College 101: Professor 101
One of the most important aspects to succeeding in college study is understanding your professor. Smart students learn to read their professors like they''d read a textbook, and ask questions! What kinds of information, or skills, or practices is your professor looking for you to learn? What sorts of details are unimportant to that professor? In order to ace a curse, you need to know. James Cook of the University of Maine at Augusta shares this idea, then explains how, as a sociologist, there are certain kinds of details he wants students to learn but other kinds of details that just aren't relevant. Make sure every one of your professors shares the same kind of information, and you'll have started off well toward a successful college experience.
Видео College 101: Professor 101 канала James Cook
Видео College 101: Professor 101 канала James Cook
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
UMA Social Networks: Social FactsVariation: Means, Standard Deviations and dVisualizing Gender as a Cultural StructureYou Speak, They Listen: Employment Forum at UMA March 22 2012Networks Exercise: Following an Oregon Trail on TwitterSocial Media Data Mining with Raspberry Pi (Part 8: Extracting Hashtags, URLs, Mentions)Connecting NodeXL and Twitter in less than Four MinutesUMA Forum on Occupy Augusta: Rep. Maeghan Maloney and Sen. Roger KatzIncome Inequality Data for Anytown USA through data.census.govMaineOSLO: How to Add a Learning ObjectBasics of Bivariate Regression, from Constants and Slopes to Contingent Means and R-SquaredSSC 320: Variables Are EverywhereWorking on a Research Project in the Social SciencesTwo Ways To Get Data from Twitter: R/Rtweet & NodeXLWhy Research Methods? An Answer Drawing from Umwelt, Vorhandenheit, and ZuhandenheitFinding Nominal, Ordinal, Interval and Ratio Levels of MeasurementSearching for Research Literature With Google Scholar and a University LibraryCriminology Paper 2 Walkthrough on Legislation Regarding Crime in MaineHow-To: Downloading GSS Data from NORCBeneath the Surface: Dashboards, Templates, Scripts and APIs in Social Media