

by Richard L. Weaver II

In our individualistic society it is a common belief that the strong, lone voice is an animating force behind every kind of success. Along with this belief is the “up-by-your-own-bootstraps” and “do your own thing” approaches to living that individuals believe frees them from having to prepare themselves within the traditional institutions or formats—colleges and universities—for their future lives.

Why do these beliefs in individual achievement and self-fulfillment occur? There are three basic reasons. First, the story of college dropouts who became successful—with the prominent one being Bill Gates, the richest man in the world—dominate people’s thoughts and fantasies and draw them into trying to do the same. Second, lotteries, gambling, instant cash prizes, and pop idols lure some from education to taking chances on wealth with hopes for a successful, happy, secure future. Third, the Internet tends to level the playing field for many. That is, it allows start-up companies with little capital to compete in the world market just as it gives everyone an equal opportunity to express themselves. With a level playing field, who needs an education?


We need more educated, informed people in this world. Of course, there will be exceptions, but as technology becomes an even greater factor in everything we do, the need for educated, informed people grows coordinately.


There is no substitute for a college or university education. I’m not suggesting that it is the “be-all” and “end-all” of solutions designed for everyone, and I’m not suggesting that everyone is likely to make the “proper” use of it. It doesn’t necessarily make people better thinkers, nor does it guarantee they will be better citizens, but the likelihood of both outcomes becomes more probable with a college education. With better thinking and responsible citizenship as a student’s primary goals, however, those outcomes are all but certain.


Why is it that technology makes education more in demand? People can now access more types of networks than ever before, and they are accessible globally. Even local community debates resonate globally. Messages between close friends and family are now visible on blogs, in virtual communities, and through webcams and photo-sharing sites. In a progressively more networked society, the future prospect of citizens being connected at any time, in any place, means that massive interconnection opportunities grow more likely. Enormous amounts of information will pass in both directions in service channels, and the major challenge is that everyone has is to make sense of it all. How do we give it meaning? This is not just true for citizens but for service designers as well.


There are new social-networking sites, Wikis, communication tools, and folksonomies, and these emphasize online collaboration and sharing among users. Never before has so much information, so much collaboration and sharing, and so much communication been available at the slight movement of a mouse. This isn’t fantasy; this isn’t a dream; this is reality, and it is here. It is the way business, education, and professional transactions will take place in the future, and the very least that education can and will do is continue to introduce new technologies, prompt the asking of intelligent questions, and promote the camaraderie, teamwork, and collaboration that is one of the ancillary, if not one of the direct, benefits of education.


If any student who is in school today—at any level—has not gotten the message, it is time to make certain it is written in large letters, blinking in bright colors, posted directly in front of them so that they cannot miss it: do not drop out of school. Stop the excuses! “I don’t want to study.” “School doesn’t excite me.” “I just can’t get into it.” “I was not cut out to be a student.” “Teachers don’t make it exciting.”


There are few jobs out there beyond fast-food, grocery workers, bank clerks, and other positions in the retail marketplace or service professions. Do you want to be a garbage collector or lawn-service provider for the rest of your life? Try raising a family, buying a house, and making your dreams come true, based on one of these salaries!

Whether the job you want requires a college education or not, you are likely to find that without one, you will quickly discover there is a ceiling beyond which you cannot progress—no matter what business or profession you are in. Even if your goal is to open an Internet business and make millions of dollars online, remember that often the success of Internet companies rely on the skills and credibility of those in positions of control and authority. Because of a college education, you are likely to have improved writing and communication skills, and these will be revealed in every message you send, contact you make, interaction you engage in, and website message you construct.

When your credibility is on the line, your preparation and background will be transparent to those who it will be necessary to persuade and influence.

So, is just any college education good enough? The true answer is “Yes.” It doesn’t matter where you obtain it. But, for yourself, it does matter what skills you gather for yourself. Think about the skills that will best suit what you want to do. Some basic understandings about business will be helpful, just as some basic math, economics, and computer skills will be, too. Take basic courses in English to gain as much experience in writing as you can. Basic psychology, sociology, and any courses that contain sections on intercultural understandings will be useful. Courses in interpersonal, small group, and public communication, without a doubt, will assist you, too, in becoming a well-qualified, college educated, individual.

The purpose of your college education should be to strengthen your foundation, broaden your understandings, and deepen your thinking. Remember, the goal is not to make you think in any specific direction; the purpose is to make you think, organize your ideas, draw meaningful conclusions, and deal with ideas in a mature and serious manner. There is no better place than college to accomplish this.



At the University of Maryland, University College website, there is an essay entitled “The Benefits of a College Education.” The essay discusses the financial benefits as well as the importance of skill development, and networking.

At the website, “The Poly Post,” sponsored by California Polytechnic University - Pomana, there is an essay by Katherine Burnside entitled, “College degree still necessity,” in which she supports the idea that today, very few people become successful without a college degree. Burnside’s is a well-written, important essay.





Contact Richard L. Weaver II

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

And Then Some News

And Then Some NewsCheck out the new video on andthensomeworks.com!

And Then Some Speech
by Richard L. Weaver II, PhD

Video Info: The "And Then Some" philosophy is a simple "life enhancement tool" that when applied personally can help focus, motivate, and enrich your life. No matter what your beliefs, no matter at what stage of life you are, and no matter where you are in this world, with the confidence of "And Then Some" you no longer need to accept the "status quo."

Click here to watch And Then Some Speech video

Thursday’s essay, “Get a College Education!,” is the fifth of a number of essays that relate to education. That I write essays on education, as I have said the past several weeks, is easily understood since I spent close to 48 years involved in public education as either a student or teacher. (This week’s essay is the kind that, if taken to heart, can change a person’s life now and forever!)

Share your And Then Some Story about the importance of a college education. How long have you been or were you a student? How successful are you or were you? Can you tell us some of the factors that have made a difference in your life (where education contributed positively to your life)? When it comes to the importance of a college education, what would be YOUR message? Can you share your tips, stories, or suggestions regarding college education? We would love to hear your story. Do you have a friend, a family member, a neighbor, or someone you just know from a distance who has had a college education? Can you tell his or her story? Feel free to use a pseudonym for the person’s real name.


Click here to share your And Then Some story


Thursday's And Then Some Essay preview
Get a College Education!
by Richard L. Weaver II

Excerpt:

There is no substitute for a college or university education. I’m not suggesting that it is the “be-all” and “end-all” of solutions designed for everyone, and I’m not suggesting that everyone is likely to make the “proper” use of it. It doesn’t necessarily make people better thinkers, nor does it guarantee they will be better citizens, but the likelihood of both outcomes becomes more probable with a college education. With better thinking and responsible citizenship as a student’s primary goals, however, those outcomes are all but certain.


And Then Some Works - see you THURSDAY!!

Thursday, September 4, 2008

The link between homework and success

by Richard L. Weaver II

It was a sturdy maple desk hidden behind my bedroom door. To my right was a large bulletin board mounted on the wall that held items of current interest; on my desk was a lamp that cast bright light on the writing surface; in my top desk drawer were my pens, pencils, and paper. It was a private, quiet, comfortable place in my basement bedroom where I put in vast and pleasant hours on homework assignments and projects.

In this essay, I want to make a strong case — based on personal experience — for homework — the time students spend outside the classroom in assigned activities to practice, reinforce or apply newly-acquired skills and knowledge and to learn necessary skills of independent study. To me, the value of homework is crystal clear. It has helped me review and practice what I learned in school, get ready for the next day’s classes, learn to use libraries, encyclopedias, and other resource materials, and explore subjects in greater depth than could be accomplished in the classroom. Homework, for me, has always been as routine as mowing the lawn or taking out the garbage.

Homework significantly affected my growth as a student. For example, with a comfortable place to study and a supportive family environment, I found that it established effective study habits. Of course, as a child I looked forward to times when I had none, but the rule was always: first your homework, then you play. And when this routine was established early and reinforced without fail, it taught me that outside of class time, I had to control, regulate, and order my world. With that kind of self-discipline, I could deal with most assignments and solve most problems. Homework became an automatic and expected extension of classes, and classwork and homework were interwoven in the same way as shoes and socks, computers and software, and pencil and paper.

Another way that homework affected my growth as a student was that it encouraged intellectual discipline. Having great teachers throughout my schooling made a difference. To me, my teachers were always interested in my intellectual growth; thus, I never questioned the quality or quantity of the homework they assigned. It had a purpose, clear instructions, matched my abilities, developed my knowledge and skills, and stretched me intellectually. It isn’t that theoretical, analytical, and logical powers cannot be nurtured in the classroom because they can, however, when you are applying these intellectual powers on your own, you are developing self-confidence and self-sufficiency in your intellectual capacities and expanding your ability to make decisions and solve problems. Independence of thought promotes self-determination, autonomy, and freedom.

The reinforcement of study habits and the nurturing of intellectual discipline are two of the important values of homework, and these values foster initiative, independence, and responsibility. Also, they bring home and school closer together. Information acquisition and concentration on ideas should not be confined to the four walls of a school building, and this is a common perception. Learning takes place everywhere, especially in the home, so homework becomes an important learning model that must be established early, highlighted continually, and reinforced at every opportunity. When learning becomes part of a regular, daily schedule, and is developed with an attitude of positive acceptance that relates school success to outside-of-class effort, and when it is performed in a home environment that is consistent, encouraging, and supportive from the outset, there is a greater chance for students to become well-rounded, fully acclimated, lifetime learners. Potential for a lifetime love of learning must always be cultivated.

There is a justification for giving homework that often escapes examination. Because my parents supervised my homework and worked with me when necessary, it helped them keep in contact with what I and the school were doing. What families do is more important to student success than whether they are rich or poor, finished high school or not, or in elementary, junior high, or high school. The partnership among myself, my school, and my parents not only increased my parents’ involvement and participation, but I’m certain it promoted my social, emotional, and academic growth as well. Effective learning depends upon that collaboration among children, parents, and teachers. Family involvement in learning is one of the best investments families can make.

Certainly there are academic reasons that can justify the use of homework just as there are personal reasons. For example, homework eases the time constraints on the amount of curricular material that can be covered in class. Educators can use it to expand, enlarge, and broaden their material. I vividly remember the thrill I had at various times when the point of an in-class presentation became clearer to me—or easier to understand—once I had an opportunity to use a theory or make an application on my own.

Other academic reasons for the use of homework include using it to supplement and reinforce work done in school. For example, I remember numerous times when I was given sample problems to complete at home after new methods of solving a mathematical problem were introduced in class. As a matter of fact, homework is solely responsible for the ease I developed in handling mathematical story problems. In other cases, homework was necessary to do background research on a topic to be discussed later in class.

There is a direct correlation between students who do their homework and succeed in life. Students who do homework graduate from high school at higher rates, are more likely to go on to higher education, are better behaved, and have better attitudes. Look around, people who are well-off are generally well-educated and have worked hard for some portion of their lives. Homework is a way to build the kind of work ethic that will get lower class students out of the lower class and help others develop greater self-discipline, independence, and responsibility — values that will affect a lifetime.



At the website of The Center for Public Education, , there is a wonderful essay, “Key Lessons: What research says about the value of homework,” along with 25 references, that clearly explains what the research says and doesn’t say about the importance of homework.

Some people reading my essay on the link between homework and success may wonder why such an essay is even necessary. Some of the controversies surrounding homework can be found at the website, The News & Observer. Patrick Winn, a senior staff writer, has written an essay, “Teachers reassess value of homework: Long hours seen as less productive.” In the essay, Winn discusses the 10-minute rule, the homework myth, and how homework can offer too much help.





Contact Richard L. Weaver II

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

And Then Some News

And Then Some News
Now available: "Search Inside" And Then Some Book 1 at Amazon.com!

"Search Inside" is a feature from Amazon.com that lets you look at actual book pages. Be a more informed consumer before your purchase. It's easy... just click the book or the link above and when you arrive at Amazon.com, then click on the book.

Not enough information? Check out And Then Some Book 1 at andthensomeworks.com where you will find more information including excerpts and full chapters.



Thursday’s essay, “The link between doing homework and success,” is the fourth of a number of essays that relate to education. That I write essays on education, as I have said the past several weeks, is easily understood since I spent close to 48 years involved in public education as either a student or teacher. (This week’s essay is the kind that, if taken to heart, can change a person’s life now and forever!)

Share your And Then Some Story about the importance of homework. How long have you been or were you a student? How successful are you or were you? Can you tell us some of the factors that have made a difference in your life (especially where homework contributed positively to your life)? When it comes to the importance of homework, what would be YOUR message? Can you share your tips, stories, or suggestions regarding homework? We would love to hear your story. Do you have a friend, a family member, a neighbor, or someone you just know from a distance who has benefited from homework? Can you tell his or her story? Feel free to use a pseudonym for the person’s real name.


Click here to share your And Then Some story


Thursday's And Then Some Essay preview
The link between homework and success
by Richard L. Weaver II

Excerpt:

There is a direct correlation between students who do their homework and succeed in life. Students who do homework graduate from high school at higher rates, are more likely to go on to higher education, are better behaved, and have better attitudes. Look around, people who are well-off are generally well-educated and have worked hard for some portion of their lives. Homework is a way to build the kind of work ethic that will get lower class students out of the lower class and help others develop greater self-discipline, independence, and responsibility — values that will affect a lifetime.


And Then Some Works - see you THURSDAY!!